S-993-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry.
What it does
This bill would require the USDA to cancel all outstanding household school meal debts (under the school breakfast and lunch programs) as of the date of enactment, and would use Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) funds to reimburse local educational authorities for those cancelled debts. It would also reauthorize the Commodity Supplemental Food Program (CSFP) — which provides food to low-income seniors — through FY2030 and allow CCC funds to be used for it. Additionally, it would expand USDA's authority to use CCC funds for all aspects of the Emergency Food Assistance Program (TEFAP), which supplies food commodities to food banks and emergency feeding organizations.
Who benefits
Families with outstanding school meal debt, who would have those balances eliminated. Students who have been denied full meals or stigmatized due to unpaid balances. Local educational authorities (school districts) that currently carry unpaid meal debt on their books. Low-income seniors (age 60+) who receive food through CSFP. Food banks and emergency feeding organizations that receive commodities through TEFAP. State agencies that administer TEFAP and CSFP, which would gain more flexible federal funding. USDA, which would gain broader authority to deploy CCC funds across food assistance programs.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who bear the cost of debt cancellation and expanded CCC fund usage. The Commodity Credit Corporation itself, whose funds — originally designed to stabilize farm commodity markets — would be further redirected to food assistance, potentially reducing resources available for agricultural price support programs. Farmers and agricultural interests who rely on CCC funds for their intended market-stabilization purpose. Fiscal conservatives who argue that using CCC funds outside their core mission sets a precedent for bypassing the normal congressional appropriations process.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that school meal debt is a documented, widespread problem — the School Nutrition Association estimated in 2023 that over 30% of U.S. school districts carry unpaid meal debt, and that students are sometimes denied hot meals or publicly shamed over balances as small as a few dollars. They contend that cancelling this debt removes a financial burden from low-income families, restores dignity to children in the school setting, and relieves school districts of an administrative and financial strain that diverts resources from education. They further argue that expanding CCC funding for CSFP and TEFAP strengthens the food safety net for the most vulnerable — low-income seniors and food bank recipients — without creating new bureaucratic structures.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that using CCC funds — a revolving credit facility designed to stabilize agricultural commodity markets — to cancel school meal debt and expand food assistance programs is a misuse of funds that circumvents the normal congressional appropriations process, reducing legislative oversight and fiscal accountability. They contend that the underlying problem of school meal debt should be addressed by reforming eligibility for free and reduced-price meal programs rather than by blanket debt cancellation, which does not fix the structural gap that caused the debt in the first place. They also argue that repeatedly tapping CCC funds for non-agricultural purposes depletes a resource that farmers depend on during market downturns, potentially harming the agricultural sector the fund was created to protect.