Georgia 2025-2026 Regular Session

Georgia Senate Bill SB217

Introduced
2/19/25  

Caption

'Healthy Start"; enact

Impact

Should SB217 be enacted, it would significantly influence educational policy and funding at the local level in Georgia. The State Board of Education is tasked with assessing the funding necessary to sustain a statewide school lunch program, which would include annual evaluations to ensure all eligible students receive meals. This approach aims to maximize student participation in school meal programs. Additionally, the bill encourages local systems to adopt the United States Department of Agriculture's Community Eligibility Provision, allowing them to group schools for maximizing federal funding opportunities, which would enhance resource allocation and accessibility to meals for students in need.

Summary

Senate Bill 217, titled 'Healthy Start,' seeks to enhance the availability of school lunch and breakfast programs for public school students in Georgia. The bill mandates that meals must be offered at no cost to students who qualify for reduced-price meals under both federal and state guidelines. It emphasizes the importance of providing high-quality, healthy meals to support student learning, thus addressing nutritional needs directly tied to educational outcomes. The bill is aimed at ensuring that local school systems receive adequate funding and support from the state in maintaining and developing these programs.

Contention

Notable points of contention surrounding SB217 include the concern that although the bill aims to improve nutritional access, there may be challenges in the implementation of the program. Stakeholders might raise questions regarding the sufficiency of proposed state supplements to local school funding, particularly in areas with varying local budgets and differing needs among communities. Furthermore, the emphasis on utilizing Georgia-grown products in school meal programs brings an element of local agricultural support but may also invite debate about cost-effectiveness and sourcing logistics, especially if implementation leads to increased costs.

Companion Bills

No companion bills found.

Previously Filed As

GA HB510

Education; breakfast and lunch programs for all public school students; provide

GA HB963

Georgia K-5 Social and Emotional Health Act; enact

GA HB1139

Leave No Child Hungry Act; enact

GA HB87

Nontraditional Special Schools Act; enact

GA HB535

Georgia Youth Homelessness Act; enact

GA HB844

Practice of Nutrition and Dietetics Act; enact

GA HB538

Georgia Early Literacy Act; enact

GA HB287

Microenterprise Home Kitchen Operations Act; enact

GA SB177

"Food Insecurity Eradication Act"; enact

GA HB62

Georgia Health and Economic Livelihood Partnership (HELP) Act; enact

Similar Bills

CA AB1197

School meals: nutritional requirements.

CA AB2949

School meals: nutritional requirements.

NJ S1677

Requires schools to provide free school breakfasts and lunches to students from working class, middle-income families; designated as "Working Class Families' Anti-Hunger Act."

NJ A2368

Requires schools to provide free school breakfasts and lunches to students from working class, middle-income families; designated as "Working Class Families' Anti-Hunger Act."

CA AB1508

Pupil nutrition: Breakfast After the Bell Program.

CA AB2527

School breakfast and morning snacks: nonschoolaged children and guardians.

CA AB2211

School breakfast: instructional minutes.

NJ S1226

Expands school breakfast program to all schools with five percent or more of students eligible for free or reduced price meals.