skip to main content
skip to newscasts

Thursday, July 17, 2025

Public News Service Logo
facebook instagram linkedin reddit youtube twitter
view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

Trump lashes out at 'weaklings' who believe Epstein 'B.S.' amid building GOP pressure to release documents; environmental groups say new OR groundwater law too diluted to be effective; people in PA to take action for voting rights, justice at "Good Trouble" protests.

view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

Trump is pressed to name a special counsel for the Epstein case. Speaker Mike Johnson urges Senate not to change rescissions bill, and undocumented immigrants are no longer eligible for bond before deportation hearings.

view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

Cuts in money for clean energy could hit rural mom-and-pop businesses hard, Alaska's effort to boost its power grid with wind and solar is threatened, and a small Kansas school district attracts new students with a focus on agriculture.

Federal program brings free breakfast and lunch to more AL students

play audio
Play

Friday, August 9, 2024   

Thousands of Alabama students headed back to the classroom will get free breakfast and lunch at school.

Six school districts will be opting into the federal Community Eligibility Program for the first time, allowing every student to eat free. Schools once needed to have at least 25% of their students qualify for free school meals. But the U.S. Department of Agriculture loosened the participation threshold to 40%, helping more schools qualify.

LaTrell Clifford Wood, a hunger policy advocate with Alabama Arise, said this will account for the needs of all students so they can thrive in the classroom.

"In our rural communities, as well as more urban counties," she said, "there can be fluctuating degrees to which childhood food insecurity is experienced in those counties and municipalities. "

In Alabama, there is about $44 million of school meal debt, according to the Education Data Initiative.

Last school year, 118 out of 150 Alabama school districts and charter schools participated in the CEP program, up from just 51 districts in 2022-23, according to the state. Despite this increase, Clifford Wood said there is still a focus on making sure all students have access to meals. However, not all schools in Alabama can offer universal meals.

She said finances are a factor that play a role in the program's expansion.

"The federal reimbursement for that program leaves a lot of districts and counties in the red when it comes to school meal debt," she said. "So the rate that schools or districts are reimbursed at is not matching inflation."

In the future, Wood said, she hopes to see the state step in to support universal school meals. She said the importance of universal school meals extends far beyond addressing hunger benefiting students' overall health.

"What universal school breakfast does is, particularly, it has been seen to address chronic absenteeism, prove adolescent mental health," she said, "but beyond that, improve long-term learning outcomes and alleviate the school-to-prison pipeline."

Children in households that receive benefits such as SNAP and Medicaid, those in foster care, and houseless children also qualify for free or reduced meals.


get more stories like this via email

more stories
Just 30% of U.S. solar and 57% of wind projects are expected to survive under the new GOP tax and spending law signed by President Donald Trump. (Adobe Stock)

Environment

play sound

More than $7 billion in Colorado's GDP and 9,600 jobs are projected to be lost under President Donald Trump's signature tax and spending bill which cu…


Environment

play sound

California receives high marks in a report on the fight against plastic pollution. This is Plastic-free July and the United States of Plastics report…

play sound

Environmental groups say Oregon's new groundwater law, meant to curb pollution, has been diluted to the point they can no longer support it. …


At least one in seven Nebraskans, or 287,240 people, are facing hunger, with one in five children considered food insecure. (Adobe Stock)

Social Issues

play sound

Groups working to end hunger in Nebraska are reaching out to all parts of the state to train food insecure people to advocate for others facing simila…

Social Issues

play sound

New Mexico demonstrators will join nationwide protests today to oppose policies of the Trump administration. The "Good Trouble Lives On" nonviolent …

Refugee and Immigrant Connections Spokane will use its AARP Community Challenge funds to teach digital literacy skills to refugee seniors. (Adobe Stock)

Social Issues

play sound

More seniors in Washington state are facing financial strain or even losing their homes and seven local organizations will expand support for them wit…

Environment

play sound

An effort to restore Northern pike habitat in Green Bay is also benefiting other wildlife species and raising local awareness about the effects of cli…

Environment

play sound

Conservation groups, including the National Wildlife Federation and Oceana, are calling for a moratorium on deep-sea mining for minerals until more …

 

Phone: 303.448.9105 Toll Free: 888.891.9416 Fax: 208.247.1830 Your trusted member- and audience-supported news source since 1996 Copyright © 2021