Your kid asks you for more money to spend on Candy, say... you know he / she eats too much candy already so you say no... Then the kid who was supposed to cover her school science project out of pocket money that she saved says she will spend the pocket money on candy and you pay for the science project.
Not exact matches
That possibility seems all the
more likely since the SNA will not be taking the opposite tack, i.e., staying the course when it comes to healthy food and trusting
kids to get used to the new offerings, but also
asking Congress
for more money to fund the law's requirements.
In several posts written last year, I took the School Nutrition Association (SNA) to task
for not
asking Congress
for more money to fund healthier school food, instead seeking only to roll - back school meal nutritional standards («School Food Professionals Versus
Kids: How Did It Come to This?
And, to be clear, I am glad that the SNA is
asking for more money, since almost everyone agrees that the Healthy, Hunger - Free
Kids Act has been underfunded since its passage in 2010.
I think this is in part because it looks like «free
money,» in that it allows him to
ask to put
more state
money into schools without
asking for new revenue sources via tax reform or something like Penny
for Kids.
I
kid you not, the next week I got a call saying they had too many leads and
asked for more money.