
听
A major provider of school lunches in fears the Government鈥檚 new $3 limit for most students will see them eating less fresh and more pre-packaged and processed food.
Associate Education Minister David Seymour cut the lunch budget for 150,000 intermediate and secondary school students by nearly $6 per meal 鈥 from $8.62 to $3 鈥 wiping $107 million a year from the Ka Ora Ka Ako school lunch programme.
He said big catering companies could supply bulk orders at low prices.
Whanganui Girls鈥 College makes up to 900 lunches a day for its own students and three other local schools, providing hot meals like macaroni cheese, beef nachos and butter chicken alternating with sandwiches, panini or wraps.
Principal Nita Pond said for some schools, the cutbacks were likely to result in more pre-packaged and less healthy items.
鈥淔or schools with an external supplier, it鈥檚 basically going to be KidsCan on steroids.
鈥淭here鈥檒l be more packaging, more things like muesli bars, yoghurt and fruit cups, and I don鈥檛 know if that鈥檚 necessarily going to be as healthy.鈥
She said many of those foods did not meet Ministry of Education Healthy School Lunches criteria, which stipulate that food should have minimal saturated fat, salt and added sugar, and be mostly whole or less processed. The only drinks should be water and unflavoured milk.
Pond told Local Democracy Reporting the Whanganui East secondary school was awaiting information about the revamped model.
鈥淲e鈥檙e still keen on somehow providing something, but we don鈥檛 know what that will look like because we don鈥檛 yet have the detail.
鈥淲ith a $3 meal, I can鈥檛 see how we would be able to cater for that.鈥
Pond said Whanganui Girls鈥 College had been making lunches for at least two years and turned a profit from the venture.
鈥淲e didn鈥檛 go into it to make revenue but everyone entering into it wants to make some profit,鈥 Pond said.
鈥淥ur previous provider wasn鈥檛 providing the kai that our students wanted and there was a lot of waste. A lot of kai was thrown out. That鈥檚 when we got our thinking caps on and thought we could probably do this ourselves.
Whanganui Girls' College principal Nita Pond says its free school lunches are the only hot meal, and sometimes the only meal, some students get each day. Photo / LDR
The school has a commercial kitchen at its boarding hostel and about six staff dedicated to the lunches programme.
鈥淭wo days a week we do 900 lunches a day, and one other school is with us for two days a week (and with another provider for the other three days).
鈥淚t has obviously provided jobs for people and we put any profit back into our students, our school and our hostel.鈥
Pond said the Government鈥檚 new approach would not stop the school lunches.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 imagine we will make any profit at $3 a meal but we think it鈥檚 very important for us to be able to provide.
鈥淲e do have families in need here, and for a number of students it鈥檚 the only hot meal, and sometimes the only meal, they get during the day.鈥
The daily meals include halal, vegetarian, dairy-free, gluten-free and vegan options, and also cater for students with allergies.
Pond said the cuts were disappointing.
The lunch budget for secondary school students will drop from $8.62 to $3 under the changes. Photo / RNZ
鈥淚t will take a lot out of the community. We鈥檝e got some beautifully grown produce in Whanganui and the same with our local butchers. Does the new model mean we鈥檙e no longer going to be supplied by them?鈥
The college would continue to provide lunches for its own students and the primary schools it serves, Pond said.
One of those schools has Year 7 and 8 students who would be eligible only for a $3 meal.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e probably going to get a different lunch.鈥
The college saw significant benefits in providing its students with free daily lunch, which was served from 10.45am to 11.30am because many students skip breakfast, she said.
鈥淪tudents are certainly calmer. Break times are calmer. It鈥檚 been really lovely to see our students sitting down with their peers with no phone. We do feel we get fewer behavioural issues.
鈥淭here鈥檚 nothing extravagant. We don鈥檛 have sushi 鈥 it鈥檚 way too complicated to make en masse. We don鈥檛 have quinoa, either.
鈥淲e have meals that are nice and simple but everything has to be weighed out and have the right nutrition balance. All of that is planned and the menus have to be approved by the ministry.
鈥淲hen the girls come running for any seconds, you know that you鈥檙e providing good kai.鈥
Pita Pit NZ is biggest provider of Whanganui school lunches
Announcing the cutbacks, Seymour said the $3 budget was based partly on the $2 meals supplied by charity KidsCan to early childhood centres (ECCs) and schools.
KidsCan chief executive and co-founder Julie Chapman told RNZ last week it was able to supply $2 meals to nearly 6000 children a day because of supplier relationships and buying power, and, unlike commercial providers, the charity was not focused on profit.
KidsCan mostly bulk-delivered ingredients such as pasta, soup, muesli bars, baked beans and canned fruit for ECCs and schools to make into meals, Chapman said.
According to the Ministry of Education, Pita Pit NZ is the biggest provider of school lunches in the Whanganui district, supplying up to 878 meals a day to seven schools. Whanganui Girls鈥 College is the next-biggest provider.
Pita Pit NZ declined to comment on the adjusted model, saying the Ministry of Education was still working on the finer details.
The Ministry of Education was hosting a series of webinars this week to provide more information to schools about the new model, due to be implemented next year.
The Associate Education Minister did not respond to questions from Local Democracy Reporting.
Local Democracy Reporting is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.
Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you
Get the iHeart App
Get more of the radio, music and podcasts you love with the FREE iHeartRadio app. Scan the QR code to download now.
Download from the app stores
Stream unlimited music, thousands of radio stations and podcasts all in one app. iHeartRadio is easy to use and all FREE