U.S. pandemic summer school meal program has served millions, but its
future uncertain
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[August 11, 2021]
By Christopher Walljasper and Brendan O'Brien
BENTON HARBOR, Mich. (Reuters) - On a warm July morning,
James Terry stepped out of his home garage, where he manages his Benton
Harbor, Michigan-based auto detailing business, and paused work to pick
up groceries, with his 7-year-old son in tow.
Instead of a grocery store, they headed to a nearby park, where the
school district offered free bags of individually wrapped milk, cereal,
applesauce and peanut butter and jelly sandwiches.
The food was available due to a dramatic change in government policy on
school meal programs during the COVID-19 pandemic. Federal agencies have
waived requirements for kids to eat summer meals on site. The government
no longer limits subsidized school meals to families that can prove they
need them.
Millions of families who lost jobs or fell behind on rent and mortgage
payments have come to rely on it to stave off the historically high
rates of hunger among children, even as the U.S. economy strengthens
more than a year after pandemic imposed shutdowns.
But the additional meals could go away next summer, when relaxed rules
around distribution and income requirements are set to expire.
Terry's wife is a home healthcare worker, so while she has been working
in the homes of other, he has juggled caring for four kids learning from
home, while also working.
"If the rules change, it's going to be a little struggle," he said.
Loosened summer restrictions have allowed parents like Terry to quickly
pick up food and return to work, and grandparents or neighbors to pick
up food for kids who can't leave the house.
Last December, 15.3 million households with children lacked enough food
to feed their families – more than 18% of the United States, according
the U.S. Census Bureau's weekly Household Pulse Survey. With the help of
school meals and other expanded nutrition assistance programs, that
number dropped to 10.7 million as of July 5, still well above the
percentage of households facing hunger pre-pandemic.
Chicago Public Schools (CPS) officials handed out about 745,000 summer
meals on average during the three years before the pandemic. This year
they expect to distribute about 4.5 million free meals in the district's
expanded summer grab-and-go meal program, illustrating the financial
need across the third-largest U.S. school system.
For Mando Martinez, 69, who helps support his daughter, a single mother,
and his 12-year-old grandson, the couple of bags of food he picks up
weekly from the CPS program at Lane Tech College Prep High School on
Chicago's North Side saves the family on a tight budget more than $100
each month.
"She doesn't get help from anyone," said the retired sign painter on a
fixed income as he was walking home with the food. "It means a lot. It
helps because everything being so expensive now."
UNCERTAIN FUTURE
The expansion of school meals is just one of the social safety net
experiments implemented during the pandemic that face an uncertain
future.
In late March 2020, the Trump administration began waiving income
requirements and other restrictions on who could pick up meals and when
meals could be served.
Continuing under the Biden administration, the U.S. Department of
Agriculture reimburses states as much as $4.31 for every lunch served,
regardless of a family’s income level.
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Prepared hot meals, available for pickup once a week during the
summer for families, are seen in Gurnee, Illinois, a suburb of
Chicago, U.S., June 29, 2021. REUTERS/Christopher Walljasper
Those waivers are set to expire in June 2022,
potentially jolting communities that have come to rely on them.
From May 2020 to April 2021, the Agriculture Department spent $10.8
billion on expanded summer food service, extending the summer
program through the school year while schools remained closed.
Before the pandemic the program averaged less than $500 million a
year on summer meals since 2016.
California recently included universal school meals in its latest
budget, permanently eliminating financial tests for meal
eligibility. Two bills were introduced in the U.S. Senate this May,
one bipartisan measure aiming to permanently expand summer meal
access and another proposal, co-sponsored by Vermont Senator Bernie
Sanders and Minnesota Representative Ilhan Omar, making universal
school meals accessible for all.
Now that the program delivers food into the beleaguered working
class community rather than requiring students go to cafeterias for
summer meals, the Benton Harbor Area School District has fed
hundreds more students, according to Ricardo Carter, general manager
for the district's food service provider SodexoMAGIC.
Nationally, school meal participation overall increased by 85%
during the pandemic, according to a 2021 survey by the School
Nutrition Association.
"Before, it was 'you've got to be at the table, we feed you that
way,'" said Carter, who reported serving far more students in need
under the relaxed rules. "I think going back to congregate meals
would be a ridiculous mistake."
Ginger Culp, an art teacher at Round Lake Area Schools, north of
Chicago, picked up lunches for her daughter and a neighbor's child.
She said she's seen hungry kids in her classroom and worries about
free meals going away.
"I think it's going to be a challenge for people who have very
heavily relied on it," Culp said.
After more than two years of federally funded meals, Colleen Pacatte,
superintendent of Illinois School District 56 worries the
middle-income, suburban Chicago district will have to fund school
meals for everyone, or ask parents to pay for lunches themselves.
"How do I explain that to a family?" she said.
"It doesn't matter to them who took the money away," she said. "They
just know the meals aren't there."
(Reporting by Christopher Walljasper and Brendan O'Brien; Editing by
Caroline Stauffer and Aurora Ellis)
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