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Ottawa to Draft School Food Program

Full Title: An Act to develop a national school food program for children

Summary#

This bill orders the federal Minister of Health to design a national school food program, in partnership with provinces and other stakeholders. It sets what the program must include, requires a report to Parliament within one year, and a full review within five years. It does not fund meals or set dollar amounts.

  • Develops a school food program with clear “healthy food” criteria based on Canada’s Food Guide (Program development (a)).
  • Assesses whether to create a federal grant and cost‑sharing with provinces so meals are at little or no cost to families (Program development (b)).
  • Builds on existing programs and best practices and promotes food education in schools (Program development (c)–(d)).
  • Requires a public report within one year and a public effectiveness review within five years (Report to Parliament (1)–(2); Review and report (1)–(2)).
  • Notes Canada lacks a national program and cites child food insecurity as a motivation (Preamble).

What it means for you#

  • Households

    • No immediate change to school meals. The bill designs a program but does not start it or fund it (Program development; Report to Parliament (1)).
    • If a future grant and cost‑sharing plan is adopted, meals are intended to be at little or no direct cost to families (Program development (b)).
  • Students

    • The goal is that all children have access to healthy food at school, but access depends on later funding and provincial agreements (Program development; Program development (b)).
    • Schools would promote evidence‑based healthy food education (Program development (d)).
  • Schools and school boards

    • You may be consulted during program design. The program will draw on existing school food efforts (Program development; Program development (c)).
    • Future standards for what counts as “healthy” food will reference Canada’s Food Guide (Program development (a)).
  • Provinces and territories

    • You will be formal partners in designing the program for health and education settings (Program development).
    • The Minister must assess federal grants and cost‑sharing with provinces; no terms or amounts are set in this bill (Program development (b)).
  • Federal government

    • The Minister of Health must table a report outlining the program within one year of the Act coming into force and post it online within 10 days of tabling in both Houses (Report to Parliament (1)–(2)).
    • A review of effectiveness is due within five years after that first report, with public posting within 10 days (Review and report (1)–(2)).

Expenses#

Estimated net cost: Data unavailable.

  • No fiscal note or cost estimate is provided.
  • The bill includes no direct appropriations or dollar amounts.
  • It requires an assessment of whether to set up a federal grant program and provincial cost‑sharing, but gives no figures or formulas (Program development (b)).
  • Administrative costs to develop, report on, and review the program are not quantified. Data unavailable.

Proponents' View#

  • Creates a national framework to address child food insecurity in schools, which the bill highlights as a concern in Canada (Preamble; Program development).
  • Uses Canada’s Food Guide to define healthy food, which can improve nutrition standards across schools (Program development (a)).
  • Aims to make meals free or low cost to families through federal grants and provincial cost‑sharing, reducing out‑of‑pocket costs (Program development (b)).
  • Respects provincial roles in health and education by requiring consultation and building on existing programs (Program development; Program development (c)).
  • Adds accountability through deadlines: a public plan within one year and a five‑year effectiveness review (Report to Parliament (1)–(2); Review and report (1)–(2)).

Opponents' View#

  • Does not guarantee funding or meals; it only mandates planning. Families may see no change without later appropriations or agreements (Program development (b)).
  • Could strain federal‑provincial relations. Education and health are provincial, and provinces may resist federal conditions (Preamble; Program development).
  • Key terms are broad. Defining “healthy” foods and “evidence‑based” education may be contentious and burdensome for schools (Program development (a), (d)).
  • Implementation risk is high if provinces differ on cost‑sharing. Uneven uptake could lead to patchy access across regions (Program development (b)).
  • Timelines may delay impact. The first concrete outcome is a report within one year; the effectiveness review comes only after five years (Report to Parliament (1); Review and report (1)).

Timeline

Dec 14, 2021 • House

First reading

Healthcare
Education
Social Welfare
Social Issues