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Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

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Page 1: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

Presenter: Linda Stull, ConsultantGrants Coordination and School Support

School Nutrition ProgramsAugust 2011

Page 2: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

It is important that students are able to prepay for meals in a common location, at designated times during the week so that overt identification is prevented.

Prepayment of meals should be advertised.

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Prepayment of Meals

Page 3: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

Meals for eligible students must be served free or at a reduced price. Maximum reduced price for lunch is 40 centsMaximum reduced price for breakfast is 30 cents

Neither the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) nor the Michigan Department of Education (MDE) set specific paid prices for school lunch, breakfast, special milk or a la carte food items.

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Student Meal Prices

Page 4: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

School meals must be priced as a unit (paid or reduced price).

Offer versus Serve (OVS) does not affect the unit price of the meal established by the school food authority (SFA).

Regardless of the number of items students select, they must pay the established unit price for a reimbursable meal. check your a la carte pricing first

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Unit Pricing

Page 5: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

Adult meals and a la carte: Cannot be subsidized by federal fundsMust be priced to cover cost of producing

mealMarket pricingPurpose is to generate revenue Any income must be used for food service

program purposesNon-profit = no more than 3 months

operating expenses

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Establishing Pricing for Adult Meals and A la Carte

Page 6: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

$2.50 Student Price of Lunch+ .26 Paid Reimbursement+ .2275 Value of USDA Foods$2.9875 .18 Sales Tax$3.1675 Final Price ($3.20, $3.25?)

Might you have other information that would tell you if you need or don’t need a price increase?

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Adult Meal Price Calculation

Page 7: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

Raw Food Cost $0.48Desired Food Cost % 38% (.38)

= $1.26 (Base Selling Price)

Round up to $1.30. Reasonable price?

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Non-Reimbursable A La Carte Price Calculation

Page 8: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

The intent of the law is to ensure that sufficient funds are provided to the food service account for paid lunches.

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Equity in School Lunch Pricing (Section 205)

Page 9: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

SFAs compare the average price for paid lunches at all of their schools to the difference between the per meal federal reimbursement for free and paid lunches.

- The current free meal reimbursement rate is $2.72 - The current paid meal reimbursement rate is $0.26 - $2.72 – $0.26 = $2.46 difference

**The difference is the same if you are a “severe need” district

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Paid Meal Equity Overview

Page 10: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

For SY 2011-2012, if an SFA’s average price of paid lunches is $2.46 or more, the SFA is in compliance and no further action

is needed.

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Average Price Calculation

Page 11: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

If an SFA’s average paid lunch price is less than the difference between the federal free and federal paid meal reimbursements, it must increase the average paid lunch price by 2% plus inflation by either:

Increasing the price charged to children

OR Adding non-federal funds to the food service account

For 2011-2012, if your average paid price is less than $1.60, you do NOT need to increase prices.

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Increasing Revenue for Paid Lunches

Page 12: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

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Average Price Calculation

Page 13: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

District XYZ average paid lunch price was $1.87

Current inflation factor is 1.14 percentAdd 2 percentage points per USDA memoMultiply the average paid lunch price by

3.14 percent $1.87 * 1.0314 = $1.9287 cents

SFAs can round down to the nearest 5 cent increment

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Calculating the Paid Meal Price Increase

Page 14: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

District XYZ needs to either:1. Increase the average paid lunch price to $1.90 in

School Year (SY) 2011-2012; or2. Provide non-federal funds to the non-profit food

service account to cover the required revenue Examples of non-federal funds would be money raised

by a parent organization for this specific reason, grants from local agencies or community organizations, etc.

