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Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs
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Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

Dec 18, 2015

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Page 1: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

Other Regulatory Requirements

Presented by: Linda StullGrants Coordination and School SupportSchool Nutrition Training and Programs

Page 2: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

Prepayment of Meals

It is important that students are able to prepay for meals in a common location, at designated times during the week so that overt identification is prevented.

Prepayment of meals should be advertised.

Page 3: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

Sample Poster

Page 4: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

Student Meal Prices

Meals must be served free or at a reduced price. Maximum reduced price for lunch is 40 cents Maximum reduced price for breakfast is 30

cents Neither the USDA nor the MDE set

specific paid prices for school lunch, breakfast, special milk or a la carte food items.

Page 5: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

Unit Pricing

School meals must be priced as a unit (paid or reduced price).

Offer versus Serve (OVS) does not affect the unit price of the meal established by the SFA.

Regardless of the number of items students select, they must pay the established unit price for a reimbursable meal.

Page 6: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

Unit Pricing

The USDA sets the maximum price that can be charged for a reduced price lunch or breakfast.

Schools may use a tiered pricing structure (example: combo meals, super meals, etc.).

Page 7: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

Setting Prices for Adult Meals

Adult meals cannot be subsidized by federal funds.

Schools have the option of charging all a la carte prices or setting an adult unit price for the whole meal.

Page 8: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

Setting Prices for Adult Meals

Page 9: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

Competitive Foods

Competitive foods are all foods sold in competition with the National School Lunch Program (NSLP) and the School Breakfast Program (SBP) to children in food service areas during the school’s designated lunch or breakfast periods.

Page 10: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

Competitive Foods

There are two categories of competitive foods:

Foods of minimal nutritional value (FMNV)

All other foods offered for individual sale

Page 11: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

FMNV

Categories of FMNV include:Soda water Water ices Chewing gum Certain candies: hard candy, jellies

and gums, marshmallow candies, fondant, licorice, spun candy, and candy-coated popcorn

Page 12: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

FMNV

These foods belong to specific categories that are described in Appendix B of the regulations for the NSLP. Current program regulations prohibit the sale of FMNV in the food service areas during the school meal periods [7 C.F.R. 210.11(b)]. The regulations do not prohibit their sale outside the food service area at any time during the school day.

States and local school food authorities may impose additional restrictions.

Page 13: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

FMNV

Schools that participate in the NSLP and SBP must prohibit the sale of FMNV in food service areas during the designated meal periods.

Page 14: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

Other Foods Offered for Sale

Regulations do not prohibit the sale of these foods at any time during the school day anywhere on the school campus, including the school food service areas.

Page 15: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

Parent/Student Input

The National School Lunch Program regulation requires that each school food authority obtain student and parent input on a yearly basis and keep it on file.

There are many different approaches that a district can use to obtain the input

Page 16: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

Parent/Student Input

Suggestions for student involvement

Student food service advisory committee

Lunch survey for students Food preference surveys Taste testing parties Youth advisory council

Page 17: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

Parent/Student Input

Suggestions for parent involvement

Parent advisory committee Parent participation day Questionnaires designed for

parental input Parent/teacher group meetings

designed specifically for the lunch program analysis

Page 18: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

Coordinated Review Effort (CRE)

State agencies must conduct a CRE in all SFAs at least once during each 5-year review cycle, provided that each SFA is reviewed at least once every 6 years.

Page 19: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

Coordinated Review Effort (CRE)

During a CRE, only selected schools are reviewed; not all of the schools in the SFA are reviewed.

CRE looks at two organizational levels – SFA and school.

CRE looks at performance in two time periods, the Day of Review and Review Period. Some findings may extend outside the review period.

Page 20: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

Two primary review components: Critical Areas of Review and General Areas of Review.

In the Critical Area there are two Performance Standards.

Performance Standard 1 – Certification, Counting, and Claiming

Performance Standard 2 - Menu Planning

Coordinated Review Effort (CRE)

Page 21: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

Coordinated Review Effort (CRE)

In the General Area, the following areas are reviewed:

Free and Reduced Price ProcessVerificationFood QuantitiesCivil RightsMonitoring Reporting and RecordkeepingFood Safety and SanitationProcurement

Page 22: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

Additional Administrative Reviews (AAR)

Child Nutrition and WIC Reauthorization Act of 2004 required States to conduct AAR reviews of selected Local Educational Agencies (LEA).

LEAs are selected each year based on risk criteria.1) Verification data indicating a high-

level (e.g. top 25% among SFAs within a State) of non-response or response based terminations

2) Consistently claiming over 90% free eligibles or 80% reduced price eligibles

Page 23: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

Additional Administrative Reviews (AAR)

AARs focus on CRE Performance Standard 1 Critical Areas of Review and the verification component of the General Areas of Review. application, certification,

verification, meal counting, and meal claiming procedures.

Page 24: Other Regulatory Requirements Presented by: Linda Stull Grants Coordination and School Support School Nutrition Training and Programs.

School Meals Initiative (SMI)

Nutrition Review at all participating SFAs once every five years (7 CFR 210.19 )

Evaluates compliance, over the school week, with the nutrition standards for lunches and, as applicable, for breakfasts

The Road to SMI Success - A Guide for School Foodservice Directors

http://www.fns.usda.gov/tn/Resources/roadtosuccess.html.