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Senators introduce School Lunch Price Protection Act

The legislation would prevent schools from being forced to raise meal prices if their child nutrition programs are financially solvent.

Bianca N. Herron, Digital Editor

July 28, 2015

1 Min Read
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U.S. Senators Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.) and Angus King (I-Maine) introduced legislation last week that would prevent School Food Authorities (SFAs) from being forced to raise meal prices when a school's program is financially solvent.

The Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act requires schools to ensure they have sufficient funds for meals served to students not eligible for free or reduced-price meals, often by raising prices. The School Lunch Price Protection Act would make this “paid-lunch equity” mandate applicable only to schools that have a negative balance in their child-nutrition account from the previous school year.

“School districts have seen a decline in full-price lunch participation and many attribute this to some families no longer being able to afford to pay the rising costs,” Inhofe said in a statement. “For those families that already find themselves under financial strain, raising prices could potentially mean the difference between their children getting a healthy meal that day or going without. Our legislation keeps Washington from forcing our schools to raise lunch prices when there is no need to and returns this important decision-making power back to state and local school districts.”

About the Author

Bianca N. Herron

Digital Editor

Bianca Herron is a digital editor at Restaurant Business. Prior to joining Restaurant Business, Bianca was editor of two real estate publications, the Illinois Real Estate Journal and Chicago Industrial Properties. Previously, she was a reporter for the Chicago Defender Newspaper. Bianca studied Mass Communications at Tennessee State University, and currently resides in the south suburbs of Chicago. 

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