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bobbert's avatar

Actually, he seems to have a surfeit of components there.

bobbert's avatar

You know, I think the "throw the food away" idea is stupid, but despite the word-salad-shooting, it is possible to derive the superintendent's meaning. Students who qualify (which includes applying) for the reduced/free lunch program have part or all of the lunch paid for by the Feds, and thus do not affect the school district's budget. Students who don't qualify, but who also don't pay, do impact the district's budget (at least hypothetically).

Now, this is complicated by not knowing what kind of contract the district has with its food-service provider, but one thing that is immediately obvious is that throwing the food away will <i>not</i> save the district any money. Which is why it's stupid.

Teh google tells me this is a K-12 district with about 4,500 students, so the full-price cost of a year's worth of lunches is around $1.5M. This suggests that the actual annual loss to the district is $50K, rather than $50,0000. This is around a tenth of a percent of the total district budget, which is large enough to warrant some attention, but maybe not large enough to warrant making kids miss lunch, especially when IT DOESN'T SAVE ANY MONEY.

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