It's this. Americans LOVE voting against their own interests. |
Check the APS website for starters: Barcroft, Barrett, Carlin Springs, Dr. Charles R. Drew and Randolph elementary schools are CEP schools and will provide meals at no cost next school year. |
I saw that the schools ran out of food very quickly today. |
I can't speak for the PP you're judging; but that person did say they CAN afford it. Nevertheless, there is always a cut-off line and therefore always people who just miss the cut-off. You never know what the financial situation is for any family. There may be a lot of additional health expenses for a child with special needs or illnesses; student loans and/or home mortgages to pay; etc. The point, I believe, is that there are a lot of families considered middle income who are having a more difficult time making ends meet with inflation, yearly rising property taxes, more and more fees for everything - and increased fees, and always having to pay the full fee for everything. A family with an income of $103K/year is expected to pay the same as a family with an income of $203K or $250K+/year. Logically, the $250K family would have significantly more discretionary income to spend on all these things without feeling as much of a pinch. |
There are a lot of processed foods in APS school lunches. Just having a vegetable or two available doesn't make the whole meal healthy and nutritious - or tasty. And not all kids get "the meal" - rather, ala cart options. |
Couldn't agree more. Elected leaders (even locally) are so out-of-touch with the realities of their constituents and they are seemingly incapable of actually analyzing the complexities of a situation to understand what would actually SOLVE a problem versus bandaid a symptom. |
Those were the packed lunches they were handing out when schools were closed. My kid's school lunches were the same as before: a meat and a vegetarian main option with a fruit and vegetable side. |
So, a certain %age eligible for FRL makes everyone at the school get it for free? Over 40% qualifies as Title I; but are you saying there's another layer on top of that? Is that part of why Arlington is so gung-ho about concentrating poverty? |
What FRL rate makes the whole school eligible for free meals? |
Is this a new program? We were Barcroft but meals weren't free for everyone when we were there. |
Thank you for this post, OP. It was actually more interesting than I thought it would be and I now support universal free school lunch. I hadn't considered the cost of running the FRL program and the greater simplicity and efficiency of just providing meals for everyone.
I agree with the poster who said they'd support universal free lunch if they do something about the nutrition and quality of the meals. Ketchup should not be considered a vegetable. 4 fried chicken nuggets is not nutrition. USDA puts out daily nutrition guidelines....they should be ensuring the food under their program is actually healthy and nutritious. We need to start by going back to preparing food on-site at each school and get rid of a lot of the pre-packaged processed crap that is contributing greatly to the obesity problem. Concurrently, we need to re-instate more recess and movement breaks and more substantial PE programs through 12th grade. Why only 2 years (4 semesters, so only one full year) of PE in high school? The point is to instill a healthy lifestyle....but apparently just until you're 15 or 16. |
+1 to everything. People move here because the salary looks amazing. After a couple months they realize how much it actually costs to live here, add a bit of inflation and then $103k doesn't look that rich. |
I don't know - Ask APS. That's directly from their website. |