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Tag: school lunches

  • Why Wake schools won’t return to shaming students for unpaid meal debt

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    Wake County will continue to cover the meal costs of students who’ve run out of money for their school meals.

    Wake County will continue to cover the meal costs of students who’ve run out of money for their school meals.

    tlong@newsobserver.com

    Despite rising six-figure debt, Wake County will continue to provide students with regular school lunches even when they’ve run out of money to pay for them.

    The Wake County school board rejected Tuesday resuming the practice of serving an alternative meal of only fruits, vegetables and water to students who’ve run out of meal money. School administrators had made the request because the student meal debt has risen to $152,170 since the district began using donations to cover unpaid meal costs.

    “The money does have to come from somewhere,” said school board member Lynn Edmonds. “But this is a basic human right, and we should find the money, as hard as that will be.”

    Administrators will now have to figure out a way to cover the meal debt. School nutrition programs are supposed to, by law, be financially self-supporting.

    Avoiding shaming students during lunch

    Students are expected to pay for their lunch unless they qualify for a federally subsidized school meal or attend a school that serves free meals to all students.

    Under Wake’s policy — which has been waived for the last 16 months — students can have up to three days of unpaid meal debt before they’re only served the meal of fruits and vegetables.

    In the 2023-24 school year, Wake served 8,000 alternative meals of only fruits and vegetables to students who were out of meal money.

    Cafeteria managers are supposed to talk to students in private when they run out of money. But school board members have said that some students have been publicly embarrassed by having their meals taken away.

    Concerns about the practice led Wake to create a systemwide Angel Fund. The district fund helps supplement schools that have little or no money in their own Angel Fund to cover unpaid meal costs.

    Wake received so many donations that in September 2024 it announced it was suspending the policy of not serving the regular meal to students who didn’t have lunch money.

    “We directed staff not to follow the current policy to avoid what some were calling the meal of shame,” said board member Chris Heagarty.

    Families not paying who can afford it?

    But school administrators said the Angel Fund donations from individuals and groups such as the AJ Fletcher Foundation, For Children Partners and BAPS Charities haven’t been consistent enough to keep up with the demand for unpaid meal costs.

    Wake says the current year-to-date unpaid meal balance is $152,170 even after collecting $87,451 from the Angel Fund. It could reach $255,733 by the end of the school year if Wake continues to absorb the meal debt.

    Questions were raised Tuesday about whether some families who could afford to pay the meals were taking advantage of the Angel Fund’s generosity. School board chair Tyler Swanson cautioned against reading into the motives of people who aren’t paying their meal debt.

    “Whether someone is taking advantage of it or is not taking advantage of it, it’s putting us in a fiscal position where by not enforcing the policy, that number is going to continue to grow,” said Superintendent Robert Taylor. “We want the board to have a good, clear understanding of what the implications are.”

    School meals a ‘basic human right’

    Administrators had recommended resuming the practice of serving only fruits and vegetables to people who had three days of meal debt starting on Feb. 17.

    The board did not take a formal vote on the recommendation, but multiple board members said they didn’t think that meal would be enough to meet the needs of students.

    “I don’t see how kids can survive on vegetables and water,” said board member Cheryl Caulfield.

    Edmonds, the board member, reiterated that access to school meals are a “basic human right.”

    “I really don’t care who’s trying to eat at school,” Edmonds said. “If we’ve got kids that want a school meal, they should get one.”

    Donate to angel fund

    Go to https://www.wcpss.net/p/~board/family-resources/post/donations-and-angel-fund for information on how to donate to the Wake County school system’s Angel Fund.

    Related Stories from Raleigh News & Observer

    T. Keung Hui

    The News & Observer

    T. Keung Hui has covered K-12 education for the News & Observer since 1999, helping parents, students, school employees and the community understand the vital role education plays in North Carolina. His primary focus is Wake County, but he also covers statewide education issues.

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  • Trump signs law to allow whole milk in school lunches

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    Credit: Official White House photo by Joyce N. Boghosian

    President Donald Trump signed a law Wednesday that will restore whole milk in federally subsidized school lunches.

