Opinion editor's note: Editorials represent the opinions of the Star Tribune Editorial Board, which operates independently from the newsroom.
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Over the past several decades, "free- and-reduced-price lunch" has become part of the lexicon in education based on income levels of American student households. It's been a standard measure and proxy for poverty — and a key way to figure out eligibility for certain programs.
However, now that all meals are free for Minnesota public school students, some parents think sharing their household financial status is no longer necessary. That's not the case. Families need to complete and return the information because their income data is tied to more than schools meals.
Last March, the Legislature approved and Gov. Tim Walz signed legislation to provide free breakfast and lunch for all students — a move that is estimated to cost the state about $400 million over two years. The free meals program went into effect July 1 and was in place when schools opened beginning in late August. Minnesota joined seven other states that provide free meals for schoolkids.
Supporters of the change expect providing free lunch to improve student health, behavior, attendance and performance. It will also end the stigma associated with receiving free- or reduced-price lunch and end lunch-shaming practices in which students were penalized when their lunch debts were not paid.
According to the advocacy group Hunger Solutions, 1 in 6 students in Minnesota experiences food insecurity. The organization also reports that food shelf visits across the state increased dramatically in 2022. With the state's free breakfast and lunch programs in place, some of the pressure on food shelves should be relieved.
Until now, Minnesota law required parents to apply for free meals through a federal reimbursement program based on their income. Starting this year, districts could also automatically add a student to the benefit rolls if their family qualified for Medicaid. And there are provisions that hold districts harmless for at least the first year. That means no federal or state aid for school meals would be lost initially.