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Opinion

A child’s Christmas in Wales? Not always a merry one – and Covid has made things worse

16 Dec 2020 8 minute read
Image by Pexels from Pixabay

Katie Palmer, Programme Manager at Food Sense Wales

With Christmas around the corner, many of us are busy placing our online food orders; scuttling to the supermarkets to stock up on our festive favourites and contacting our local butcher to make sure that our turkey’s been ordered, ready for the big day.

But that’s not the Christmas tale of every household in Wales.  Far from it.

Although the Welsh Government has committed to providing free school meals for the 90,000 eligible families in Wales during the Christmas holidays, around another 70,000 children, living below the poverty line won’t benefit from this much-needed support – either during the holidays or when they return to school in January. This is because they don’t meet the eligibility criteria set by Government.

Covid has exacerbated and brought to the forefront the twin challenges of inadequate state safety nets and low paid work.  Brexit is also likely to have an impact on the affordability of food in the UK and in the short term, our household bills are certain to increase.

The issue of how children receive their right to good food has rightly been highlighted through campaigns such as Marcus Rashford’s where more than 1 million people signed a petition calling on the governments of the UK to expand free school meals to all under-16s where a parent or guardian is in receipt of Universal Credit or equivalent benefit.

Some low-income families are managing without this support. Many parents are cutting down on their own food to ensure their children have sufficient. Others will turn to foodbanks. Some will be supported through community provision such as Pantries and others will rely on friends and family. But many are experiencing physical and/or mental ill-health as a result of being unable to access sufficient food in a dignified way. Most of these parents are working and on low incomes.  Many are single parents.

ACE (Action in Ely and Caerau) is seeing increasing numbers of working families who are not eligible for FSM support, but still struggling to make ends meet. ACE’s Your Local Pantry project now targets these families experiencing in-work poverty to provide ongoing support with food costs.

One of its members (Family A) stated that they didn’t know how they would have coped without the use of the Pantry during the lockdown: “I have been placed on furlough and despite a reduction of income we are still not eligible for free school meals and the children are eating more at home, mostly due to boredom.

“Previously they would attend the breakfast club and have a small packed lunch. We are having to pay extra costs for gas and electricity as well as the extra food costs that seem to have shot up. Using the pantry has meant that I can get some good quality food for less and have a little extra money available to help with the fuel costs and other bills.

“I feel there should be more help available for parents who may be working but have had a loss of income through no fault of their own. I have lost 20% of my salary but the bills remain the same and still need to be paid.”

 

Least generous

This troubling situation isn’t new. Covid has just made it worse.

Back in 2018 Welsh Government reviewed free school meal eligibility in line with the roll-out of Universal Credit. At that time I wrote about how changes to the criteria of those who could access free school meals was an opportunity to put children’s nutrition first.

After consultation, Wales decided on rules that mean that families on universal credit are able to earn just £7,400 a year before they become ineligible for free school meals. The threshold is not adjusted to account for the number of children in the family, or to account for two-parent households, and it is not automatically increased in line with rises in the national living wage.

Northern Ireland opted for a wider criteria allowing earnings of up to £14,000 and although England and Scotland also have the £7,400 earning cut off, both nations have introduced Universal Infant free school meals – meaning all children in reception and years 1 and 2 receive a free hot lunch.

However, Wales decided to resource free primary school breakfasts instead and has pledged to pilot an extra allowance for Year 7 children receiving free school meals to enable them to have free breakfasts in school.

It should therefore come as no surprise that the Child Poverty Action Group (CPAG) has found that Wales has the least generous provision for free school meals across the UK. It means Children growing up in poverty in Wales are less likely to get a free school meal than children growing up in England, Scotland and Northern Ireland, because Wales has a tighter means-test and less generous universal infant provision than other nations.

As a result, these two policies mean significantly more parents and carers in low paid jobs in Wales can’t access free school meals for their children.

Many families are being supported in term time and during the holidays but many other children are missing out altogether.  Missing out on free school breakfasts (due to Covid); free school meals (due to eligibility) and any form of holiday provision.

Indeed, Welsh Government’s flagship School Holiday Enrichment Programme (SHEP), which supports many children on low incomes, not just those eligible for Free School Meals, was cancelled this year with funding repurposed into holiday free school meal provision.

Again, it’s heartening to know that children eligible for Free School Meals were able to benefit from the holiday payments but what happened to those families who were ineligible who might otherwise have attended?

Future

I reflected on this during the recent UN Human Rights day (December 10th). Wales has enshrined the Rights of the Child in our domestic legislation. Surely it is time to do a Children’s Right Impact Assessment to see how current policies are affecting all those children living in families on low incomes? Now must be the time to align support with need? And that need is likely to become even more urgent as the fall out of Covid sees reductions in household incomes (rising unemployment) meeting increases in household bills.

Tesco has already announced it expects 5% increases in food prices in January and research has shown that a no deal Brexit could result in a family paying an average of 4% more for their fruit and vegetables over the course of a year.

Working as a coalition of organisations, Food Policy Alliance Cymru, has been advocating for Welsh Government to set up a Food System Commission that would link all elements of the food system – from production and supply to consumption – and would pay due regard to all the challenges in the food system including public health, climate change, nature loss, fair work and rising food insecurity.

If predications of child poverty reaching 39% by 2022 are correct we need a radical rethink, one which links the “safety net” element of Free School Meals with the production standards in agriculture and food production; school food standards; food education and public procurement policies.

This could help reduce inequalities, protect the environment and support the food and farming sector – especially if Government were to look at serving every child in Wales a free hot nutritious school meal sourced sustainably from the Welsh supply chain.

In other words, a Universal Free School Meal service fit for our future generation. One that protects their health, their local economy and their planet.

Earlier this year, the University of Essex published its final report on the impact of Universal Infant Free School Meals. It demonstrates an increase in uptake of Meals by Free School Meal registered children and those not registered; reduction in children’s bodyweight in the first year of school; improved absence rates and indications of reducing the attainment gap at age 5 between FSM-registered children and those not registered.

This evidence wasn’t available in 2018 when eligibility criteria was last reviewed. Wales has one of the highest child Obesity rates of all 4 nations and is working hard to reduce the attainment gap but again, this is another target that’s been hindered by the impact of Covid.

World-class

So what should we do next?

Members of the Wales Antipoverty coalition have recently written to both the First Minister and the Education Minister calling on Welsh Government to:

  • Extend free school meals to all families receiving universal credit (or equivalent benefits)
  • Permanently extend free school meals to families with no recourse to public funds
  • Build on the successes of the School Holiday Enrichment Programme by continuing to invest in provision outside of term time

But I think Welsh Government could go further. I’d like to see Government conducting research into the feasibility and impact of providing Universal Free School Meals – a policy that could benefit all children in Wales as well as providing a solid market for our food producers whilst also driving up environmental standards.

Universal provision of healthcare was conceived in Wales.  The NHS is rooted in Wales. I’d like to see Wales continue to pioneer and to become the first UK nation to create a world-class universal free school meal service that supports all children, their local economy and protects their planet.


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