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NJ School District Cuts Portions for Students $3 Behind on Lunch Payment

CALIFON, N.J. – It’s bad enough that school children across the nation are going hungry on the skimpy portions offered through the Michelle Obama lunch menu.At the Tewksbury school district in New Jersey, children who fall $3.10 behind on their food payments get one hard-boiled egg, a package of crackers and a carton of milk for lunch.

The Tewksbury district consists of two schools, one for grades K-4 and one for grades 5-8. Lunches at the school cost $2.40 per day. That means children are only allowed to fall one day behind in their lunch payments before getting stuck with the egg special.

The lunches at Tewksbury, like most in schools across the nation, are subsidized by the federal government.

Frankly, we’re confused. We thought the feds provide low-cost school lunches because many children come from impoverished homes where the food budget is tight, or from homes where meals are not prepared on a regular basis. The government wants to make sure every kid receives proper nutrition and the dignity that comes with eating a full lunch with classmates.

But at Tewksbury, kids who fall a day behind in their payments are left to gnaw on hard-boiled eggs while their friends eat the full serving on the menu.

Apparently school officials are willing to humiliate children into coughing up three dollars and ten cents.We were unable to determine how many children, if any, have been affected by the new policy at this point.

Tanya Bischoff, the mother of three children in the Tewksbury district, said she asked a group of students at a soccer match this week if they knew of any students who had been affected.

Several kids told her that a fifth-grade boy had been reduced to eating the miniscule lunch, and all of his classmates knew about it.

“It’s a huge humiliation for a kid,” said Bischoff, who said she was stunned when she learned about the new policy. “That something that will probably stick with him the rest of his life.”

Bischoff forwarded EAGnews copies of two letters she received from Maschio’s Food Services Inc., the contractor that provides lunches for the school district.

One letter bragged about how Maschio’s school lunches “are healthy and well balanced and provide students all the nutrition they need to succeed at school.”

But the second letter warned that “a student may have a maximum school lunch account balance of negative three dollars and ten cents (-3.10). After this negative balance has been reached, if no monies are received, the student will receive a hard-boiled egg, a package of crackers and a milk for lunch until a deposit is made to their account.”

The letters were dated in August, but weren’t sent out until September, after school started, according to Bischoff. She said she only heard about the new policy from her children, after it was announced over the intercom during lunch on the first day of school.

“The kids found out before the parents,” Bischoff said. “That’s what made everyone upset.

“My youngest daughter was very nervous. She told me to make sure I have money in her account, because she’s very scared she’s going to be served a hard-boiled egg.”

As a former volunteer in the school cafeteria, Bischoff said she knows how easy it is for young children to lose or forget their lunch money. She said she also understands how easy it can be for parents to forget a lunch payment for a day or two.

“It’s not difficult at all,” Bischoff said. “I volunteered in the cafeteria for years, and I don’t know how many kids came up to me and said they lost their lunch money. They had tears in their eyes and asked me what they were going to do.

“It happens more than you think.”

Bischoff said she has talked to many other parents in the district, and everyone is outraged by the new policy.

“I talked to friends on the phone and they were shocked,” Bischoff said. “In years past, if there was money owed or a child forgot money, they would still give them a meal.

“It’s outrageous. We look at it as if they’re making some sort of statement. This is not about nutrition. This is not because the school can’t afford it. They’re making a punitive statement with this policy. They’re punishing the parent through the child.”

We encountered some confusion about the identity of the official who signed the letter warning parents about the egg policy. It was signed, “Cathy Pepe, Director, Maschio’s Food Services.”

Officials at Maschio’s said Pepe works for the school district. School officials said Pepe works for Maschio’s. We were unable to contact Pepe, wherever she works.

Joanne Untamo, director of operations for Maschio’s Food Services, said the hard-boiled egg policy was established by the school district.

But she defended the policy, saying “no school has any responsibility to serve a child lunch if they don’t have money. Most schools are generous in that they allow a student to charge a few times.

“There are a lot of parents who are not being responsible. If you don’t have the policy, you end up with a lot of outstanding meal balances that don’t get paid.”

When asked if it was right to punish small children because their parents fail to pay, Untamo said “parents can come to board meetings and have input (on the policy).”

