First Minister urged not to abandon universal free school meals

The First Minister said targeted help might be needed to assist those most in need

The First Minister appeared to question universal free schools meals
Author: Kieran BrandPublished 3rd May 2023

Humza Yousaf is being urged to recommit to rolling out free school meals to all youngsters across Scotland, as the First Minister said targeted help might be needed to assist those most in need.

His comments came at the end of an anti-poverty summit he chaired in Edinburgh on Wednesday.

The Scottish Government has previously committed, but has not yet delivered, free school lunches for older primary school pupils as well as a pilot for secondary school students, but Mr Yousaf appeared to question the universal provision of free schools meals.

He told a newspaper: "I've got a 14-year-old now. Should people be paying for her free school meals when I earn a First Minister's salary?

"I don't think that's the right way to use that money. A better way is to target those that need it absolutely the most."

But the Educational Institute of Scotland has hit out at the suggestion the policy of universal free school meals could be abandoned.

General secretary Andrea Bradley made clear: "Reneging on a commitment to free school meals would be a massive and profoundly damaging mistake which would betray young people living in poverty across Scotland, and would be a particularly hard blow to families with school-aged children as they continue the hard struggle with the cost-of-living crisis."

Ms Bradley added: "The First Minister seems to suggest that means-testing provision of free school meals is a preferable option, primarily for financial reasons.

"But that is misunderstanding the problem entirely. A key principle of universal provision of free school meals for all young people is about removing the stigma of free entitlement, to ensure that the young people who need free meals the most feel completely comfortable in accepting them.

"Means-testing will always mean, as it does now, that too many young people will miss out on access to healthy, nutritional food at school.”

Mr Yousaf’s comments came as he hinted there could also be future tax rises for higher earners to help boost support for low-income Scots.

Mr Yousaf said: "We must be bold in considering future tax decisions. Tough choices will need to be made about existing budgets, and we need to consider whether targeting help is the way forward when money is so tight."

The First Minister said he had called the summit, which brought together anti-poverty campaigners, academics and people "at the sharp end of the cost-of-living crisis and with direct experience of poverty", so the Government could consider what more needs to be done.

Mr Yousaf said: "Everything I heard confirmed that poverty and the cost-of-living crisis is the biggest challenge facing this country - one that has been exacerbated by some of the UK Government's actions and inactions.

"We have already acted to tackle the pressure on those most in need - for example, our game-changing ÂŁ25 per week, per child Scottish Child Payment, Carer's Allowance Supplement, and Winter Heating Payment. But we must do more."

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