This item was published during the term of a previous administration that ended in April 2007
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Free fruit for first two years of primary
19/02/2003
Healthier school meals are on the menu while children in the
first two years of primary will enjoy free fruit thanks to new
measures and investment announced today.
A package of improvements, backed by an additional £63.5
million, aims to drive up nutritional standards, improve the
health of young people, and tackle child poverty.
The Measures include:
- free fruit for pupils in primary one and two
- new nutrient standards for school meals
- larger portions of more nutritious food at no further
cost to parents
- fresh, chilled drinking water available free in school
dining rooms
- raising awareness of the entitlement to free school
meals
- improved atmosphere and ambiencefacilities in dining
halls
- raising awareness of the entitlement to free school
meals
They flow from the final recommendations of the Expert Panel
on School Meals which today publishes its final report
Hungry for Success. Ministers have accepted
the recommendations in full.
At St Thomas of Aquin's school in Edinburgh, Education
Minister Cathy Jamieson said:
"Under the chairmanship of Michael O'Neill, the Panel has
produced an excellent set of recommendations which will secure
a radical improvement in the quality and attractiveness of the
school meals service.
"A healthy diet and lifestyle are vital to developing
healthy minds. Research clearly demonstrates that young people
perform better academically when they eat a well-balanced diet.
and iImplementing the recommendations from
Hungry for Success will revitalise the school
meals service in Scotland.
"The new measures will help local authorities and caterers
serve up healthier meals in settings that are appealing to
children and young people. Pupils can expect to have a greater
say about services and to see improvements such as better
facilities in dining halls, fewer queues, more choice and
generous portions of good-quality food.
"However, these improvements are not just about school
lunchtimes - they should be consistent with our efforts to
create a 'whole school' approach, towards the promotion of
better health through what is taught in classrooms, what is
served in breakfast clubs and out-of-school clubs, and what is
sold in vending machines and tuck shops.
"And the introduction of free fruit in the first two years
of primary will introduce children to the importance of a
healthy balanced diet from an early age."
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Social Justice Minister Margaret Curran said:
"If we are to tackle poverty and close the opportunity gap
which still stifles the prospects of many young Scots, we need
to work together as a government. All the evidence shows that
children need a healthy start in life if they are to realise
their full potential as adults.
"We also face the problem that one in five children who
qualify for free school meals do not take them. It is important
that schools do everything to reduce the stigma often
associated with free school meals. No child should be made to
feel like a second class citizen because their parents have a
low income, and schools must make sure that does not
happen."
Health Minister Malcolm Chisholm said:
"Our nutrient standards for school meals are the first of
their kind in the UK and form a key part of our campaign to
improve Scotland's health record by improving the nation's
diet. Local authorities, schools and caterers will work in
partnership with parents and pupils to implement the standards
in all primary and special schools by December 2006.
"Schools meal facilities will no longer advertise or promote
food or drinks with a high fat or sugar content. Pupils will
have healthy meal options and access to fresh, chilled drinking
water with meals. Schools should complement this with access to
good-quality tap water throughout the school day.
"Our Healthy Living Campaign and the Scottish Diet Action
Plan seek to increase the amount of fresh fruit and vegetables
in our diet, and reduce the high consumption of fat, sugar and
salt. Today's announcement will ensure children across Scotland
have access to high-quality school meals, which supports those
objectives."
The Expert Panel visited schools across Scotland, conducted
an audit of current practice, and held workshops with local
authorities. It recommended practical proposals based on
existing good practice and sound evidence.
The panel's final report report was
Hungry for Success - a whole school approach to school
meals in Scotland.
Its key recommendations are:
- establishment of Scottish Nutrient Standards for School
Lunches for primary and specialist school by December 2004
and secondary December 2006
- schools to explore ways of maximising anonymity of free
meals
- schools and local authorities to review current
procedures and make improvements to dining facilities to
enhance atmosphere and ambience and encourage social
experience of schools meals. This should include looking at
seating, queuing, length of lunch break, supervision of
meals, labelling of meals and to explore introducing
pricing as an incentive to healthy food and sending menus
to parents.
- monitoring the implementation of the Standards by HIME
and other relevant agencies
- all schools should review their current practice in
establishing links between learning and teaching on healthy
eating in the curriculum and food provision in the
school.
- education authorities should promote partnership
approaches and schools should develop mechanisms to deliver
partnership working.
- processes maximising anonymity for free meal recipients
should be explored as a priority in all schools. Primary
schools should review their ticket allocation practices to
ensure anonymity for free school meals is maximised and
education authorities should adopt early introduction of a
school meal application for multiple use cards in
particular in secondary schools
- improvements to the dining room to enhance its
atmosphere and ambience, and encourage its use as a social
area should be considered as a priority by local
authorities and should be taken into account in their wider
school estate planning. It is desirable, wherever possible,
that a separate dining area should be provided.
