Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s the farms cutoff for this?
There isn’t one.
All kids eat free.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So when does every kid in Fairfax county get this?
I take 25 students to lunch. On a typical day I'd say 2 to 4 eat school lunch. Even if it was free I doubt many more than that would eat school lunch.
Not true. We are in Vienna and a lot of kids buy lunch including mine. It’s convenient. Our school is not on that list and does not need to be.
In Vienna, too. My kids have never bought lunch after trying it 3 times.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So when does every kid in Fairfax county get this?
I take 25 students to lunch. On a typical day I'd say 2 to 4 eat school lunch. Even if it was free I doubt many more than that would eat school lunch.
Not true. We are in Vienna and a lot of kids buy lunch including mine. It’s convenient. Our school is not on that list and does not need to be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not in VA but Baltimore City schools decided to do this for all schools a few years ago. All students in all school receive free breakfast and lunch. It makes the breakfast and lunch lines move a lot faster since students no longer have to enter their PIN number at the end of the line.
Yeah, and it’s really improved the schools in Baltimore, hasn’t it? Bet it will only accelerate the flight of non-FARMS families from those schools.
Wow, you are pretty heartless. So we should only feed kids on the taxpayer's dime IF it increases test scores?
Giving even more free stuff to families in those areas and having the schools show up as 100% FARMS on state reports certainly won’t improve those neighborhoods. Teaching personal responsibility might.
Anonymous wrote:The privilege on this thread is astounding.
Anonymous wrote:I actually think Woodburn is a typo and it should be Woodlawn in Alexandria.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So when does every kid in Fairfax county get this?
I take 25 students to lunch. On a typical day I'd say 2 to 4 eat school lunch. Even if it was free I doubt many more than that would eat school lunch.
Not true. We are in Vienna and a lot of kids buy lunch including mine. It’s convenient. Our school is not on that list and does not need to be.
How is what I wrote not true? My post was about my experience at my school, not your school in Vienna. I take them to lunch every day. On average 2-4 will eat school lunch and I’d bet most would still pack even if it was free.
Sorry I wasn’t clear and came off as rude. I believe it is true for your school. I meant it’s not true that children are not interested in eating or even buying the school lunch. My children were very excited for pizza day today.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:School lunch is awful. If people are going to spend taxpayers money on feeding kids, make sure it's nutritious and edible.
They are nutritious now and largely go untouched by many students. At our school, those who receive a free lunch are required to take one. If they skip the line that day, an attendant brings a tray to them. Even if they don't want it, that's the rule. And then it gets thrown away untouched. These are kids who get bags of food to carry them over the weekend (mostly junk food, like, boxed mac & cheese and Chef Boyardee) and are known to be food insecure. Hungry kids would rather go hungry than eat the garbage given to them... that's sad.
Lol. I checked out my local school's lunch menu which markets 'nutritious food' but it's still crap like pizza and corn dog. Just because it's whole grain doesn't make it nutritious. This country has a very warped idea of nutrition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:School lunch is awful. If people are going to spend taxpayers money on feeding kids, make sure it's nutritious and edible.
They are nutritious now and largely go untouched by many students. At our school, those who receive a free lunch are required to take one. If they skip the line that day, an attendant brings a tray to them. Even if they don't want it, that's the rule. And then it gets thrown away untouched. These are kids who get bags of food to carry them over the weekend (mostly junk food, like, boxed mac & cheese and Chef Boyardee) and are known to be food insecure. Hungry kids would rather go hungry than eat the garbage given to them... that's sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So when does every kid in Fairfax county get this?
I take 25 students to lunch. On a typical day I'd say 2 to 4 eat school lunch. Even if it was free I doubt many more than that would eat school lunch.
Not true. We are in Vienna and a lot of kids buy lunch including mine. It’s convenient. Our school is not on that list and does not need to be.
How is what I wrote not true? My post was about my experience at my school, not your school in Vienna. I take them to lunch every day. On average 2-4 will eat school lunch and I’d bet most would still pack even if it was free.