
N.S. working on universal school lunch program following critical report
CBC
Provincial officials told the Nova Scotia the legislature's public accounts committee Wednesday they are working on upgrading and expanding the province's school meal programs.
The assurance comes after a report by the provincial Auditor General Kim Adair in September that pointed to inconsistencies in school food programs across Nova Scotia and gave most schools a failing grade.
Rosalind Penfound, the interim deputy minister of Education and Early Childhood Development, told the committee the province is improving its healthy food policy for schools and creating a universal lunch program.
Kari Barkhouse of the Nova Scotia Health Authority told the committee there is considerable evidence that children who are well nourished performed better at school and had fewer behavioural problem.
She said researchers in Nova Scotia had found direct links between the diet of students and their performance in English and mathematics.
Penfound said the province's school health eating program (SHEP) ensured a universal breakfast program in schools and also supported a lunch program in some schools.
"If a student needs food, they get food," Penfound said. "We know throughout many of the schools in our province they are finding unique and innovative ways to ensure every student has food."
She noted the example of a school in the South Shore Regional Centre for Education that has a free salad bar accessible to all students.
Committee member Brendan Maguire, Liberal MLA for Halifax Atlantic, said the auditor general's report noted there is inconsistent accessibility to food in schools across the province.
"We heard the intern deputy minister speak about a salad bar. I can tell you that of the nine schools in my community, there's not a salad bar," Maguire said.
"I can tell you that when my three children go to school, it's a granola bar or cheese string — that's what breakfast is."
In response, Penfound said the COVID-19 pandemic had caused a reallocation of resources to help keep children safe and that may have affected food programs in school.
It was an argument that didn't sit well with Maguire who said in his experience there is no difference between meals before and after the pandemic. He said the only difference he sees is that food like pizza is now individually wrapped.
Penfound said there is always room for improvement in the kind of food offered in school programs.