HARTFORD – State Senator Ceci Maher (D-Wilton)voted with her colleagues today to fund free student breakfasts and lunches through the end of the current school year for half a million Connecticut students. The senator also voted to continue for another five years Connecticut’s tough budget safeguards that have allowed our state to build up its largest budget reserve ever, while devoting billions of dollars toward old, unfunded pension debt.
“If students are hungry, they cannot learn,” said Sen. Maher, Senate Chair of the Children’s Committee. “We know this, and the many people who spent their time providing testimony in support of this bill, know this as well. For them and the countless Connecticut students that will benefit immensely from the expansion of the school meal program, I am extremely happy we were able to get this done, and done so quickly. The school meal program is crucially important to students and their families, extending this much-needed support as the federal program ends ensures no student in our state has to worry about focusing on their schoolwork while hungry. Food insecurity isn’t just an issue here but also a problem nationwide and I’m proud of my colleagues in the General Assembly for ensuring that no child in Connecticut will go hungry.”
During the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, the federal government extended its free and reduced-price meals policy to all 50 million public school students nationwide – including those in Connecticut. But, like many federal grants tied to the pandemic, that funding was for a limited time only. The federal funding for free school meals for everyone expired on September 30, 2022, although last spring Democrats set aside $30 million from the federal American Rescue Plan Act and out it in the state budget to continue providing free school breakfast and lunch to Connecticut students through December 31, 2022.
Now, those funds have run dry. Today’s vote moves $60 million from the Invest CT program and into the Free Meals for Students program to provide free school meals through the end of the current school year, usually around mid-to-late June. Free meals will be provided to more than 500,000 students in all 169 towns.
The senator also voted today to continue the Democrat-led financial restraints that were first put in place in 2017.
Today’s bill will: