The Government knew its changes to the school lunch programme would risk achievement, attendance, nutrition and wellbeing of New Zealand children, as well as having wider impacts on reducing child poverty, and made the changes anyway, new documents show.
On 27 March, the Government considered a Cabinet Paper which included advice from multiple agencies with concerns about plans to cut back the school lunch programme. It included:
- The Ministry of Health said โโฆthe current proposal does not appear to be grounded in public health evidence and are concerned it will have a significant negative impact on communities where Ka Ora, Ka Ako is having the greatest impact.โ
- Te Puni Kokiri notes โrisks to learner achievement should the nutritional value of food delivered to secondary learners reduce.โ
- Oranga Tamariki did not support the changes, saying the current programme โhas strong links to educational attainment and attendance, as well as wider impacts to alleviate child poverty.โ
โThe Ministry of Education also makes clear what we already knew, that $3 a day is not sufficient to feed secondary kids properly. The changes the Government has made will see students getting a snack rather than a healthy meal,โ Labour education spokesperson Jan Tinetti said.
โDavid Seymour was gunning for the scrapping of the programme. He didnโt get his way, so instead he is stripping $107 million out and setting it up to fail.
โThe Cabinet Paper from 27 March includes advice from various agencies, including strong opposition to parring back the programme. But they chose to do it anyway.
โTaking good, healthy food out of the mouths of students in years seven and up, which are some of the most challenging school years, will only see worse outcomes for many young people.
โThis is about choices. Cutting $107 million from school lunches, whilst giving $2.9 billion to landlords will not sit right with many New Zealanders.
โConcerns have also been raised about communities losing local jobs, some of which are done by parents. With unemployment set to rise, this could be a double whammy for household budgets during a cost-of-living crisis.
โThis newly released advice clearly shows the consequences of cutting the healthy lunch programme. Itโs unfathomable that with the evidence in front of him, Christopher Luxon signed off on this Cabinet paper,โ Jan Tinetti said.
The Ministry of Educationโs proactively released documents can be found here:
ER-1325253-Cabinet-Paper-changing-the-provision-model.pdf (education.govt.nz)



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