With school closures stemming from the novel coronavirus escalating, school leaders across the country must wrestle with another dilemma: if schools shut down, their students may not have access to meals.
Millions of students, in school districts big and small, rely on the free or discounted meals they eat at school. Advocates worry that as more schools close their doors, more children will go hungry.
鈥淭hese meals are a very big deal,鈥 said Joel Berg, chief executive officer of Hunger Free America, a New York-based nonprofit. 鈥淎lmost 30 million kids a day rely on government subsidized school meals. If schools are shut down for weeks at a time, we鈥檙e going to have a serious child hunger crisis.鈥
As of Monday, 507 U.S. schools had been closed or are scheduled to close, affecting 363,357 students, according to Education Week鈥檚 tracking of coronavirus-related shutdowns.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture, the federal agency that oversees the nation鈥檚 school meal programs, has issued guidance instructing schools on how to feed students during unanticipated school closures.
But that doesn鈥檛 mean school districts have contingency plans or that federal regulations make it easy to get meals to students amid a public health crisis.
Access to Food
In Fremont, Neb., the district decided to shut down schools for the week because of a local resident who may have been exposed to the virus. That means roughly 4,300 students are out of school for at least five days, and about 60 percent of families in the school district are eligible for free or reduced lunch, state data show.
While the school district does not currently have plans to distribute meals to students, officials are coordinating with the local United Way and food pantries in the region to ensure children in need are not missing meals in case the closure stretches beyond this week.
鈥淢any families rely on the breakfast and lunch that鈥檚 provided at school,鈥 said Christy Fiala, the executive director of the Fremont Area United Way. 鈥淢aking sure that when schools close unexpectedly close that [families have] access to food is important.鈥
An agriculture department memorandum issued in November allows some districts to offer meals using programs created to feed low-income children during the summer. But both programs requires 鈥渃ongregate feeding,鈥 which provides meals to children in group settings. One practice for preventing spread of the virus is to reduce large group gatherings.
鈥淲ell, if the whole point of closing schools or closing workplaces or campuses is to prevent people from congregating, that really defeats the purpose if people all have to go to a centralized location to get food,鈥 said Berg.
In a March 5 letter to Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue, the School Nutrition Association asked the agency to waive the requirements for congregate feeding and allow meals to be served at closed schools and community sites.
The group also urged the agriculture department to allow districts to deliver meals to multiple locations, 鈥渕inimizing families鈥 dependence on public transportation to access meals.鈥
鈥淓xpanding opportunities for school food authorities to serve students during anticipated school closures would help combat food insecurity, prevent massive amounts of food waste and spoilage in school cafeterias nationwide,鈥 the letter read, in part.
The agriculture department did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Education Week.
Developed in response to the coronavirus, interim guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggests that schools consider ways to distribute food, such as offering 鈥済rab-and-go鈥 bagged lunches or meal delivery, to avoid having students gather in groups.
Over the weekend, the agriculture department approved requests by California and the state of Washington to allow meal services during school closures.
鈥69传媒 have become such a hub of nutrition,鈥 said Chris Reykdal, the Washington state superintendent of public instruction. 鈥淚n many of our communities, if the school isn鈥檛 providing lunch and sometimes breakfast and lunch, there鈥檚 a real probability that students will lack nutrition.鈥
鈥楢 Basic Need鈥
Lori Uscher-Pines, a senior policy researcher at the RAND Corp., was among the researchers that on 鈥渟ocial distancing鈥 during influenza pandemics, but said the work has relevance to the current outbreak.
The research team explored how practices such as shutting down lunch rooms and mandating that students eat in classrooms or issuing prepacked lunches could slow the spread of the flu. The research team explored the role food plays in public schools.
鈥69传媒 have an educational mission, they鈥檙e not public health organizations,鈥 Uscher-Pines said. 鈥淣ow they鈥檙e supposed to be in the business of meal delivery. The schools seem to be under pressure to take on a lot of roles.鈥
Coronavirus has caused the most disruptions to schooling in Washington state, where education officials said they鈥檝e had to grapple with keeping meals flowing to students amid closures.
鈥淲e鈥檝e got to find a model for distribution in a very tough time,鈥 Reykdal said. 鈥淒istricts are trying to figure out how to do that well in an unusual moment where the school itself might be closed for instruction.鈥
In Bothell, Wash., the Northshore School District, closed all of its schools last Thursday for up to 14 days. The district began online classes for its students Monday and provided lunches to students, offering 鈥済rab and go鈥 meals at 17 school sites.
鈥淲e鈥檙e still servicing students as far as education goes,鈥 Juliana Fisher, the district鈥檚 food services director. 鈥淔ood is a basic need and everyone knows that students can鈥檛 learn if they don鈥檛 have the nutrition that they need. So we needed to find a way to make that available.鈥
The district has 23,500 students and about 13.5 percent of them鈥攎ore than 3,000鈥攓ualify for free or reduced lunch, Fisher said. One of the first challenges to making meals available was having staff members in place to prepare and deliver them. She said staff members who felt they were at high-risk for getting the virus could opt out of work.
鈥淥ne of our biggest concerns was making sure that our staff and our community stay safe,鈥 Fisher said. 鈥淲e also had to determine what staff was available. And so those were the two big things. And then once we had those, we could kind of organize people into groups and work with our transportation team for doing meal delivery.鈥
The district offered two meals options on Monday: orange chicken with rice and steamed carrots or yogurt with sunflower seeds and granola and a side salad of kale for vegetarians.
69传媒 did not have to pre-order. If they showed up, they received a meal, Fisher said.
鈥淪ituations like this really show how important it is and how much some families depend on those meals at school,鈥 she said.
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