This 2023 legislative session, we are committed to supporting no-cost meals for all CT Public School students with a policy that creates equity and economic opportunities.
IT’S TIME TO MOBILIZE AND SUPPORT OUR KIDS
1 in 8 Connecticut Children Suffer From Hunger
IT’S TIME TO MOBILIZE AND SUPPORT OUR KIDS
1 in 8 Connecticut Children Suffer From Hunger
What we support
- Providing a free, healthy school breakfast and lunch for all Connecticut school kids
- Incentivize farm to school collaboration
- Maximize federal reimbursements for school meals
- Parents always having the option to provide a meal for their children
Watch: Advocacy Matters
Our Priorities
Students will be more successful academically and behaviorally with nutritious meals
Studies have proven that performance on standardized test scores for math and reading are increased with healthy school meals.* Hungry students can’t focus in the classroom, are disruptive, and don’t reach their full academic potential.
*Explore the research here.
Families would have much needed economic relief
School Meals for All protects families from economic hardship. Parents won’t have to worry lunch debt, or having to pack lunches on school days, reducing their grocery costs, and freeing up their resources for other necessities.
Elevating school meals means greater access to fresh, local food
An essential component to School Meals for All includes expanding efforts to incorporate local food in school meals and giving students more opportunities to taste the fresh flavors of CT Grown. Buying from local farmers and connecting students to food through hands-on-learning is a win-win for schools, farmers, and the CT economy.
Stigma and shame will be lessened with no-cost meals
When everyone is welcome, more kids participate in school meals – no-cost meals levels the playing field so kids in every community can achieve their full potential.
Reduces administrative cost while providing more resources for schools, staff, and Board of Educations
Schools can focus on strengthening educational opportunities that keep healthy meals on students’ plate. Administrative costs when it comes to paperwork will be diminished, leaving school food directors to focus on feeding nutritious meals to their students.
Community Voices
In every school district in the state, regardless of the wealth of the community, there are children who can’t learn because they are hungry. Connecticut can be a national leader in funding universal school meals indefinitely to ensure the physical and mental health of our children and keep their focus on earning A’s in the classroom rather than a growling stomach.
I support healthy school meals for all because it would be nice to get a break somewhere since food and everything we need day to day is so expensive. Also some people can’t work or are single parents and struggle to put meals on the table every day.
Since free meals stopped, I have friends who don’t eat lunch because they don’t have food at home and don’t have money to buy it. I think that everyone deserves to have food but especially kids. I hope that Connecticut will pass legislation that gets food to the kids who don’t have it otherwise.
As a pediatrician, every day I see how important it is for children to have access to healthy, nutritious food. Children who experience food insecurity, defined as a lack of access to consistent food or nutritious food are at increased risk of multiple negative health outcomes… it is critical for Connecticut’s elected officials to act now to ensure that all Connecticut’s children have access to free school meals in order to ensure that all children and especially those who experienced structural inequities have a healthy bright future.
I’m frustrated that we have this fantastic program that used to give access to all our students to healthy meals with local foods. And now I have to cut back on the quality of those meals. I’m frustrated that I have students in every school that are going hungry every day now. I’m frustrated that when I talk to parents who just want to feed their children, that there’s nothing I can do to help them.
When our life stops when our child is hungry, the life of the legislature should stop as well. Because these are Connecticut children, they are our children.
I am concerned about the psychological damage done to students that skip meals because they cannot buy it at school. Hunger at school could be a core memory that will impact a person forever.
I can’t bring that much food from home and it’s not really healthy. I don’t want my parents to pay so much for school lunch every day, they should rather worry about stuff like our gas bill. The food I bring is also not enough for until 5 p.m. when I get home, because of sports.
Since lunch has stopped being free, myself and many others have stopped getting the school lunch. By not getting lunch, people are not able to appreciate the lunch ladies hard work and cooking and lots of food is going to waste.
Getting free food helps my family w/ getting & saving more money for bills. Multiple of my friends can’t afford lunches sometimes & it’s sad watching.
My mother is a registered nurse in the Willington schools. She has seen first-hand the effects of children coming to school hungry or becoming hungry as the day goes on. They spend valuable class time coming to her office looking for a snack or wanting to lie down because they are tired or do not feel well due to lack of food. My mom, along with many other professionals in her school, provide snacks as they are able. A more sustainable solution, such as no-cost school meals, is essential to best support students like the ones my mom sees and the many others like them across the state.
WAYS TO BECOME INVOLVED
Take Action
Sign a letter, submit a letter-to-the-editor, or email your legislator to show your support for school meals for all.
Newsletter Sign Up
Don’t miss important information on how you can advocate for us in person and online straight to your inbox.
OUR PARTNERS
The School Meals for All Connecticut coalition represents education, health, agriculture, and food agencies. We advocate for investments in school meals that fight child hunger, support rural and agricultural communities, help mitigate climate change, strengthen regional school food supply chains, and support school nutrition workers.
GET IN TOUCH
Follow us on social media to stay up-to-date
Have questions or a story about school meals that you’d like to share? Contact Lucy Nolan, EHC! Policy Director
Cover Image by Channing Johnson