Source: Center for Budget
and Policy Priorities, 9/8/14, School
Meals
Tuesday, October 14, 2014
SCHOOLS CAN IMPROVE HELP FOR HUNGRY KIDS
The National School Lunch
and Breakfast Programs have been feeding millions of children for
decades. On a typical school day in 2013, more than 30 million—
nearly three in five — students ate a school lunch. Over 70% of those
children — more than 21 million — received a free or reduced-price meal.
That means that more than two in five students benefited from free or
reduced-price lunches on a typical day last year. But some children who could
benefit from free school meals miss out because their school district doesn’t
automatically enroll them as required. States can improve their processes for
automatically enrolling children for free meals when their family receives SNAP
benefits. School districts can make sure they are identifying children
who homeless or in foster care so that they begin receiving free meals
immediately during a period of family turmoil. And a new policy allows schools
to begin feeding low-income children as soon as they receive an application,
even if they have a processing backlog.
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