Free
school meals
Thank you,
Presiding Officer,
I am pleased
that this issue is being debated today.
I have
previously asked for a Welsh Government statement or debate on this issue as
children going hungry or relying on foodbanks is not what I and I believe most
members want to see
I have also
submitted many written questions on free school meals
For many children,
the free school meal is their major meal of the day
To repeat something,
I have said many times in the chamber
During
school holidays
Parents must
provide an additional 10 meals per child a week during school holidays
That is why
I have continually asked for and now welcome the continued provision of free school
meals during the school holidays at Christmas and Easter
Will the
Government confirm that it will be provided at half term as well?
I am calling
on the Government to budget for in 2021/22 free school meals across all the
school holidays including half term holidays.
I am not
sure all members understand poverty, some of us understand it from personal
experience.
To us it is
a lived experience not an abstract debating point
It is real
It affected
us and people we grew up with and went to school with
To those of
us who come from a certain background know it as school dinners.
The reason
we know it as school dinners is because it is the main meal of the day, it is
followed by tea.
It keeps
many children adequately fed.
That is why
I am so pleased it will be provided across the next holidays.
When I was
in school pupils would not attend lessons but come into school to be fed.
If you want
to know someone’s background, ask them when dinner is midday or evening.
I support
the first part of the motion Calls on the Welsh Government to immediately amend
the eligibility criteria for free school meals so that any child in any family
receiving universal credit or equivalent benefit and any child in a family with
no recourse to public funds is eligible
Expanding
eligibility would help struggling families to cope, improve educational
outcomes and help tackle in-work poverty.
Over half of
children in Wales who live below the UK poverty line are not entitled to free
school meals. Of the 129,000 school-age children living below the poverty line
in Wales, over 70,000 are not eligible for free school meals, mainly because
their parents are in low-paid jobs which take them over the eligibility
threshold.
In addition,
nearly 6,000 children in Wales are not normally eligible for free school meals
because their families have no recourse to public funds; many of these children
live in deep, long-term poverty and are in urgent need of support.
The Welsh
Government need to urgently address this for next year’s budget.
Do Plaid
Cymru really believe that the provision of free school meals to every child is
a good use of limited resources
Is it costed?
Will it
appear in Plaid Cymru’s proposed budget for April 2021?
What is the
estimated cost?
Capacity is a big issue
If the school hall is used for meals and teaching such as PE
in primary schools
Kitchen capacity
Serving capacity
Organising several sittings based upon the capacity of the
hall
Timings of the sittings
There are schools that now have two sittings
How would three or four be organised
On universal
provision
Great
headline
Ill thought
out
We need to
expand the provision of free school meals to all children in need
We need to
commit to expanding the provision
We need to
commit to continuing it through the holidays
This will
improve education attainment
How is it to
be funded
Out of the
economy and transport portfolio
As I keep on
saying higher educational attainment is the best economic development tool
Far better
than bribing companies to bring branch factories to Wales which then leave
Ensuring
children are well fed must be a government priority
No comments:
Post a Comment