Officials at the Tewksbury school board office declined to comment. A detailed message was left with the school district’s attorney, but he failed to return the call.

http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2012/09/29/A-3-debt-in-Tewksbury-New-Jersey-schools-gets-you-one-hard-boiled-egg-and-crackers-for-lunch


Added: Oct-1-2012 Occurred On: Oct-1-2012
By: marc1921
In:
Regional News
Tags: the, hard-boiled, egg, policy
Location: New Jersey, United States (load item map)
Marked as: approved
Views: 1390 | Comments: 70 | Votes: 0 | Favorites: 1 | Shared: 0 | Updates: 0 | Times used in channels: 2
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  • Comment of user 'boofhead' has been deleted by author!
    • @boofhead No kidding. At our local High School, kids (parents) are paying $5.25 a day for nutritious food that they could have bought at the grocer for $2. The kids are hungry because they're accustomed to eating what is practically garbage.......now we have a "huge" obesity problem and when they're presented with wheat bread instead of white they treat it like it's poisonous.

      Posted Oct-1-2012 By 

      (2)

  • Another in a long list of unintended consequences when the state acts as substitute parent.

    Posted Oct-1-2012 By 

    (3)

  • What about an egg salad sandwich at least? It sickens me though, that prisoners get three hots and a cot for FREE, yet a child cannot get a lunch, because a family might not be able to afford it.

    Posted Oct-1-2012 By 

    (3)

  • Pay up, deadbeats.

    How much do you want to bet that every single household of these "poor" children has a big screen tv, cell phones, and a computer?

    Posted Oct-1-2012 By 

    (3)

  • I don't know if it's this way elsewhere, but that's been the norm for over 20 years here. Unless you're on some means of credit with the school, if you cross the $5 debt limit, you got your lunch cut in half.

    Posted Oct-1-2012 By 

    (2)

  • The real question is why schools are advancing credit to kids...? If you haven't got the money, don't buy it. Good life lesson right there.

    Posted Oct-1-2012 By 

    (2)

  • "children who fall $3.10 behind on their food payments get one hard-boiled egg, a package of crackers and a carton of milk for lunch."

    Good.

    Posted Oct-1-2012 By 

    (1)

  • Solution: More tax dollars to Obama's "Free Lunch" program.

    Posted Oct-1-2012 By 

    (1)

  • what you cant take your own lunch in the US? hard-boiled egg, pack of crackers and a carton of milk for lunch, is plenty anyway. I remember in high school most of the fatties didn't even eat anything, too embarrassed.

    Posted Oct-1-2012 By 

    (1)

  • If you a are a parent you know very well kids throw away most of the food, and low income families apply for the food card giving them a few hundred more a month. So, cutting back on portions is good for there health and eat all of there portions. Giving a huge savings for public schools for other...like paying a teacher what there are worth...or worse just keeping a teacher on the payroll.

    Posted Oct-1-2012 By 

    (1)

  • hardboiled eggs are very nutritious, these kids are very lucky

    Posted Oct-1-2012 By 

    (1)

  • I recall when it was a peanut butter sandwich and a carton of milk that was all one could expect for free?

    I continue to pay taxes on property although I have no children. I completely support a 50% reduction in all elected officials pay effective immediately.

    That money can easily be used to up the schools budgets by a few percentage points.

    ---
    Vote for Gary Johnson, please no more of the same old bipartisan politics.

    Posted Oct-1-2012 By 

    (1)

  • There's a thing called a grocery store.....you can buy food there. If parents are too stupid to pay a fraction of the price and ensure their children eat well rather than leaving it to a "nanny state", then maybe we don't want their genes in our pool.

    Posted Oct-1-2012 By 

    (1)

  • I think education should be our primary investment. Great minds cause great things. Food nourishes the body. Knowledge nourishes the soul. The body kinda holds the soul, so fucking feed these children dammit!

    Posted Oct-1-2012 By 

    (1)

  • If mom and dad dont give a fuck, then who should?
    This was always the case. If you didnt have lunch money, then you could go to the office and "borrow" so many times. Usually only once.

    Posted Oct-1-2012 By 

    (0)

    • @xfer42

      The answer, I suppose, is the rest of us should.

      Posted Oct-1-2012 By 

      (-1)

    • @PocoBueno They can apply for lunch tickets and get a regular lunch at either a reduced rate or free. In the 80s, lunch at my high school was $1.25. Parents gave me $2 everyday. I skipped lunch so I could by cigarettes. If they are poor, they can still get lunch. Do you think I would have qualified for a free lunch?

      Posted Oct-1-2012 By 

      (1)

    • @xfer42

      I wasn't talking about social justice, not that there is such a thing, but humiliating kids doesn't rest easy with me.

      Posted Oct-1-2012 By 

      (0)

    • @PocoBueno I agree.

      Posted Oct-1-2012 By 

      (0)