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NYC Public School Families to Receive $375 Per Child for Food Benefits Through Federal COVID Relief

June 7, 2022 | 11:09 AM
in NEWS, SCHOOLS
9
A school prepares food to go when campuses were closed earlier during the coronavirus pandemic.Laura Faith Kebede / Chalkbeat.

This story was originally published by Chalkbeat. Sign up for their newsletters at ckbe.at/newsletters.

By Marcela Rodrigues-Sherley, Chalkbeat New York

Jun 3, 4:51pm EDT

All New York City public school families regardless of income will receive $375 per child in food benefits to help cover the costs of meals from last summer during the pandemic —whether they attended summer school or not.

The state began the rollout this month, with the retroactive benefit being distributed to students enrolled as of June 2021.

The benefit comes from the Coronavirus Pandemic Electronic Benefit Transfer or P-EBT, a federally created program covering meal expenses for students who typically received free meals when in school but were learning remotely due to the pandemic. This is the third round of food benefits for public school families across the state since the pandemic began in March 2020, with the state sending more than $3.4 billion to families since then, officials said.

Because New York City is a universal free lunch district, all public school students are eligible to receive P-EBT regardless of their household income. Families are also eligible regardless of immigration status.

The food benefits will automatically be distributed to all households with eligible school-age children in the same manner they received their P-EBT benefits for the past two school years. For those who typically receive food benefits, the money will be added to their regular cards; for others, the funds will be automatically loaded on P-EBT cards they received in the mail in 2020 or 2021. (Families should keep their cards after the money is used because new iterations of the program might still be approved.)

The benefits can be used to purchase eligible food items in stores that accept them and are available for at least 274 days from the date they were issued.

Some eligible students have yet to receive benefits for logistical reasons, such having an incorrect address on file or incomplete information from a school, according to a spokesperson from the state’s Office of Temporary and Disability Assistance (OTDA), which oversees the disbursements.

“It’s been hugely important to help families stay afloat during this crisis,” said Liz Accles of Community Food Advocates, a New York-based nonprofit focused on food access. “Most New York City public school students are in families who are struggling to make ends meet. And there are many more that are right above the federal eligibility for free or reduced price meals, given the cost of living in New York City.”

According to the city’s education department, 73% of public school students are economically disadvantaged.

“School meals are one of the biggest, most far-reaching anti-hunger programs. If kids access two meals a day, that’s 40 meals a month for each child in the household,” Accles said.

A recent survey of more than 600 families conducted by Change Research and No Kid Hungry found that 58% of adults with children in New York City schools have struggled to eat healthy and nutritious food over the past 12 months. The same survey found that 43% worried a member of their household would not have enough food to eat. More than a third of respondents had to skip a meal.

New York City schools will provide free meals this summer to anyone ages 18 and under at select campuses starting on June 28. But historically, families in need have not fully taken advantage of the program. Research has shown that food insecurity is higher during the summer months, when many children do not receive their regular free meals at school.

“We refer to summer as the hungriest time of the year,” said Rachel Sabella, of No Kid Hungry New York, the New York division of a national campaign that aims to solve hunger in the United States. “For many families, they may not have a summer meals site close to them, where they can access those free meals. Some food pantries and soup kitchens that are normally open in the summer rely on volunteers. If the volunteers are not available, their services are not available.”

Sabella said that P-EBT is also valuable to families because they’re able to go buy groceries in convenient locations, rather than travel to a free meal site.

There are legislative efforts to extend P-EBT and to pass a summer food benefit program nationwide. The summer EBT proposal was part of President Joe Biden’s American Families plan in 2021. But as of now, the summer program is still in its pilot version, serving a limited number of states.

“Summer EBT would be pretty much exactly what pandemic EBT is, it would be available in the summer months when school is closed for families that had been receiving free and reduced price meals as another way to get them those grocery benefits,” Sabella said.

The P-EBT benefit remains in effect while COVID-19 is a public health emergency, but each state must be approved by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) . The public health emergency was extended until mid-July.

Marcela Rodrigues-Sherley is a reporting intern for Chalkbeat New York. Contact Marcela at mrodrigues-sherley@chalkbeat.org.

Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educational change in public schools.

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9 Comments
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Joe
Joe
3 years ago

How wasteful.

2
Reply
Sarah
Sarah
3 years ago
Reply to  Joe

Yeah, feeding kids…worst example of government excess imaginable.

5
Reply
C. Kerr Uvtrooth
C. Kerr Uvtrooth
3 years ago
Reply to  Sarah

Wanna know what’s REALLY WASTEFUL? All of the Federal spending on weapons of war!
Google it and you’ll come up with statements like:
1. “The United States spends more on national defense than China, India, Russia, United Kingdom, Saudi Arabia, Germany, France, Japan, and South Korea — combined.”; or
2. “The majority of the overall defense budget, $718 billion in FY2021 was spent by the Department of Defense (DoD) on military activities.”
The Conservatives rant about “welfare queens” while the BIGGEST “gimmee…gimmee’s” are the defense contractors.

3
Reply
Jerome
Jerome
3 years ago

This is insane that we are still distributing Covid money! Enough is enough. We will spend our way to oblivion and run inflation at 8%+ for years.

4
Reply
Deb
Deb
3 years ago

There are a lot of UWS families that are struggling. Why not find a way to distribute this among those who really need help. Many UWS families really don’t need this $375 to feed their kids but so many do.

3
Reply
Sarah
Sarah
3 years ago
Reply to  Deb

Because means-testing has its own costs and also risks excluding vulnerable people. It’s cheaper in many cases to give a benefit to everyone than to operate a cumbersome gatekeeping bureaucracy, and this way you don’t exclude people whose lives are too chaotic to permit them to successfully engage the machinery.

7
Reply
Jen
Jen
3 years ago

This has nothing to do with feeding children but is another populist move. I’m a parent of a public school child. I can definitely use $375. However I would rather see constructive measures re the economy and inflation than these hand-outs that do not make any difference.

Granted, some families and children are affected by Covid more and others and still might need assistance. So do a targeted help, not yet another wasteful politically-charged spending.

2
Reply
MJB
MJB
3 years ago

ALL NYC children need food assistance? The ones in PS 199, Andersen, you name it?

Give the money to whoever really needs it, more than $375 if necessary, instead of yet another frivolous spending while inflation is high as it is.

2
Reply
Beth
Beth
3 years ago
Reply to  MJB

Don’t assume “who really needs it” based on where their children go to school. Many parents have been laid off/were unemployed during Covid. Don’t assume. It’s been a very difficult time for many.

1
Reply

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