![]() ![]() A parent of one of the Utah children told the Salt Lake Tribune it was a “despicable” act, and questioned why children should be “punished or humiliated for something the parents obviously need to clear up.” And two years ago in Utah, some 40 students had their lunches seized for unpaid meal debts in a case that caused a national uproar. A 12-year-old in Dickinson, Texas had his school breakfast dumped over a 30 cent debt. In Dowagiac, Michigan, Dominic Gant, a high-schooler, was left embarrassed and hungry when his lunch was taken and trashed for owing $4.95. Last year in Bedford, Kentucky, parents complained and accused the local elementary school of “bullying” after a child’s lunch was confiscated and thrown away in front of her friends for running a negative balance. And the result is hungry children, stunned parents, and increasing questions about how school districts handle overdue payments. “There should be a way to indicate before they get into line that they don’t have enough on their account to save the distress of having to return their lunch,” she said.Ī debate on school nutrition-trading pizza, fries, and cookies for whole grains, fruits and vegetables-has raged for years, while a parallel debate has gone somewhat unnoticed and unaddressed: What should be the consequence for children with delinquent school-meal accounts? While the most pressing issue in some school cafeterias is students tossing healthier school lunches in the trash, in others it is school employees dumping children’s lunches in the trash for nonpayment. Still, Frost says a process that subjects children to the embarrassment of returning their lunch-one that isn’t uncommon in schools across the country-just isn’t sound. The Silver Spring, Maryland, mom says the lunch server graciously let Natalie keep her selected hot lunch with a reminder to bring money for her meal account. When her youngest went through the cafeteria line to buy lunch, the cafeteria worker told Natalie she didn’t have enough money to pay for her food: Her mother had forgotten to make the last deposit. As the mother of four, refilling school lunch accounts is second nature by now, but last week she was caught by surprise. Sifting through permission slips, picture day fliers, field-trip notices, and other forms seems like a daily occurrence, and often somewhere lost in the pile is a reminder to send money to her fifth-grader’s school cafeteria. Like many parents of school-age children, Frances Frost tries to keep up with the papers sent home in her daughter Natalie’s backpack. ![]()
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