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Seanad Éireann díospóireacht -
Tuesday, 13 Oct 2015

Vol. 242 No. 9

Commencement Matters

School Meals Programme

I welcome the Minister of State, Deputy Simon Harris.

I thank the Minister of State for breaking his busy schedule on budget day and coming into the House to take this matter. There will be lots of headlines today and many issues will attract the attention of the media, but one that will not is the school meals programme. It is an undervalued and unsung success story in the social protection and education systems. I commend the Government for continuing to resource the programme and increasing its resources. The Tánaiste, Deputy Joan Burton, strongly favours having breakfast clubs in schools. It requires a little extra effort on the part of a school, with teachers coming in early on a voluntary basis to monitor and administer the programme, but the bottom line is that in this day and age no child should go to school or go through the school day hungry. That is why this programme is extremely important.

As resources become available and the budgetary position improves, as we will see outlined on budget day, more resources should be put into this programme because it is vital. I would like to see an emphasis on breakfast clubs. I would also like to see the programme being administered in a transparent and open manner. I know that it is important to the Minister of State that we have value for money and an open and transparent tendering processes. There is quite a bit of money involved. We must also ensure good quality meals are being served to the children, that they are of a high nutritional value and that it is not just tokenism. It is important to ensure we get not only value for money but also good nutritional value from the meals served. I am looking forward to the Minister of State's reply on how the programme is being rolled out and how it can be improved.

I thank the Senator for raising this important matter and giving me the opportunity to respond on behalf of the Department of Social Protection. The Department administers the school meals programme as a targeted intervention for children at risk of food poverty and educational disadvantage. The programme provides funding towards the provision of food services for disadvantaged children through two schemes. The first is the statutory urban school meals scheme, operated by local authorities and part-financed by the Department. The second is the school meals local project scheme, through which funding is provided directly for participating schools and local and voluntary community groups that run their own school meal projects. The programme provides funding towards the provision of food services for some 1,700 schools and organisations, which benefit more than 217,500 children. In view of the benefits of the programme and despite pressure on the social protection budget in the past few years, the Government allocated an additional €2 million for the programme in 2015, providing a total allocation of €39 million. The Government had already increased funding for the programme by €2 million in budget 2013, which was used to extend it to 100 additional DEIS and special schools, benefiting more than 9,800 additional children.

The programme is an important component of policies to encourage school attendance and extra educational achievement by children, especially those from the most disadvantaged background. Priority is, therefore, given to schools that are part of the Department of Education and Skills' delivering equality of opportunity in schools, DEIS, initiative for disadvantaged schools.

The additional €2 million in funding provided in 2015 is being used to increase payments to existing DEIS schools, with a particular focus on the provision of funding for breakfast clubs, something in which the Senator believes strongly and which can provide very positive outcomes for vulnerable children in terms of their school attendance, punctuality and energy levels. There is clear evidence that good nutrition improves the concentration levels of students and breakfast clubs are particularly effective in this regard. A total of 57 schools and preschools in counties Laois, Offaly and Kildare were approved for funding in the 2014-15 academic year, at a total cost of €1.3 million. The Department of Social Protection is processing applications for the current school year.

Sitting suspended at 1.10 p.m. and resumed at 4 p.m.
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