USDA has said verbally that revenue from a la carte food and beverage sales, of which the foods and beverages were purchased with the non-profit food service account funds, do not count as a source of non-federal funds

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Next Steps by the School Food Authority

Page 15: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

The maximum required annual average paid lunch price increase is capped at 10 cents.• SFAs can elect to increase their average paid

lunch price by more than the calculation requires

• Under Section 205, the SFA would never be required to increase its average lunch price by more than 10 cents

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Next Steps by the School Food Authority

Page 16: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

A PLE tool is available on the FNS website.Average price across the SFANew required average price across the

SFADistribution of price increases across SFANon-federal source contribution amount

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Paid Lunch Equity Tool

Page 17: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

Paid Lunch Equity Tool

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Page 18: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

Pricing Estimation Calculator

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Page 19: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

Non-Federal Source Contribution Calculator

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Page 20: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

Beginning in SY 2011-2012, SFAs must report their paid lunch prices to USDA through the Michigan Department of Education.

Data is reported every program year.USDA must publish these prices.

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Reporting Prices of Paid Lunches

Page 21: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

There are two categories of competitive foods:Foods of minimal nutritional value

(FMNV)All other foods offered for individual sale

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Competitive Foods

Page 22: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

Schools are prohibited from selling FMNV in serving and eating areas during meal service times.

Soda water, water ices, chewing gum, and certain candies such as:Licorice, marshmallow candies, hard

candies, fondant (candy corn), jellies and gums (jelly beans), spun candy, and candy coated popcorn

USDA has an Exemption List.

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Foods of Minimal Nutritional Value (FMNV)

Page 23: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

Any foods sold in competition with the School Breakfast Program (SBP) or the National School Lunch Program (NSLP) to children in food service areas during the meal period.

A la carte itemsVending machinesBake sales and other fundraisers

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Competitive Foods

Page 24: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

National School Lunch /School Breakfast Program

All buildings at least once each year before February 1

Sample in Manual

School employees must conduct reviews

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On-Site Reviews

Page 25: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

After School Snack ProgramAll sites two times per year

First review in the first four weeks of operationSecond review in the second half of the school

year

School employees must conduct reviews

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On-Site Reviews

Page 26: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

It is a local decision as to whether or not students are allowed to charge meals.

Regulations do prohibit schools from denying meals as a form of disciplinary action against free, reduced, or paid students.

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School Policy Guidelines for Replacing and Denying Meals

Page 27: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

Alternate meals may be reimbursable or non-reimbursable.

If a student has a balance due and comes to school with payment for that day’s meal, the student must be provided the meal.

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School Policy Guidelines for Replacing and Denying Meals

Page 28: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

All schools must promote activities to involve students and parents in the program.Menu planningEnhancement to eating environmentProgram promotion

Schools that operate under a Food Service Management Company (FSMC) must establish an advisory board of students, parents, and teachers.

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Student/Parent/Community Involvement

Page 29: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

Local Educational Agencies (LEAs) are selected each year based on risk criteria.1. Verification data indicating a high-level (e.g. top 25%

among SFAs within a State) of non-response or response based terminations; and

2. Consistently claiming over 90% free eligibles or 80% reduced price eligibles

AARs focus on Coordinated Review Effort (CRE) Performance Standard 1 (PS1) Critical Areas of Review and the verification component of the General Areas of Review. Application, certification, verification, meal counting,

and meal claiming procedures

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Additional Administrative Reviews (AAR)

Page 30: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

A Nutrition Review at all participating SFAs once every five years (7 CFR 210.19 ).

Evaluates compliance, over the school week, with the nutrition standards for lunches and, as applicable, for breakfasts.

Proposed rule would discontinue the SMI reviews.

Proposed rule: Levels of calories, saturated fat, and sodium to be calculated by SA.

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School Meals Initiative (SMI)

Page 31: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

Proposed Changes – Monitoring Nutrition Standards

Three-year review cycle

Establish a two-week review period

Include breakfast in the CRE review

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Page 32: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

Implementation Plan of the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010 shows the timeframe for actions and implementation of the law.Plan is in Manual

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Implementation Plan

Page 33: Presenter: Linda Stull, Consultant Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Programs August 2011

Contact MDE School Nutrition Programs at:

Phone: 517-373-3347 or

E-mail: [email protected]

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Questions