    The dairy staple — out of school meal programs for more than a decade amid a broader push to curb childhood obesity — will soon return to school cafeterias under the law. 

    Trump said during a signing ceremony in the Oval Office that the Whole Milk for Healthy Kids Act will “ensure that millions of school-aged children have access to high-quality milk as we make America healthy again.” 

    Seated with a jug of milk on the Resolute Desk, Trump said the changes will also be “major victories for the American dairy farmers who we love and who voted for me in great numbers.” 

    White House ceremony

    Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins celebrated the legislation becoming law and said her department would post Wednesday the “new rulemaking that is necessary to get whole milk back into school lunches.” 

    Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. also lauded Trump’s efforts and described the measure as a “long overdue correction of the school nutrition policy that puts children’s health first.” 

    Trump was also joined by Dr. Ben Carson, national advisor for nutrition, health, and housing at USDA, along with Democratic Sen. Peter Welch of Vermont, GOP Sens. John Boozman of Arkansas, Mike Crapo of Idaho and Roger Marshall of Kansas, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and advocates who supported the bill.

    Rep. Glenn “GT” Thompson of Pennsylvania, who chairs the House Agriculture Committee, and Rep. Tim Walberg of Michigan, chair of the House Committee on Education and Workforce, also attended the ceremony. 

    The U.S. House passed the bill in December, following unanimous passage in the Senate in November. 

    Welch and Marshall, along with Pennsylvania Sens. Dave McCormick, a Republican, and John Fetterman, a Democrat, introduced the measure in the Senate. 

    Thompson and Democratic Rep. Kim Schrier of Washington state brought corresponding legislation in the House.

    What the new law does 

    Under the law, schools that are part of the USDA’s National School Lunch Program can offer “flavored and unflavored organic or nonorganic whole, reduced-fat, low-fat, and fat-free fluid milk and lactose-free fluid milk.” 

    The program — which provides free or low-cost lunches in public and nonprofit private schools and residential child care institutions — saw nearly 29.4 million children participate on a typical day during the 2023-2024 school year, according to the Food Research & Action Center.

    The schools can also provide “nondairy beverages that are nutritionally equivalent to fluid milk and meet the nutritional standards established by” the Agriculture secretary.

    The law exempts milk fat from being considered saturated fat as it applies to schools’ “allowable average saturated fat content of a meal.” 

    Parents and guardians, as well as physicians, can also offer a written statement for their student to receive a nondairy milk substitute. 

    Michael Dykes, president and CEO of the International Dairy Foods Association, celebrated the bill becoming law in a Wednesday statement.

    Dykes dubbed the law a “win for our children, parents, and school nutrition leaders, giving schools the flexibility to offer the flavored and unflavored milk options, across all healthy fat levels, that meet students’ needs and preferences.” 

    The signing marked the second major nutrition policy change this month. The U.S. Department of Agriculture and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services released the 2025-2030 Dietary Guidelines for Americans, which encourages more full-fat dairy and protein.  

    Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Contact Michael Moline for questions: info@floridaphoenix.com. Follow Florida Phoenix on Facebook and Twitter.


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    It was out of school meal programs for more than a decade amid a broader push to curb childhood obesity

    That’s down from a Mason-Dixon survey taken last March, when he was at 53%, and the lowest ranking taken by Mason-Dixon since July 2020

    Florida bill would require portraits of Washington and Lincoln in all K-5 classrooms and all other classrooms used for social studies



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    Shauneen Miranda, Florida Phoenix
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  • Big donation helps keep students in Montgomery County fed – WTOP News

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    Montgomery County school leaders are celebrating a big donation that will help families in the Maryland county who struggle to afford school lunch.

    Montgomery County school leaders are celebrating a big donation that will help families in the Maryland county who struggle to afford school lunch.

    About half the county’s 160,000 students receive assistance through the Free and Reduced-Price Assistance Program. Even with that help, according to Montgomery County Public Schools, families have amassed about $1.36 million in school lunch debt.

    Stepping up during the holiday season, DARCARS Automotive Group recently donated $230,000, wiping out the debt of many families.

    “This incredible act of generosity from DARCARS does more than just clear a balance; it removes a barrier to student success,” Superintendent Thomas Taylor said.

