Wishing you the best for the Thanksgiving holiday, and
in anticipation of the delicious food we will all enjoy, sharing this hopeful
experience regarding delicious school meals.
Earlier this month,
Rosemary and I drove 15 minutes from our home in Boston’s Back Bay to the P J
Kennedy Elementary School in East Boston near Logan Airport. Traditionally a
community of immigrants – once home to John Kennedy’s paternal grandfather Patrick
- East Boston is now 50 percent Latin American, and the school 85%.
Jill Shah, a friend and
neighbor of ours whose family foundation renovated kitchens in three East
Boston Schools to pilot improved school meals for some of Boston’s poorest
children, met us to give us a tour. Until recently, Boston school meals were
made on Long Island and sent here from New York to be thawed and eaten. Jill’s
vision was more old-fashioned – source healthy food locally and actually cook
it for the kids.
The school was built in 1933 and last renovated more than 50 years ago. All 302
K thru 5th grade students qualify for free or reduced price meals.
Lunch is served in the basement where the new kitchen was designed by chefs
Andy Husbands and Ken Oringer. School chef Santiago, in chef whites and a
Red Sox baseball cap, could not be prouder of the kitchen’s new combination
oven/steamer, and especially the counter of freshly cooked food. From the
minute we walked in, the wonderful smell made us hungry.
Around noon, kids line up and point to what they’d like. A lunch lady arranges
their choices on a tray. Today it is broccoli, carrots, chicken, mac and
cheese, apples and bananas. The kids sit at picnic style tables and eat
quietly. “Notice the zen-like hum” says Jill. “Last year it was total chaos in
here.” Jill plans to expand the program to 30 Boston schools next year. They
will be renovated and retrofit over the summer.
A first grade girl asks my name. Hers is Melissa and she is with her friend
Kristin. I ask what they like best. To my surprise it’s the broccoli and
red peppers. I walk over to the trash barrel on wheels and find almost no
food tossed or wasted. Only empty cardboard trays.
The city estimated the
renovation would cost $1 million. The Shah Foundation did it for
$65,000. They threw in a new coat of paint. “This really didn’t cost much
money” she says. “It was more about not taking no for an answer. There were
tons of obstacles. A sink that didn’t meet regulations. The lack of a grease
trap. I could go on and on. Some people stop at ‘no’. We didn’t. The idea was
not just serve better meals but create a food culture here.”
Boston has the money for
fresh and healthy school meals. What its students didn’t have was a voice. The
Shah Family Foundation provided one. Good food matters. Share Our Strength
chefs are as passionate about quality as access. Kids don’t just deserve food,
they deserve healthy and delicious food. If the Shaw’s experiment in Boston
catches on, our trip to the future maybe closer than we think.
Have a great Thanksgiving
holiday. Come back determined not to take no for an answer.
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