Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s great your poopsies love it, but the reality is FCPS is large and serves many different kids. A lot of kids won’t touch it.
What is your point? Would you rather they NOT have a salad bar that a lot of kids enjoy just because your special snowflake will only eat chicken nuggets and fries and will throw it out if they're touching each other?
I hate to see waste in the schools. And this is one example of where there will be a lot of waste.
You don't know that. You're just making things up and doubling down even after several people told you our kids love the salad bar. Not every kid is like yours, a lot of them like veggies, a lot of us are raising our children differently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s great your poopsies love it, but the reality is FCPS is large and serves many different kids. A lot of kids won’t touch it.
What is your point? Would you rather they NOT have a salad bar that a lot of kids enjoy just because your special snowflake will only eat chicken nuggets and fries and will throw it out if they're touching each other?
I hate to see waste in the schools. And this is one example of where there will be a lot of waste.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s great your poopsies love it, but the reality is FCPS is large and serves many different kids. A lot of kids won’t touch it.
What is your point? Would you rather they NOT have a salad bar that a lot of kids enjoy just because your special snowflake will only eat chicken nuggets and fries and will throw it out if they're touching each other?
I hate to see waste in the schools. And this is one example of where there will be a lot of waste.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s great your poopsies love it, but the reality is FCPS is large and serves many different kids. A lot of kids won’t touch it.
What is your point? Would you rather they NOT have a salad bar that a lot of kids enjoy just because your special snowflake will only eat chicken nuggets and fries and will throw it out if they're touching each other?
Anonymous wrote:It’s great your poopsies love it, but the reality is FCPS is large and serves many different kids. A lot of kids won’t touch it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s great your poopsies love it, but the reality is FCPS is large and serves many different kids. A lot of kids won’t touch it.
I have been teaching for the county for 20 years. When the salad bar was introduced, the purchase of school lunches increased. Most children (and teachers) really enjoyed it. I think your kid is the outlier.
All the teachers I know don’t want to eat from it because we’ve watched our students use it first and, let’s just say that even with all the proper training and precautions, it doesn’t seem exactly sanitary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a kid in FCPS in the 80’s. I fondly remember the salad bar, especially on Friday’s when it was taco salad day. Line was out the door.
Also an fcps kid in the late 80s and it was always pizza on Fridays.
I don't think healthy eating -aka salad bar - was in fcps vocabulary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s great your poopsies love it, but the reality is FCPS is large and serves many different kids. A lot of kids won’t touch it.
I have been teaching for the county for 20 years. When the salad bar was introduced, the purchase of school lunches increased. Most children (and teachers) really enjoyed it. I think your kid is the outlier.
All the teachers I know don’t want to eat from it because we’ve watched our students use it first and, let’s just say that even with all the proper training and precautions, it doesn’t seem exactly sanitary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s great your poopsies love it, but the reality is FCPS is large and serves many different kids. A lot of kids won’t touch it.
I have been teaching for the county for 20 years. When the salad bar was introduced, the purchase of school lunches increased. Most children (and teachers) really enjoyed it. I think your kid is the outlier.
All the teachers I know don’t want to eat from it because we’ve watched our students use it first and, let’s just say that even with all the proper training and precautions, it doesn’t seem exactly sanitary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s great your poopsies love it, but the reality is FCPS is large and serves many different kids. A lot of kids won’t touch it.
I have been teaching for the county for 20 years. When the salad bar was introduced, the purchase of school lunches increased. Most children (and teachers) really enjoyed it. I think your kid is the outlier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a kid in FCPS in the 80’s. I fondly remember the salad bar, especially on Friday’s when it was taco salad day. Line was out the door.
Also an fcps kid in the late 80s and it was always pizza on Fridays.
I don't think healthy eating -aka salad bar - was in fcps vocabulary.
Anonymous wrote:I was a kid in FCPS in the 80’s. I fondly remember the salad bar, especially on Friday’s when it was taco salad day. Line was out the door.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s great your poopsies love it, but the reality is FCPS is large and serves many different kids. A lot of kids won’t touch it.
I have been teaching for the county for 20 years. When the salad bar was introduced, the purchase of school lunches increased. Most children (and teachers) really enjoyed it. I think your kid is the outlier.
Anonymous wrote:It’s great your poopsies love it, but the reality is FCPS is large and serves many different kids. A lot of kids won’t touch it.