Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew’s NDP government is set┬аto become the second province to sign on for a slice of the $1 billion federal school food program.
Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland and Social Development Minister Jenna Sudds are expected to join the premier Friday morning to announce an agreement that will see over $17 million in additional federal funding added over the next three years to the $30 million the province already has budgeted for its┬а“universal school nutrition program.”
Despite the name, the Manitoba┬аprogram launched on Sept. 5 isn’t quite universal yet. It’s stitching together and supplementing what has been a patchwork of meal and snack programming┬аacross┬аthe 37 school divisions in Manitoba. The provincial government set aside $6 million┬аfor 50 schools in communities it described┬аas having┬а“high socio-economic need.”
Sudds┬аsaid the initial $3.8 million in federal funding┬аgoing to high-needs areas this fiscal┬аyear will help deliver food to an estimated┬а19,000 kids┬аwho would not otherwise have access to school breakfast, lunch or snack programs.
“Now┬аthose parents will not have to have that worry and those kids can focus on being kids, right? And focus on learning,” the minister told CBC News ahead of Friday’s official announcement.
Most of the funding will go to purchase food, Sudds┬аsaid. But schools can also use the federal money to buy equipment like refrigerators or toasters, or renovate in-school kitchen facilities. It could also cover the cost of hiring more staff.
One┬аof the federal conditions for this funding is that provincial investments do not decrease as a result.
“We want to see them maintained, if not increase, over time, and that’s a commitment that the Manitoba government is very transparent and excited about,” Sudds said.
Programs vary across schools, regions
Newfoundland and Labrador was the first province to sign on for federal funding on Sept. 4. Three provinces┬атАФ British Columbia, Saskatchewan and New Brunswick┬атАФ are in the middle of election campaigns, so federal talks with those jurisdictions are on hold.
The National School Food Policy┬аreleased by Sudds’ department earlier this year laid out general criteria┬атАФ but not specific requirements┬атАФ┬аfor the types of school meal or snack programs that can receive federal funding.
The policy says programs must be “universally accessible” and “culturally appropriate.” It also includes language┬аthat prioritizes “local food sources” and “sustainability,” although individual communities are free to define what that means for their kids.
The federal policy states that the food served must be in line with federal nutrition guidelines┬аand requires that participating provinces report back to the federal government with their implementation plans and┬аresults.
“Ultimately, it will be the decision of the province and the school boards, as they move forward, for┬аwhat those priorities in their local food systems look like,” Sudds said. “Each province is unique,┬аeach community is unique.”
Unlike American school lunch programs┬атАФ which┬аfall under the purview of the U.S. Department of Agriculture and have helped subsidize American farmers for decades┬атАФ there’s nothing in the federal policy┬аrequiring schools to serve food from local supply chains. Sudds said she┬аhopes┬аthat schools connect what they serve┬аstudents with what they’re teaching┬аthem about the food┬аgrown, caught and processed in their communities.
The NDP government in Manitoba and the Liberal government in Newfoundland and Labrador are “aligned” with the federal government’s vision, Sudds said.
She also┬аacknowledged┬аthat some provinces are “harder to deal with than others.” That doesn’t mean agreements with conservative-leaning governments aren’t also possible in the coming months, Sudds added.
“Most recently, [Ontario] Premier Ford has┬аreally showed his enthusiasm and has been speaking about getting on to the national school food program,” she said.
Separate efforts are underway to reach agreements with Indigenous governments to allocate some of the federal funding to schools that fall outside of provincial education systems.
Federal Conservatives dismissive, future uncertain
Sudds┬аsaid she hopes more deals can be reached with additional jurisdictions over the course of this school year. She may be running out of time.
The minority Parliament in Ottawa has turned┬аperilous for the Liberals. Even if Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government survives upcoming confidence votes, the next fixed date for a federal election is in the fall of┬а2025.
Every new agreement reached with a province or territory serves to solidify school food programming as part of Canada’s social safety net. If all jurisdictions across Canada sign on, the $1 billion allocated in the 2024 federal budget to roll out over┬аthe next five years could feed up to 400,000 school kids who don’t currently have access to food provided by their schools.
“This should not be political, right?” Sudds said. “We hear in the House of Commons [Conservative Leader] Pierre Poilievre refer to this as ‘bureaucracy.’┬аAnd I have to tell you how incredibly frustrating it is to hear someone speak about providing food to kids┬аas ‘bureaucracy.'”
Poilievre┬аhas dismissed the program as something that┬а“costs millions, but hasn’t fed a single meal.” He also has attacked the federal Liberals frequently over the cost of groceries and the rise in food bank usage.┬аIn December of last year,┬аConservatives voted against a┬аprivate member’s bill┬аthat would have established a national framework for a school food program.
“I feel the urgency every day of making sure that we get this done.” Sudds┬аsaid. “I also have a lot of fear about what a federal Conservative government would do.”
When asked how this urgency dovetails with word this week that four of her cabinet colleagues will not run again, Sudds said her┬а“focus, honestly, is delivering.”
When asked if she’s running again, Sudds said,┬а“I sure am.”