A South Auckland principal has rejected the government's school lunch programme, saying it does nothing 'for people's mana'. Others say it's simply an example of the village raising the child. Justin Latif reports.
In 1975 Milton Friedman, hero of free-market economics, titled his collection of essays There's No Such Thing As A Free Lunch. His contention: the welfare state comes at the cost of creating dependency.
Similar arguments appear to inform a decision by Ōtara-based Yendarra School principal Susan Dunlop, following consultation with parents and staff, to decline the chance to join the free Ka Ora, Ka Ako school lunches programme.
A core value of the school is "rather than giving a man a fish, give them a hand up", Dunlop told The Spinoff. "We don't give out things for free as we don't think it does anything for people's mana."
The school has its own lunch initiative. In 2008, it launched a drive urging parents to only provide students with healthy food, alongside a "no fizzy drink" policy instituted a year earlier.
Dunlop says it's proven to be a huge success and as a result, "99.9 per cent of parents" opted not to take up the free lunches programme when it was suggested in a survey late last year.
"When I started here we were a typical decile 1a school," she said. "There wasn't any healthy food coming into school, and instead there were two-litre bottles of Coke and a bag of chips and that was it. We had hungry kids. They were so badly behaved and attendance was shocking, so we had to do something and I think, as principals, we're paid to make change," she said.
There had been "zero backlash" to the policy, she added. When a new child starts at the school the parents are given guidelines of what to buy and over time the children start bringing full lunch boxes which include fruit and a sandwich.
"We often dumb parents down. But the stories we constantly hear are of parents who go to the supermarket and their children are telling them what they can and can't put in the trolley," she said.
Dunlop is concerned, however, that the school is missing out on much-needed funding that is being put into the lunches programme instead.
"We're saving the government an excess of $1 million over three years, but we're being disadvantaged by helping ourselves," she said.
The case for wider change
For Sir Douglas Bader Intermediate School principal Jerry Leaupepe, such considerations have to be balanced against the wider economic opportunities.
"Schools could be treading into waters that are not our area and we need to steer clear of parenting parents," he said.
"I can't play martyr because of my personal view and then deny a kid something, it doesn't sit well with me. And there's always a piece of gold in there somewhere with a programme like this."
While he believes only a handful of families would struggle to provide lunches at his Māngere-based school, he says the programme can have a wider economic impact for the area.
"Wherever I can, I try to make sure we use local," he said.
"I've made sure our cleaner is a local guy, our uniforms are provided by a local business, a local guy does all our printing, and so we saw this as an opportunity to keep things as local as possible.
"We will flip our whole canteen into a space that allows a team to be paid to be here and make lunches for the kids. They still have to go through a bit more of a process but by term four I believe we can hopefully bring them on."
Clarissa Mackay began the Eat Right, Be Bright campaign for free lunches in schools in 2017, and her advocacy not only helped change the government's policy, but also saw her recognised by the Obama Foundation as an emerging leader in the Asia-Pacific region.
She says international research shows that when a free lunches programme is implemented effectively, it reduces child poverty and increases the economic infrastructure of that community.
"When you look at the United Kingdom and the majority of Europe, they've been doing it for so long that it's not seen as [disempowering], it's just seen as an alternative way for the 'village' to support the child," she said.
She believes the programme shouldn't just be viewed as a free food service, but as another way to increase incomes in low wage areas while at the same time giving local businesses new opportunities.
"The alternative to this programme would have been for the government to give every child $5 per day, per week, by increasing the benefits for example," she said.
"For a family of five kids, the government is essentially increasing their available income by $25 a day but this programme reaches a far wider group of people [not just beneficiaries but also those low wage families]. So even if your principled view is that you're disempowering families, economically this programme is essentially putting $5 a day per child into parents' pockets, to be used elsewhere."
Mackay says the programme seems to be operating well so far, but she would like to see some consistency in how it's delivered.
"Each school has had to choose a provider so in some instances this has created an amazing programme that works really well and in other areas, it's really let down the children, so some consistency in those providers, in terms of food quality and healthiness of the food, is what I'm looking for now."