The Food Fuels Learning Network believes all students have the right to nutritious, culturally appropriate food that enables them to attain their full potential.​​ Recognizing the importance of school meals for students’ health and readiness to learn, we strongly support the School Meals for All bill, L.D. 1679.

Maine could be the first state to guarantee children the right to free meals at school. While COVID-19 has increased the vulnerability of children to food insecurity in our state, child hunger has been a longstanding issue in Maine and will persist beyond this pandemic if we do not act.

In Portland, almost half of public school students are eligible for free meals, meaning that their family’s income is at or below 130 percent of the poverty line. And yet, because of the current method of collecting family income data, the U.S. Department of Agriculture income guidelines and the deep stigma attached to accessing subsidized school meals, the National School Lunch Program never fully meets the need. Universal meals would eliminate burdensome paperwork and normalize school meals as a free and zero-barrier service, like riding the school bus or using school internet.

This school year, schools across the nation have been providing students with meals at no charge in response to the pandemic emergency. But the child hunger emergency is not over. L.D. 1679 presents an opportunity to provide consistency, stability and collective community care for Maine children at risk of hunger, investing in their future and the future of our state.

James Hanna
Portland


Only subscribers are eligible to post comments. Please subscribe or login first for digital access. Here’s why.

Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.

filed under: