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New report: State should join effort to provide free meals to all Hawai‘i public school students : Maui Now

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The United States Department of Agriculture’s School Breakfast Program and National School Lunch Program have played crucial roles in providing meals to children for decades, serving 2.5 billion breakfasts and 4.9 billion lunches in FY2019.

But a newly released report, “Equity on the Menu: The Case for Universal Free School Meals,” warns that federal school meal programs are not reaching many students in Hawaiʻi households that are struggling to make ends meet.

Photo courtesy Hawaiʻi Appleseed

The report calls for the state to extend free meals to all students, regardless of their eligibility for the federal programs. 

During the COVID-19 public health emergency, the federal government authorized a 2 1/2-year, nationwide universal free school meals pilot program which significantly reduced child hunger in at-risk households by 7%, and eased the financial burden on families during an economic crisis.

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The end of these flexibilities has caused schools in Hawaiʻi and around the nation to revert back to charging students for meals, running the risk of stigmatizing students whose meal accounts have a negative balance and parents are unable to pay. Hawaiʻi is one of only a few states that legally allows this, according to a press release from the Hawaiʻi Appleseed Center for Law & Economic Justice. 

“Hungry keiki cannot learn,” said Jordan Smith, Senior Policy Analyst for Anti-Hunger Initiatives at Hawaiʻi Appleseed. “This report underscores the stark reality that challenges the well-being of countless families in Hawaiʻi. The inability of current federal income eligibility guidelines to reflect the cost of living in Hawaiʻi leaves many households on the brink of hardship and denies some of our most vulnerable keiki equal opportunity to thrive.”

In response to these challenges, eight states across the country have taken the initiative to fund and implement their own Universal Free School Meal programs. These states recognize the worthwhile investment in their keiki and the numerous benefits of UFSM, including eliminating lunch-shaming and meal debt, reducing stigma, and addressing inadequate income eligibility rates for working families struggling to make ends meet. 

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The report estimates that extending free meals to all public school students would come at a cost of approximately $25 million per year — only about 1% of the Hawaiʻi State Department of Education’s operating budget.

The report provides evidence that this worthwhile investment increases test scores, decreases food insecurity, promotes resilience, and improves health outcomes, particularly for children from lower-income households. 

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Source: Maui News

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