Anonymous wrote:Correct. Income on the form is self reported and is not verified.
Anonymous wrote:[guardian]Anonymous wrote:In the recent past, families at my school self reported. Believe me, no one wants school lunch. It's gross. Also, no one wants teachers and office staff to know they are poor. In the last year though, my district did away with any income verification. Any kid who wants breakfast or lunch can have it, free of charge. This change happened because older kids were beginning to put together "they are poor" with the kids who don't pay each day. Our state didn't want kids avoiding ordering lunch because they didn't want to be seen as poor. No kid wants to be the poor kid. Some will go hungry to avoid that stigma. Especially, if they are in a district like mine with a wide income spread. We have families of 6 living on less than 20K a year and then we have families of 3 living on 100K. That's a big difference.
In middle school/high school most kids buy lunch from school. My two MS kids buy because they are too lazy to pack their lunches, and they so that most of the other kids at their middle class school buy as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is very cynical, but I expect the next frontier will be well-off families applying for FARMS because it gives them a significant leg up in admission to magnet schools (which it does in MoCo).
My guess is they'd probably audit it for the few FARMS applications to the magnets. But.. it's MCPS and they tend to mess a lot of things up.. so maybe not.
Well-off families would have an easier time having their child self-identify as a race that is not heavily represented in the magnet programs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fwiw, the vast majority of people are honest.
OP here. I believe that as well and obviously the schools that have the largest number of farm families are located in low income areas, so presumably many of them are being truthful, but I guess I find it rather hard to believe that this all operates on the honor system, and there is no attempt to determine whether the family’s income is as low as what they self report.
The danger of kids going hungry because of difficulties with verification paperwork is much greater than a few kids getting a free lunch unnecessarily.
That's also why some schools have community eligibility.
Anonymous wrote:This is very cynical, but I expect the next frontier will be well-off families applying for FARMS because it gives them a significant leg up in admission to magnet schools (which it does in MoCo).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are random audits that require verification.
And if they are audited, and found not to qualify, what happens? Nothing. They just don't get free lunch. There's no deterant in stopping someone with the inclination to lie from doing so.
Anonymous wrote:This is very cynical, but I expect the next frontier will be well-off families applying for FARMS because it gives them a significant leg up in admission to magnet schools (which it does in MoCo).
How many people are going to try to scam the system for what would amount to $10-$15 a week?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In the recent past, families at my school self reported. Believe me, no one wants school lunch. It's gross. Also, no one wants teachers and office staff to know they are poor. In the last year though, my district did away with any income verification. Any kid who wants breakfast or lunch can have it, free of charge. This change happened because older kids were beginning to put together "they are poor" with the kids who don't pay each day. Our state didn't want kids avoiding ordering lunch because they didn't want to be seen as poor. No kid wants to be the poor kid. Some will go hungry to avoid that stigma. Especially, if they are in a district like mine with a wide income spread. We have families of 6 living on less than 20K a year and then we have families of 3 living on 100K. That's a big difference.
What state is this? Here all kids have an identical lunch card. No one can tell whether the parent put money in the kid's account or if they are getting reduced lunch. I find it highly surprising that your state hasn't thought of this.
Of course you understand that not every parent has access to a credit card or the internet, and therefore has no way to put money into an "account". I'm in a state west of DC.