The Washougal School Board will seek state legislators’ support in 2023, to provide free breakfast and lunch to Washougal students.
The Washougal School District is close — but not quite close enough — to qualifying for the United States Department of Agriculture’s Community Eligibility Provision (CEP), part of the National School Lunch Program that permits eligible districts and schools to provide meal service to all students at no charge regardless of economic status.
To qualify for a CEP, a district, school or group of schools from the same district must have at least 40% of students who qualify for free and reduced-price meals.
A little more than 39% of Washougal students qualified for free and reduced-price meals during the 2021-22 school year, said Les Brown, the district’s director of communications and technology.
“Universal support for (free meals) would be helpful,” Washougal School District Superintendent Mary Templeton said during a Nov. 8 school board workshop. “There is a mechanism in the state of Washington that allows a district to be fully compensated to provide meals for breakfast and lunch. Our district (doesn’t qualify), but we’re very close based on the percentage. Because we’re not quite there, we have children (in need) who do not qualify for free or reduced meals, so I would advocate strongly for that support as well.”