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While schools are given an average yearly budget of 11 billion to school food programs and prisons are given a mere 205 million annual budget, still only less than one third of school food ...
Roosevelt high schoolers in Chicago's northwest side are boycotting school lunches that they say are 'worse than prison food.' Students are boycotting school lunch they say is 'worse than prison food'
What makes school lunch so contentious, though, isn’t just the question of what kids eat, but of which kids are doing the eating. As Poppendieck recounts in her book, Free for All: Fixing School Food in America, the original program provided schools with food and, later, cash to subsidize the cost of meals.
A School Lunch Program recipient in 1936 A poster produced by the War Food Administration promoting school lunches. Before the official establishment of the large-scale, government-funded food programs that are prevalent today in the United States, small, non-governmental programs existed.
As of October 2, 2016, federal prisons offer their inmates a vegan meal option for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. [5] Although there is a certain amount of self-regulation, most oversight occurs as a result of inmate litigation. Complaints against prison food have been made on the grounds of breach of Constitutional Amendments.
Most often the term is used in reference to food served in institutional cafeterias, such as prison food or a North American school lunch. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The term is also sometimes applied to meat products where the species from which the meat has come from is known, but the cuts of meat used are unknown.
National School Lunch Week (Oct. 14-18) is supposed to celebrate the benefits of healthy school meals. But sadly, there's very little to celebrate, in my view. In 2023, the National School Lunch ...
Nutraloaf, also known as meal loaf, prison loaf, disciplinary loaf, food loaf, lockup loaf, confinement loaf, seg loaf, grue or special management meal, [1] is food served in prisons in the United States, and formerly in Canada, [2] to inmates who have misbehaved, abused food, or have inflicted harm upon themselves or others. [3]