Our elementary school (not in Potomac) has a salad bar and the food is fresh, but options are limited. |
I feel so sorry that your children suffer in order for other kids to have a meal. Your poor little poopsies. Now I'm crying at my desk. |
They should have different menus for schools west of the 270. These kids have refined taste buds. |
My personal chef does! Can you believe she asked for a raise because I asked her to start packing macrobiotic lunches for my kids? The nerve! |
what? Do you have lunch with him on a daily basis? How else do you know this? |
LOL. I work at a FARMS school and yes, the food is total crap. Be grateful that you have the choice to pack your own child's lunch. |
What? Your snowflakes are too good for chicken nuggets? |
Yes!! Of course they do! They are packed by the nanny. |
In MCPS, food is food no matter where you're located. http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/foodserv/ We don't discriminate. |
When I was on the PTA (at a Potomac school), we got a request from a parent to bring in one of the school lunch services that delivers healthy lunches. I can't remember the name of the service but the thought was that it could be an option for those families interested in paying for it. Families that did not want to pay could continue to bring a lunch or buy the MCPS lunch. Principal said this was not allowed in MCPS. |
You obviously have never dealt with the privileged crowd in Potomac. |
That observation was made during an open house. You think the school deliberately served crappy food on that particular day and on other days his lunches would be dramatically better? ![]() |
Because Potomac kids are so speshul. Thank goodness sanity prevails at some level in MCPS. |
+1, public schools have turned into subsidized daycare |
Maybe if we as a people/our government supported children in more substantial ways, schools would not need to step in and play these various roles in addition to the educational one they were set up for. Federally, we spend $7 on programs for elderly people for every $1 spent on programs for children. (That disparity is boggling, at least to me.) The result of that has been an incredible reduction in the number of older people living in poverty since the 1970s — but 21 percent of the children in the United States live in families with incomes below the poverty level, the highest percentage since 1993 and the highest numbers (about 16.4 million) since 1962. http://www.brookings.edu/~/media/research/files/reports/2009/11/05%20spending%20children%20isaacs/1_how_much_isaacs.pdf |