SF4959
State-paid free school lunches limitation to families with incomes at or below 500 percent of the federal poverty guidelines provision, school wellness and resiliency aid establishment, school-linked behavioral health grants expansion provision, and appropriation
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)
Related bill: HF4800
AI Generated Summary
Purpose
- The bill aims to update education funding and school meal policies in Minnesota. Key goals include limiting state-paid free school lunches to families with income at or below 500 percent of the federal poverty guidelines (FPG), creating school wellness and resiliency aid, and increasing resources for school-linked behavioral health grants. It also makes various changes to how school meals and related benefits are governed.
Main provisions
School meals policy requirements for National School Lunch Program participants
- Each participating school must adopt a written school meals policy and post it publicly (on its website or the meal-serving organization’s site).
- The policy must communicate how student meal charges work when payment cannot be collected at the point of service and must be reasonable and protect student dignity.
- The policy must address whether the school uses a collections agency for unpaid meals debt.
- The policy must ensure that once a meal is served to a student, it cannot be taken back by a cashier or school official, even if there is an outstanding balance.
- The policy must guarantee that a student deemed eligible for free or reduced-price meals is always served a reimbursable meal, even if the student has outstanding debt.
Third-party meal service providers
- If a school contracts with a third-party meal vendor, the school must share its meals policy with that vendor.
- Any contract with a third-party provider entered into or modified after July 1, 2021 must require the vendor to follow the school’s meals policy.
Eligibility and meal definitions
- Application for educational benefits: an online or paper form used to determine eligibility for school meals and other benefits.
- Enhanced student eligibility standard: defined as a student whose family income is between 185 percent and 500 percent of the federal poverty guidelines for that school year.
- Enhanced student meal: a meal served to a student who meets the enhanced eligibility standard.
- Federal poverty guidelines: the poverty thresholds published by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services for the school year.
- Free meal / Reduced-price meal / Full paid meal: defined by how a student’s family income compares to the free/reduced-price eligibility under the National School Lunch Program and related programs.
Eligibility sources
- Students may qualify for free, reduced-price, or enhanced meals based on the application for educational benefits or through direct certification processes.
Scope
- These requirements apply to Minnesota participants in the National School Lunch Program.
Significant changes to existing law
- Introduction of an enhanced eligibility framework
- Adds the concept of an “enhanced student eligibility standard” (185% to 500% of FPG) and an “enhanced student meal” for students in that income range.
- Limitation of state-paid free meals
- Sets a new cap: state-paid free school lunches are limited to families with incomes at or below 500% of the federal poverty guidelines.
- Strengthened protections for students
- Prohibits lunch shaming and ensures students who are eligible for free or reduced meals are served a reimbursable meal even if there is outstanding debt.
- Requires transparency and dignity in meal charges, debt handling, and vendor compliance.
- Compliance and governance enhancements
- Expands definitions and clarifies how eligibility is established (applications and direct certification).
- Requires third-party meal providers to adhere to schools’ policies, with updated contract requirements for post-2021 arrangements.
Implementation considerations (summary)
- Schools will need to develop, post, and maintain written policies about meal charges, debt collections, and protections against taking meals away after service.
- Districts using outside meal vendors must ensure those vendors follow the district’s meal policy.
- Districts will administer enhanced eligibility and enhanced meals for a defined subset of students and adjust budgeting to reflect the cap on state-paid free meals.
- The bill also signals new funding streams (wellness/resiliency aid and school-linked behavioral health grants), though specific program details and funding levels would appear in later sections or appropriation language.
Relevant terms
- National School Lunch Program
- state-paid free school lunches
- federal poverty guidelines (FPG)
- enhanced student eligibility standard (185%–500% of FPG)
- enhanced student meal
- free meal
- reduced-price meal
- full paid meal
- lunch shaming
- school meals policy
- actionable debt/collecting unpaid meals debt
- third-party meal service provider
- direct certification
- application for educational benefits
- school wellness and resiliency aid
- school-linked behavioral health grants
Actions
| Date | Chamber | Where | Type | Name | Committee Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| April 07, 2026 | Senate | Action | Introduction and first reading | ||
| April 07, 2026 | Senate | Action | Referred to | Education Finance | |
| Showing the 5 most recent stages. This bill has 2 stages in total. Log in to view all stages | |||||
Citations
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Progress through the legislative process
In Committee
Sponsors
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