
School Nutrition
Guidance, policy updates and actionable resources for schools & districts focused on nutritional standards and access to school meals.
Background
ÂÜÀòÍøstrongly supports the enactment of comprehensive services and programs that encourage children to be healthy.
- Schools will not have to do anything for SY24-25 – everything will remain the same.
- Sodium is far less stringent than the original proposal – there will only be one more reduction.
- Milk and whole grain rules remain the same as now.
- Moving forward states are not required to take fiscal action against districts who are not able to be in compliance due to supply chain disruptions for other issues.
AASA's Position & Priorities
The guiding principles for federal education policy stem from equity and the important role the federal government stands to play in creating equitable learning opportunities for all students. ÂÜÀòÍøis committed to advocating for better access to school meals and reasonable nutrition standards for students in the public school system.
AASA's priorities are to:
- Support universal school meals on the contingency that such policies do no harm to eligibility for and enrollment in existing federal funding streams serving schools, and fully cover costs associated with the program
- Refrain from increasing the administrative burden related to nutrition eligibility verification
- Ensure that licensing and certification requirements for school nutrition workers are a state responsibility
- Ensure federal school meal reimbursement rates are sufficient to cover the full cost of production
“For years, ÂÜÀòÍøhas been sounding the alarm that when nutrition standards go too far result is meals that students are not willing to consume, undermining the entire purpose of the program – to feed students and ensure they are ready to learn.
David R. Schuler, ÂÜÀòÍøexecutive director
Issue Updates
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July 06, 2023
The Advocate July 2023: Additional School Meal Funding has ExpiredAs we head into July, a key priority for the ÂÜÀòÍøAdvocacy Team is urging Congress to extend the additional reimbursements for school meal programs provided by the Keep Kids Fed Act (KKFA), which expired on June 30.
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June 23, 2023
ÂÜÀòÍøLeads Letter to Congress on Increased Reimbursement Rates for School MealsToday, AASA, with 17 other national education, nutrition and child welfare organizations, sent a letter to Congress urging them to extend the additional reimbursements from the Keep Kids Fed Act.
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June 05, 2023
USDA Announces $1.3 Billion in Additional Funding for School Meal ProgramsOn Friday, June 2, USDA announced that it will be providing $1.3 billion in Supply Chain Assistance (SCA) Funds to help schools as they prepare for the end of the temporary reimbursement increase that is set to expire on June 30.
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May 09, 2023
ÂÜÀòÍøSubmits Comments on USDA to Lower CEP Eligibility ThresholdYesterday, ÂÜÀòÍøin partnership with ASBO, submitted comments in support of USDA's proposed rule to lower the Community Eligibility Provision (CEP) eligibility threshold from 40 to 25.
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Additional Resources
U.S. Department of Education Resources
- (Source: USDA)
Resources to Support School Nutrition
- (Source: Urban Alliance)
- (Source: Urban Alliance)
- (Source: Data Quality Campaign)
- (Source: Domina, Pharris-Ciuriej, and Sanabria. [2018]. Educational Researcher.)
- (Source: Food & Research Action Center [FRAC])

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