Families around the country, mine included, are feeling fortunate to have our kids back in school after a turbulent, unpredictable couple of years. Students, teachers, and school officials were forced to navigate unexpected changes. For most, the ongoing shifts from virtual to in-person learning were stressful and added to many other pandemic-induced hardships. Through it all, school districts quickly spearheaded innovative approaches to ensure they could continue to serve much-relied-upon school meals to students. They implemented “Grab and Go” models allowing parents to pick up meals in school parking lots or other community hubs; loading up school buses with meals and dropping them off at stops along neighborhood routes; and delivering meals directly to students’ homes.
Schools were able to offer this continuity and flexibility because when the Covid-19 pandemic forced nationwide school closures—and hunger and food insecurity spiked—Congress passed the Families First Coronavirus Response Act and CARES Act in 2020.
Provisions in these laws provided the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) with authority and funding to implement waivers that permit schools nationwide to serve meals to all students free of charge (also known as universal school meals). The measures also allowed schools flexibility to help ensure that meals are provided safely during a public health emergency. That includes distributing meals to families outside of the school setting and temporarily serving meals that meet the less stringent nutrition standards of the Summer Food Service Program, which require fewer fruits and vegetables than USDA’s current nutrition standards for school lunch.
This adaptability and universality of school meals for all has also been so important because for tens of millions of children in the United States, school isn’t just a place to learn, but a place where they depend on receiving healthy meals. The pandemic highlighted how critically important school meals are for preventing child hunger and ensuring millions of families have enough to eat, especially those furthest from economic opportunity. Unfortunately, the child nutrition waivers are scheduled to expire on June 30. We must find a way to do right by our children, families, and schools by extending these waivers through, at minimum, the 2022-23 school year.
New, Unexpected Challenges for School Nutrition Programs
Historically, school nutrition programs are often understaffed, underfunded, and overlooked. The pandemic led to additional financial losses. According to USDA data, school food service departments reported more than $2 billion in federal revenue losses from March to November 2020. Challenges continued to emerge throughout the pandemic and are still impacting school nutrition programs today.
For example, the Roswell Independent School District in New Mexico saw a sharp drop in school meals participation due to forced school closures. Now, with students in school, its nutrition program, like many others, is facing supply chain issues.
Kimberly Meeks, the district’s Student Nutrition Director, said she struggles to get the products she needs to feed her students. One week she ordered 100 cases of chicken nuggets but ended up receiving only 30. She has to tackle new challenges each week to ensure the meals have enough nutrients, including how to get her students protein without the planned food.