Case Study of National School Lunch Program Verification Outcomes in Large Metropolitan School Districts

Case Study of National School Lunch Program Verification Outcomes in Large Metropolitan School Districts

Published: Apr 30, 2004
Publisher: Alexandria, VA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Food and Nutrition Service, Office of Analysis, Nutrition and Evaluation
Download
Associated Project

Ensuring the Integrity of the School Meals Application Process

Time frame: 2016-2019

Prepared for:

U.S. Department of Agriculture, Food and Nutrition Service

Clients
USDA
Authors
Recent media attention has suggested that some children who are certified as eligible for free school lunch may in fact be ineligible because their family income is too high. This report presents the result of a case study of the process used to identify and detect these types of errors, indicating that the verification process itself is subject to errors. Among students approved for benefits on the basis of income reported on the application and whose benefits were terminated because the family did not respond to the district’s verification request, half were income eligible for at least the benefit amount they had been receiving. About a third of households whose benefits were unchanged as a result of verification were not income eligible for their benefit level two to three months after completing verification.

How do you apply evidence?

Take our quick four-question survey to help us curate evidence and insights that serve you.

Take our survey