    In a news release announcing the donation, Jamie Darvish, owner of DARCARS Automotive Group and DARCARS Toyota, said, “No student should have to worry about affording a meal while at school.”

    According to the school system, the donation eliminates two years of meal debt for families with free or reduced lunch eligibility, ensuring these students enter the new year with a clean financial slate.

    “No student should ever feel embarrassed because their family is facing difficult times, and we are profoundly grateful for this collective effort,” Montgomery County Board of Education President Grace Rivera-Oven said.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Kyle Cooper

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  • Loudoun County schools see a major increase in the number of students unable to pay for school lunches – WTOP News

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    Unpaid school lunch debt is becoming a primary issue in Loudoun County Public schools as food insecurity continues to impact the D.C. area.

    Unpaid school lunch debt is becoming a primary issue in Loudoun County Public Schools as food insecurity continues to impact the D.C. area.

    “Our unpaid meal date has increased year over year,” Sharon Willoughby, chief financial officer for Loudoun County Public Schools, said during a joint meeting of the Loudoun County Board of Education and Loudoun County Board of Supervisors on Monday.

    She said unpaid meal debt is up 52% compared to last year. And requests to be included in the Free and Reduced Lunch program have jumped 180%.

    “This year, we’re off to the same trend, where we will most likely be exceeding last year’s unpaid meal debt,” Willoughby said. “After the pandemic, LCPS, along with other school divisions across the nation, has seen their meal debt really increase just across the board.”

    She said debt status will not stop students from getting their lunches, but families are getting notifications if they have a negative balance that’s over $5.

    Students with a negative balance are not allowed to get extra items in the lunch line but will still get a breakfast and lunch.

    Willoughby said school meal prices have increased by 20 cents a meal to address the rising cost of the program. Lunches now cost $3.55.

    “We understand the need of having students have food in their stomachs in the morning so they can focus on the day,” Loudoun County Board Supervisor Sylvia Glass said.

    At the end of a fiscal year, any outstanding meal debt is absorbed by the school system and does not roll over into the next school year. Families then start with a zero-dollar balance even if they can’t pay their meal debt.

    LCPS has partnered with Giant Food and some other organizations to help with donations to cover some of the unpaid debt.

    “You may notice when you check out at the grocery store sometimes you have the option to round up for a certain charitable cause. One of those causes has been donating to the school nutrition program,” Willoughby said.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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  • California lawmakers pass bill to ban ‘ultraprocessed’ foods in school lunches

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    SACRAMENTO, California — A bill to ban “ultraprocessed” foods in school lunches is heading to Gov. Gavin Newsom’s desk, after drawing support not only from Democrats, but Republicans who linked the legislation to the MAHA movement.

    The proposal would define as ultraprocessed any food or beverage that includes flavor or color enhancers and that is high in saturated fats, sodium, or specific added sugars or sweeteners. Those foods would be phased fully out of schools by July 2032.

    The bill’s author, Democratic Assemblymember Jesse Gabriel, called the moment “historic” and told POLITICO that he’s been working on these issues “before anyone had ever heard of MAHA,” or Make America Healthy Again.

    “You’ve seen a lot of folks in Washington D.C. talking about these issues, but we haven’t seen a lot of action,” he said. “We’re actually going to move the needle on protecting kids and protecting families in California.”

    How to define ultraprocessed has been hotly contested since the bill, AB 1264, was introduced in February. But Gabriel said in a committee hearing this week that he took more than 50 amendments on the bill, heeding the concerns of lawmakers and agricultural interests groups.

    The bill passed both houses with only a single “no” vote. It now goes to Newsom for a signature or veto.

    Last year, the governor signed legislation from Gabriel banning food containing certain dyes from being sold in schools by 2027.

    A coalition of industry groups, including the American Beverage Association, California Grocers Association and California Farm Bureau, remain opposed. They said in a letter on Monday that the bill ropes in too many unintended foods and would create an “unnecessary liability for schools serving these products, as well as manufacturers producing food subject to these arbitrary definitions.”

    Of those critics, Gabriel said, “every member of the state Senate disagrees with them.”

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