USDA bans school lunch fees for low-income families
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[November 06, 2024]
By ADRIANA MORGA and CORA LEWIS
NEW YORK (AP) — The U.S. Department of Agriculture announced that
students eligible for free or reduced price school meals cannot be
charged processing fees beginning in 2027.
School districts currently work with processing companies to offer
cashless payment systems for families. But the companies can charge
“processing fees” for each transaction. By law, students who are
eligible for reduced price meals cannot be charged more than 30 cents
for breakfast and 40 cents for lunch. With processing fees, however,
families can end up paying 10 times that amount. Processing companies
charge as much as $3.25 or 4% to 5% per transaction, according to a
recent report from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
For families with lower incomes who can’t afford to load large sums in
one go, processing fees can arrive weekly or even more frequently,
increasing costs disproportionately. Families that qualify for free or
reduced lunch pay as much as 60 cents per dollar in fees when paying for
school lunches electronically, according to the report.
The new Agriculture Department’s policy becomes effective starting in
the 2027-2028 school year. With this rule, the USDA will lower costs for
families with income under 185% of federal poverty guidelines, which
equals $57,720 for a family of four.
“USDA and schools across America share the common goal of nourishing
schoolchildren and giving them the fuel they need to learn, grow and
thrive,” said Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack in a statement Friday.
“While today’s action to eliminate extra fees for lower-income
households is a major step in the right direction, the most equitable
path forward is to offer every child access to healthy school meals at
no cost. We will continue to work with Congress to move toward that goal
so all kids have the nutrition they need to reach their full potential.”
The decision by the USDA follows a CFPB report that found online school
meal payments predominantly affect low-income families. School lunch
fees collectively cost families upwards of $100 million each year,
according to the report.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture has mandated that school districts
inform families of their options since 2017, but even when parents are
aware, having to pay by cash or check to avoid fees can be burdensome.
“It’s just massively inconvenient,” said Joanna Roa, 43, who works at
Clemson University in South Carolina as a library specialist and has two
school-aged children.
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Students line up for lunch at a middle school in Sandy, Utah, May
19, 2017. (Laura Seitz/The Deseret News via AP, File)
Roa said that when her son was in
first grade and she saw the $3.25-per-transaction fee for lunch
account transactions, she and her husband decided to send him to
school with packed lunches instead.
“A dollar here and there, I expected,” she said. “But $3.25 per
transaction, especially here in rural South Carolina where the cost
of living is a lot lower — as are the salaries — is a lot.”
Roa said packing lunch for two kids every day became a burden in
both time and effort for two working parents. For the past two
years, thanks to surplus funds, her school district has been
providing free school lunches which has changed the equation, but
Roa said that could end at any point.
In its review of the 300 largest public school districts in the
U.S., the CFPB found that 87% of sampled districts contract with
payment processors. Within those districts, the companies charge an
average of $2.37 or 4.4% of the total transaction, each time money
is added to a child’s account.
While payment companies maintain that school districts can negotiate
fees and rates before they agree to contracts, the CFPB found that
complex company structures “may insulate companies from competition
and make school districts less likely to negotiate.” Just three
companies — MySchoolBucks, SchoolCafe, and LINQ Connect — dominate
the market, according to the report.
Without the ability to choose which company to work with, “families
have fewer ways to avoid harmful practices,” the agency said,
“including those that may violate federal consumer protection law.”
___
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