- senior management within schools should strongly
support and endorse their school meal provision as part of
the whole child approach
Local authorities together with COSLA will incorporate
strategies for implementing the recommendations into mainstream
planning process that will enable schools and communities to
adopt recommendations.
School meals additional grant funding distribution
arrangements (£000s)
| 2003-04 | 2004-05 | 2005-06 Total |
Aberdeen City | 403 | 682 | 765 | 1,849 |
Aberdeenshire | 536 | 904 | 1,006 | 2,447 |
Angus | 251 | 426 | 479 | 1,155 |
Argyll & Bute | 195 | 331 | 374 | 899 |
Clackmannanshire | 122 | 209 | 240 | 570 |
Dumfries & Galloway | 329 | 557 | 623 | 1,509 |
Dundee City | 361 | 628 | 745 | 1,735 |
East Ayrshire | 296 | 507 | 582 | 1,385 |
East Dunbartonshire | 284 | 482 | 543 | 1,308 |
East Lothian | 223 | 382 | 440 | 1,045 |
East Renfrewshire | 242 | 410 | 462 | 1,113 |
Edinburgh, City of | 873 | 1,504 | 1,751 | 4,128 |
Eilean Siar | 64 | 108 | 123 | 295 |
Falkirk | 333 | 567 | 644 | 1,543 |
Fife | 814 | 1,386 | 1,575 | 3,775 |
Glasgow City | 1,405 | 2,446 | 2,911 | 6,761 |
Highland | 539 | 924 | 1,065 | 2,529 |
Inverclyde | 212 | 365 | 423 | 1,000 |
Midlothian | 206 | 352 | 403 | 962 |
Moray | 205 | 347 | 388 | 940 |
North Ayrshire | 342 | 586 | 675 | 1,603 |
North Lanarkshire | 879 | 1,518 | 1,775 | 4,172 |
Orkney Islands | 48 | 81 | 92 | 220 |
Perth & Kinross | 272 | 460 | 513 | 1,246 |
Renfrewshire | 468 | 810 | 950 | 2,228 |
Scottish Borders | 237 | 400 | 447 | 1,084 |
Shetland Islands | 56 | 95 | 105 | 257 |
South Ayrshire | 254 | 431 | 487 | 1,172 |
South Lanarkshire | 766 | 1,318 | 1,530 | 3,614 |
Stirling | 201 | 342 | 389 | 932 |
West Dunbartonshire | 248 | 425 | 492 | 1,165 |
West Lothian | 398 | 677 | 765 | 1,840 |
Scotland | 12,060 | 20,660 | 23,760 | 56,480 |
The free fruit for the first two years of primary will be
financed via the National Priorities Action Fund and each
authority will receive an amount dependent on pupil numbers for
each of the next three years. (£s)
| 2,000,000 |
Aberdeen City | 68,597 |
Aberdeenshire | 94,346 |
Angus | 43,950 |
Argyll & Bute | 34,063 |
Clackmannanshire | 20,560 |
Dumfries & Galloway | 58,012 |
Dundee City | 55,304 |
East Ayrshire | 48,492 |
East Dunbartonshire | 48,282 |
East Lothian | 40,194 |
East Renfrewshire | 41,889 |
Edinburgh City | 139,833 |
Eilean Siar | 10,743 |
Falkirk | 58,361 |
Fife | 140,199 |
Glasgow City | 213,391 |
Highland | 85,192 |
Inverclyde | 33,574 |
Midlothian | 34,535 |
Moray | 36,631 |
North Ayrshire | 57,365 |
North Lanarkshire | 139,116 |
Orkney Islands | 8,367 |
Perth & Kinross | 50,186 |
Renfrewshire | 72,021 |
Scottish Borders | 42,675 |
Shetland Islands | 9,398 |
South Ayrshire | 41,854 |
South Lanarkshire | 122,714 |
Stirling | 34,954 |
West Dunbartonshire | 39,094 |
West Lothian | 76,109 |
The new nutritional standards will apply to publicly funded
primary, secondary and specialist schools, but it is hoped that
independent schools will also follow them.
In 2001-02, 19% of pupils were entitled to free school meals
in local authority schools, but only 15% were recorded as
taking free meals. 50% of all pupils take school meals (free
and paid).
The cost of school meals is £87 million of which £30 million
is recovered from paid meals. Local authorities receive money
for school meals from the Executive based on pupil numbers in
the annual school census.
The Executive's Healthy Living campaign is part of a broad
and comprehensive campaign to improve the national diet. The
aim is to create a climate of change within the country,
promoting healthy eating to the public and supporting and
encouraging the food industry to play their part.
St Thomas of Aquin's operates a cashless canteen system;
pupils use swipecards. This promotes anonymity and encourages
those pupils entitled to free school meals to take them up.
53-60% of pupils eat school meals (Monday-Thursday) and
approximately 13% of pupils are entitled to free school
meals.