Deal reached on extending free school meals
Bipartisan, bicameral deal reached to extend school meal waivers beyond June 30 expiration date.
In an announcement late June 21, Senate Agriculture Committee Chairwoman Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., and Ranking Member John Boozman, R-Ark., along with House Committee on Education and Labor Chairman Bobby Scott, D-Va., and Ranking Member Virginia Foxx, R-NC, announced an agreement to help school and summer providers keep kids fed. The Keep Kids Fed Act will provide important funding and flexibility for communities to provide children healthy meals this summer and provide support to schools and daycares to respond to supply chain challenges and high food costs for the coming school year.
“USDA’s child nutrition programs provide nutritious meals to America’s children,” says Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack. “The school and other nutrition professionals who make these meals possible need additional resources and continued flexibilities as they grapple with the ongoing challenges presented by the pandemic.”
Vilsack says the deal announced would ease uncertainty and bring a measure of relief to schools, summer sites and childcare feeding programs.
Stabenow notes the agreement will help keep kids fed and fully paid for as a report from the Food Research & Action Center says the COVID waivers provided to pay for meals has been helpful in reducing child hunger in school districts and 82% reported the nationwide waivers supported academic achievement.
If Congress didn’t extend the waiver, the program would end on June 30, cutting approximately 10 million children off from free meals this summer, through the next school year, and for the foreseeable future. The waivers have been extended twice since March 2020 on a bipartisan basis, but then in March 2022, Republican lawmakers opposed including the waivers in the government funding package.
“With 90% of our schools still facing challenges as they return to normal operations, this will give our schools and summer meal programs much-needed support to deal with ongoing food service issues. Congress needs to act swiftly to pass this critical help,” says Stabenow.
Legislators have been working for weeks to come up with a bipartisan, bicameral agreement that provided a fully paid-for solution to extending the waivers.