
BY: SHAUNEEN MIRANDA
State's Newsroom
WASHINGTON â Amid persistent child hunger and food insecurity in the United States, lawmakers and advocates on Wednesday stressed the importance of school meal programs during a U.S. Senate Agriculture subcommittee hearing.
Hunger severely impacts kidsâ emotional and physical well-being and can lead to negative outcomes in school, research has shown. Last year, 47.4 million people lived in food-insecure households, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Federally funded efforts, such as the National School Lunch Program and School Breakfast Program, provide free and reduced-cost meals to students across the country.
Advocates say these programs play a crucial role in helping to reduce child hunger and urged the panel to expand them.
âSchool lunch should always be free and definitely free of judgment,â said Sen. John Fetterman, who chairs the Subcommittee on Food and Nutrition, Specialty Crops, Organics, and Research.
âHonestly, it shouldnât be a conversation â it would be like asking the kids to pay for the school bus every morning or to pay for their own textbooks at school,â Fetterman said.
Fetterman and fellow Pennsylvania Democrat Sen. Bob Casey introduced two bills in June aiming to expand free or reduced-price meals access for kids. Part of the initiatives also call for amending the Community Eligibility Provision, which allows schools and school districts in low-income areas to offer free meal options to all students.
Fetterman also sponsored the Universal School Meals Program Act, an effort introduced by independent Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders last May, which would âprovide free breakfast, lunch, and dinner to every student â without demanding they prove they are poor enough to deserve help getting three meals a day,â according to Sandersâ summary of the bill. U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar, a Minnesota Democrat, introduced a companion bill.
Subcommittee ranking member Mike Braun of Indiana said he introduced the American Food for American Schools Act last July with Ohio Democrat Sen. Sherrod Brown in an effort âto better prioritize and support the use of American food in school meal programs.â
That bipartisan bill would increase requirements for school meals to include U.S. products.
States a model
Crystal FitzSimons, interim president of the Food Research & Action Center, pointed out that eight states have implemented policies that offer school meals to all students, regardless of oneâs household income. Those states are California, Colorado, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Mexico and Vermont.
The national nonprofit aims to reduce poverty-related hunger in the U.S. through research, advocacy and policy solutions.
âWhile those eight states are showing us what is possible, there are critical steps the subcommittee and Congress should take to enhance the reach and impact of school meals nationwide,â FitzSimons said.
As one piece of the puzzle, FitzSimons said Congress can âensure that all children nationwide are hunger-free and ready to learn while they are at school by allowing all schools to offer meals to all their students at no chargeâ and the Universal School Meals Program Act âcreates that path.â
Meg Bruening, professor and department head at Pennsylvania State Universityâs Department of Nutritional Sciences, said âthe school meal programs in the U.S. provide a critical safety net for almost 30 million children with meals each yearâ â comprising 60% of children in the country.
Bruening said these school meal programs align closely with the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, âensuring a variety of healthy foods are offered to children while at school, where children spend most of their waking and eating hours.â
The guidelines, developed by the USDA and the Health and Human Services Department, are updated every five years.
Summer EBT
Georgia Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock underscored how child hunger increases in the summer months when kids lack access to regular meals at school.
Thirty-seven states, the District of Columbia and multiple territories and tribal nations opted in this year to a new effort, known as Summer EBT, to feed kids during the long summer months.
Also called Sun Bucks, the USDA initiative provides low-income families with school-aged children a grocery-buying benefit of $120 per child for the summer.
But 13 states, including Georgia, chose not to participate in the program in 2024. The USDA said states have until Jan. 1 to submit a notice of intent if they plan to participate in the program next year.
Warnock said he hopes state leaders reverse their position on Summer EBT.
âUnfortunately, my home state â the state of Georgia â has not opted in to Sun Bucks, with some officials saying it does not result in higher nutritional outcomes for students, and that existing programs are âeffective,ââ he said.
âI heard our state leadership say: âWe donât need it,ââ he added. âIâm still trying to figure out who this âweâ is â for whom are you speaking when you say: âWe donât need it?ââ
A spokesperson for Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp has said the governor has concerns about the programâs dietary standards and cost.



