Almost one million families to be hit by Theresa May’s plan to end free school lunches, think tank warns

Authored by independent.co.uk and submitted by ManiaforBeatles
image for Almost one million families to be hit by Theresa May’s plan to end free school lunches, think tank warns

Almost one million children from poor backgrounds will lose the right to free school meals if Theresa May pushes through cuts in the Conservative manifesto, an educational think tank has warned.

The Prime Minister announced last week that universal free lunches for infants will be stopped if the Tories win the June 8 general election, with free breakfasts on offer instead.

The move will cost families around £440 a year for each child affected and is thought likely to save around £650 million a year, according to the research by the Education Policy Institute (EPI).

The EPI found that those losing hot lunches would include 100,000 from families living in relative poverty, and 667,000 from those it defined as coming from “ordinary working families” of the kind that Theresa May has said she wants to help.

Those from the poorest backgrounds will still be entitled to a free midday meal.

EPI executive director Natalie Perera told The Observer: “Around 900,000 children from low-income families will lose their eligibility for free school meals under these proposals. Around two-thirds of those children are from what the Government considers to be ‘ordinary working families’.

“The typical annual cost for an ordinary working family would increase under these proposals to around £440 for each child aged between four and seven.”

Universal free lunches for infants were introduced under the coalition government by Liberal Democrat education minister David Laws, now the EPI’s executive chairman.

The party’s former deputy prime minister Nick Clegg said: “This just confirms the sleight of hand from the Conservatives – scrapping universal infant school lunches hits some of the most hard-pressed families the hardest. The offer of free breakfasts won't reach the children who don’t come to breakfast clubs.

“All Theresa May’s talk of helping the ‘just about managing’ will ring hollow as long as this regressive decision remains in place.”

20 show all UK news in pictures

1/20 19 May 2017 Ecuador urged Britain today to 'grant safe passage' out of the country to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange after Sweden dropped a warrant that drove him to take refuge in Ecuador's London embassy Getty Images

2/20 19 May 2017 Football manager Chris Coleman, with daughter Christy, wife Charlotte and son Sonny, after he was awarded an OBE by the Prince of Wales during an Investiture ceremony at Buckingham Palace Getty Images

3/20 16 May 2017 British artist Jo Peel, poses with her street art in the RHS Greening Grey Britain Garden, still under construction, at the Chelsea Flower Show Jack Taylor/Getty Images

4/20 16 May 2017 The Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall visit the historic Covered Market to sample produce and meet independent vendors at Market Street in Oxford Chris Jackson/PA Wire

5/20 16 May 2017 Queen Elizabeth II greets Cressida Dick, the recently-appointed Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, at an audience at Buckingham Palace Victoria Jones/PA Wire

6/20 16 May 2017 Queen Elizabeth II greets Cressida Dick, the recently-appointed Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, at an audience at Buckingham Palace, London Victoria Jones/PA Wire

7/20 15 May 2017 British IT expert Marcus Hutchins who has been branded a hero for slowing down the WannaCry global cyber attack, sits at his workstation during an interview in Ilfracombe, England AP Photo/Frank Augstein

8/20 10 May 2017 A police convoy arrives at Westminster Magistrates Court where Khalid Mohamed Omar Ali, who was arrested near Parliament Square three weeks ago is due to appear on charges of preparing terrorist acts, in London Reuters

9/20 10 May 2017 A police convoy arrives at Westminster Magistrates Court where Khalid Mohamed Omar Ali, who was arrested near Parliament Square three weeks ago is due to appear on charges of preparing terrorist acts, in London Reuters

10/20 9 May 2017 Sunrise in Sunderland. Photographer David Zdanowicz has travelled the country capturing stunning shots of sunsets and sunrises at some of the most beautiful locations in the north east of the country Rex

11/20 9 May 2017 Sunset at Whitby Abbey. Photographer David Zdanowicz has travelled the country capturing stunning shots of sunsets and sunrises at some of the most beautiful locations in the north east of the country Rex

12/20 9 May 2017 Beautiful sunrise at Saltburn by the sea. Photographer David Zdanowicz has travelled the country capturing stunning shots of sunsets and sunrises at some of the most beautiful locations in the north east of the country Rex

13/20 9 May 2017 Preview of the Pink Floyd Exhibition: Their Mortal Remains at The V&A in London Getty Images

14/20 9 May 2017 A display showing the Division Bell metal heads during a preview of the Pink Floyd Exhibition: Their Mortal Remains at The V&A in London Getty Images

15/20 9 May 2017 Preview of the Pink Floyd Exhibition: Their Mortal Remains at The V&A in London Getty Images

16/20 8 May 2017 People stop to view a mural by artist Banksy of a workman removing a star from the EU flag which appeared yesterday near the ferry terminal in Dover, Kent PA wire

17/20 2 May 2017 Mayor of London handout photo of a number 150 bus. Dozens of London's red buses are being given a second colour to help passengers navigate the city. PA wire

18/20 2 May 2017 Police presence on David's Lane in St Ives, Ringwood, near to where Guy Hedger gunned down by intruders at a house in East Dorset Andrew Matthews/PA Wire

19/20 2 May 2017 National Portrait Gallery undated handout photo of the portrait of Ed Sheeran, painted by Belfast-based artist Colin Davidson, that has been acquired by the museum PA wire

20/20 1 May 2017 Actress Jaime Winstone told how Dame Barbara Windsor described her as 'more me than me' when she portrayed the former EastEnders star for a new film about her early life Sophie Mutevelian/BBC/PA Wire

But a Conservative spokesman said: “We don’t think it is right to spend precious resources on subsidising school meals for better-off parents. So instead we will give that money to headteachers, to spend on pupils’ education instead.

“We will make sure all those who need it most still get free lunches – and will offer a free school breakfast to every child in every year of primary school. So the most disadvantaged children will now get two free school meals a day rather than one.”

When the pledge was announced, Sarah Olney, the Lib Dem education spokeswoman, said: “Margaret Thatcher was know as the ‘milk snatcher’. Theresa May will go down as the ‘lunch snatcher’.”

rishinator on May 21st, 2017 at 14:02 UTC »

Meanwhile in India free school lunches are the best thing that happened to us, it got many poor children back into schools.

varro-reatinus on May 21st, 2017 at 11:15 UTC »

Theresa May: stable, strong, and stealing both your lunch and your internet pornography, in order to keep your children safe from the evils of terrorism, nutrition, and education!

FourSquareEggs on May 21st, 2017 at 10:02 UTC »

My Mum works at a school that currently receives free school lunches and is a recent thing at that. Before free meals, she would take in extra sandwiches for the children who she knew to be from poorer homes but it wouldn't reach enough students and the education board would've hated it if they found out.

Children who are not properly fed can suffer from fatigue and low blood sugar levels which can lead to low levels of concentration, sleepiness and general poor performance.

This deduction from schools would only punish the poor children who don't have access to the meals they need.

Edit: I feel I have to point out that "poor" was used in the sense of, 'oh no, that poor man hut himself'. There are plenty of people from backgrounds with more money who don't get good meals from their parents. Some parents don't realise they need to take so much care for children, some don't care and others have other reasons for not being able to provide meals.