South Carolina – A new effort to increase South Carolina school food accessibility is just one step from becoming law. After passing the South Carolina House on Thursday, a law intended to increase access to free and reduced-price lunches in public schools is on its way to Governor Henry McMaster’s desk.
Central to the law is a mandate for all public school districts to engage in federal school lunch programs—unless they can show that doing so would cause a financial strain. Although federal money has long been accessible via the National School Lunch Program, just a small number of school districts around the state have fully exploited this opportunity. Lawmakers supporting the measure claim this shift is long overdue.

With most of the expense covered by the federal government, the National School Lunch Program offers students whose families satisfy particular financial criteria free or reduced-price meals. Proponents of the revised law contend that students who most require these meals but attend schools that have not previously chosen into the program will benefit from it by closing food insecurity disparities.
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Importantly, the measure also targets what has come to be referred as “meal shaming.” Schools would be forbidden from disciplining or publicly naming students with unpaid lunch balances should signed into law. That means no more replacing cold or unpleasant lunches, singling students out, or barring them from field excursions and graduation ceremonies because of school lunch debt.
A temporary financial clause has long promoted involvement in the federal lunch program. This legislation would make that need constant. Through a simple application, it would also require schools to inform parents if their kid qualifies for food assistance, hence facilitating more direct connection between families and schools.
The modifications could be soon noticeable. Should Governor McMaster approve, the new regulations would take effect starting the next school year.
The National Center for Education Statistics estimates that during the 2022–2023 school year, almost 70% of South Carolina students qualified for free or reduced-price lunches. Advocates said the measure is an important step in guaranteeing those kids really get the assistance they qualified for—without stigma or unneeded obstacles.
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Supporters of the bill want the governor’s approval to help convert policy into action given that many communities around the state continue to struggle with food insecurity, so guaranteeing that no kid is denied a healthy meal just because of debt or bureaucracy.