S-4518-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry.
What it does
This bill would amend the Child Nutrition Act of 1966 and the Richard B. Russell National School Lunch Act to provide free breakfast and lunch to every child enrolled in a participating school, regardless of family income. It would eliminate the existing tiered system of free, reduced-price, and paid meals, replacing it with a single universal free meal reimbursement rate ($3.28 per breakfast, $5.42 per lunch), adjusted annually for inflation. The bill would also prohibit schools from collecting unpaid meal debt, establish a federal program to reimburse schools for existing delinquent meal debt, ban "meal shaming" practices, provide bonus payments for schools sourcing at least 25% of food locally, and extend free meal coverage to afterschool care, summer programs, and child care settings. It also updates poverty measurement tools used across multiple federal education and workforce programs to replace free/reduced-price lunch eligibility as a proxy for low-income status.
Who benefits
All school-age children enrolled in participating schools — approximately 50 million students — who would receive free meals regardless of income. Low- and middle-income families currently paying reduced-price or full meal prices would see the most direct financial benefit. Schools and school food authorities would be relieved of administrative costs associated with income verification, means-testing, and debt collection. Children currently subject to "meal shaming" or meal denial due to unpaid balances would be protected. Local and regional farmers within 250 miles of a school food authority would benefit from bonus reimbursement incentives. Children in afterschool care, summer programs, child care centers, and juvenile detention facilities would gain or expand access to free meals. Schools with existing unpaid meal debt would receive federal reimbursement for those balances.
Who is hurt
Higher-income families who currently pay full price for school meals would no longer contribute directly to meal costs, shifting that burden to federal taxpayers broadly. Taxpayers generally would bear the increased federal spending required to cover all meals at the free reimbursement rate. Food service vendors and suppliers currently serving paid-meal tiers may face contract restructuring. Private, for-profit juvenile detention centers are explicitly excluded from the program's benefits. States and localities that currently administer means-testing infrastructure may face transition costs in shifting to new poverty measurement systems. Fiscal hawks and deficit-reduction advocates would argue the bill adds substantially to mandatory federal spending without an identified offset.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that universal free school meals eliminate the stigma and administrative burden of means-testing, which research — including USDA studies of states that have piloted universal programs — suggests increases meal participation rates and reduces food insecurity among children. They contend that roughly 1 in 5 American children experiences food insecurity, and that hunger directly impairs learning, citing peer-reviewed studies linking breakfast consumption to improved academic performance and attendance. Supporters also argue the bill reduces costly administrative overhead for schools, including income verification, debt collection, and the social harm of meal shaming, making the program more efficient and equitable for all students.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that extending free meals to all children regardless of family income is a poorly targeted use of federal funds, directing subsidies to middle- and upper-income households that do not need assistance. They contend the bill would add hundreds of billions of dollars to federal spending over a decade — the Congressional Budget Office estimated a prior version of this legislation at roughly $60 billion over 10 years — without a pay-for, worsening the federal deficit. Opponents further argue that existing programs already serve low-income children effectively, and that the Community Eligibility Provision already allows high-poverty schools to offer universal free meals, making a nationwide mandate unnecessary and fiscally disproportionate.