| Literature DB >> 32334823 |
Sheila Fleischhacker, Elizabeth Campbell.
Abstract
Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32334823 PMCID: PMC7176575 DOI: 10.1016/j.jand.2020.03.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Acad Nutr Diet ISSN: 2212-2672 Impact factor: 4.910
Proposed current federal legislation to address unpaid meal debt and ensure equitable access to school meals.
| Bill Title and Status | Summary | Strengths (+) and Limitations (−) |
|---|---|---|
| Anti-Lunch Shaming Act of 2019 (HR | Prohibits: Stigmatization, such as requiring wristband or hand stamp, of a child unable to pay for a meal or who has unpaid meal debt Requiring children to perform chores or activities not generally required by students Served meal from being disposed All communication concerning debt be directed toward parents and distributed in a manner that does not stigmatize the child | + Prohibits shaming/stigmatization of students |
| No Shame at School Act (HR 3366 and S 1907) | Prohibits: Overt stigmatization, such as requiring wristband or hand stamp or withholding educational opportunities, of a child unable to pay for a meal or who has unpaid meal debt Served meal from being disposed All communication concerning debt be directed toward parents and distributed in a manner that does not stigmatize the child School districts to make efforts to directly certify or assist in school meal application for children in a family who owe a week or more of unpaid meal debt Federal government to retroactively reimburse meals for up to 90 days | + Prohibits shaming/stigmatization of students |
| Caregivers Access and Responsible Expansion for Kids Act of 2019 (S 2760) | Authorizes: Direct certification for free school meals for children who are being raised by a relative who receives adoption or guardianship assistance, being raised by a grandparent or relatives due to placement by a state or tribal child welfare agency, living with grandparents/relatives with housing assistance, or automatically eligible for Medicaid | + Expands on the Healthy Hunger Free Kids Act inclusion of direct certification for foster children |
| Expanding Access to School Meals (HR 5308) | Eliminates: The reduced-price breakfast and lunch category Income eligibility for free school meals to 200% of federal poverty level Direct certification to Medicaid and CHIP The CEP The federal government to retroactively reimburse meals for up to 90 days | + Promotes mechanism to collect on unpaid meal debt with retroactive reimbursement |
| School Modernization and Efficient Access to Lunches for Students Act of 2019 (HR 5283 and S 2692) | Provides funding: To improve direct certification process and infrastructure; and For USDA CEP application deadline of June 30 and expands eligibility data time frame | + Improves mechanisms to support full uptake of both CEP and direct certification provisions |
| Universal School Meals Program Act of 2019 (S 2609 and HR 4684) | Prohibits: Children being denied school meals School lunch and breakfast for free to all children Free summer and after school meals and snacks to all children Promotion of procurement of local foods Reimbursement to the USDA-recommended amounts Summer EBT | + Promotes mechanism to feed all children |
All bills have only been introduced and referred to their committees of jurisdiction in the House and/or Senate (as of April 1, 2020).
HR=House of Representatives.
S=Senate.
CHIP=Children’s Health Insurance Program.
CEP=Community Eligibility Provision.
USDA=US Department of Agriculture.
EBT=electronic benefit transfer.
States aiming to address lunch shaming and unpaid meal debt through legislation.
| Anti–Lunch Shaming Legislation | Elimination of Reduced-Price Meal Category Legislation | Universal Meal or Establishment of Funding to Support Free Meals for All Legislation |
|---|---|---|
| Arkansas, California, Georgia, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Wisconsin | Colorado, Washington DC, Maine, Maryland, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oregon, Vermont, Washington | Oregon, West Virginia |