From Portside Culture <[email protected]>
Subject Biden Signs the School Meal Waivers Bill Into Law, but Free Meals Are Over for Many
Date June 28, 2022 12:00 AM
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[Before the pandemic, meals were either free, reduced price or
full price to students. During the pandemic, the waivers allowed for
all meals to be free. The House bill included only free and full-price
options. Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., blocked the bill in the Senate, urging
lawmakers to bring back the "reduced price" category of the National
School Lunch Program. ]
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PORTSIDE CULTURE

BIDEN SIGNS THE SCHOOL MEAL WAIVERS BILL INTO LAW, BUT FREE MEALS ARE
OVER FOR MANY  
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Ximena Bustillo
June 25, 2022
npr.org
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_ Before the pandemic, meals were either free, reduced price or full
price to students. During the pandemic, the waivers allowed for all
meals to be free. The House bill included only free and full-price
options. Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., blocked the bill in the Senate, urging
lawmakers to bring back the "reduced price" category of the National
School Lunch Program. _

Los Angeles Unified School District food service workers pre-package
hundreds of free school lunches in plastic bags. , Damian
Dovarganes/AP

 

President Joe Biden signed the Keep Kids Fed Act on Saturday morning,
extending partial school meal flexibilities through the next school
year five days before they were set to expire.

Schools have felt the strain of rising food, gas and labor costs.
Waivers passed by Congress at the start of the pandemic gave relief
from regulations that monitor how, when and who gets school meals.

Congress couldn't reach a deal in time to include an extension of the
waivers in the budget signed by President Biden in March after Senate
minority leader Mitch McConnell pushed against the extension.

Earlier this week, a bipartisan group of lawmakers brokered a deal to
expand some of the waivers, days before they would expire. The House
on Friday morning approved Senate changes to a nearly $3 billion plan
to extend all pandemic school meal waivers through the summer and
supply chain flexibilities and increased federal reimbursements for
school through the 2022-23 school year.

The deal comes after Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., blocked the bill in the
Senate, urging lawmakers to bring back the "reduced price" category of
the National School Lunch Program.

Before the pandemic, meals were either free, reduced price or full
price to students. During the pandemic, the waivers allowed for all
meals to be free. The House bill included only free and full-price
options.

The bill would fully extend all waivers through the summer to allow
meal deliveries and grab-and-go options for students. It would also
extend supply chain flexibilities and higher than pre-pandemic federal
reimbursement rates through the 2022-2023 school year.

But the biggest omission is the exclusion of flexibilities that
suspended eligibility requirements for free and reduced-price meal
applications, giving every student free meals.

Senate Agriculture Chair and bill sponsor Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich.,
told NPR that there would have never been 10 Republican members in
support of extending all the free meals. The eventual compromise to
return to pre-pandemic meal categories was necessary to make sure
schools received other necessary assistance.

"We aren't completely back to normal as it relates to the pandemic,"
Stabenow said, noting that school are still facing high food costs and
supply chain disruptions. "Up to one-third of the schools may not have
been able to provide school meals at all without [any waivers]."

What's being waived?

Before the pandemic, federal laws required schools meet specific
nutrition requirements that governed what they could and could not
serve students. They had to serve their meals in "congregate"
settings, like a cafeteria or a park. Families had to meet income
requirements to receive free or reduced-price meals under the National
School Lunch Program. And in the summer, only areas that had 50% of
kids qualifying for free or reduced-priced meals can operate a summer
meal program.

Those rules went out the window during the pandemic.

"[Waivers] really provided a lifeline, because in a lot of rural and
suburban communities, poverty is so widely dispersed over large
geographies," said Jillien Meier, director of partnerships and
campaign strategies at No Kid Hungry. "So even if 49% of your kids in
your community qualifies for free or reduced price meals under the
National School Lunch Program, you can't operate an open summer meal
site."

The school meal waivers allowed for students to grab lunches to-go and
or be delivered via school buses.

They also provided flexibility for schools when the supply chain
disruptions began and never quite went away.

"You might be ordering fresh fruits and vegetables and you get donuts.
You order 5,000 cases of something you might get 20. The supply chain
is a disaster," said Katie Wilson, executive director of the Urban
School Food Alliance. "We had a district where big a produce house
they worked with for years called them and said, 'we are no longer
servicing schools. We're giving you a two-week notice.'"

More than 98% of school meal programs reported shortages of menu
items, supplies and packaging, as well as items being discontinued by
manufacturers, according to the School Nutrition Association.

School staffs made trips to grocery stores to buy missing ingredients.
But substituted foods from a store or another vendor might be more
expensive or not meet nutritional standards.

Waivers also provided extra funding for schools to shore up the rising
costs of food and labor.

Mary Rochelle, program, events and grant coordinator at the Food
Services Department of the Boulder Valley School District in Colorado,
said one of her bread vendors raised prices by 50% without notice.

Kristen Hennessey, director of Food and Nutrition Services for
Plymouth-Canton Community Schools in Michigan has also seen beef rise
51% and chicken 30% in her district and employee wages will increase
by 31% next school year.

The federal government already reimburses schools a portion of each
meal's cost — a rate that increased with the waivers. Congress'
proposal would continue to reimburse schools per meal at higher than
pre-pandemic levels, but less than the original waivers.

"For about what you'd pay for a latte, schools are expected to put
together a meal that has milk and fruits and vegetables, protein and
grain," said Diane Pratt-Heavner, director of media relations at the
School Nutrition Association. "The pandemic and the after effects of
the supply chain and labor challenges that the programs are facing has
just blown up the model."

Getting rid of free meals

Schools are preparing to raise meal prices, so those students who no
longer qualify for free meals will pay more than before the pandemic.

Some schools are preparing to raise meal prices, meaning that families
who were paying before the pandemic will now pay more when the waivers
expire. Only students with a family income of 185% of the poverty
level or below will qualify.

In anticipation of the expiration, USDA extended some flexibilities to
states that chose to use them. But only Congress can change the
eligibility requirements for free meals.

Reaching families with younger children needing to go through the
process for the first time, technology access, language barriers and
confusing applications pose challenges to school administrators,
according to Rochelle, especially with the months-long congressional
limbo.

"Even if we do reach them and ask them to fill out the application and
they do it, there's a high chance they might not qualify because the
cutoff is so low and doesn't change depending on where you live,"
Rochelle said. "So in the Boulder area, our housing costs are three
times the national average, and it doesn't take that into account."

Looking beyond the extension

Regardless of the extensions, a cliff will inevitably come for schools
and families unless Congress passes a more permanent solution.

The creation of virtual schools during the pandemic allowed students
to still have access to meals they otherwise wouldn't. Despite
McConnell's attempt to use the waivers to force schools back in
person, many districts are continuing virtual learning.

"We ended up creating a very successful K-12 virtual academy within
our district," Hennessey said, adding that the virtual academy is
planning to stay regardless of what happens to the waivers. "I began
to look at the list of the kids that were virtual — 46% of them
qualified for free reduced meals next year. I will not be able to
provide a meal to those children."

Inflation is raising prices on almost everything, except rotisserie
chicken

School food and nutrition advocates want this to be addressed at the
White House's September conference on food and hunger. Hennessey
attended one of the White House's listening sessions this month in
preparation for the conference. Advocates told officials food access
was revoked by not pushing for extended universal free meals for
another year.

"You're taking away accessibility," Hennessey recalled saying. "So you
want us to talk about ways to [make food accessible]. Well, you just
took away a great way to do it and you just ran a pilot for a year."

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