School dinners: Beef off the menu as costs rise
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Rising food prices mean beef is off some school dinner menus, with staples such as potatoes also more expensive, caterers have told BBC News.
Some caterers have switched to cheaper imported meats, and changed the fruit and vegetables on offer.
Laca, the school caterers' association for England and Wales, said the quality of meals was under threat.
The government said it was watching the issue of funding for free school meals "very closely" as costs rise.
Until recently, Laira Green Primary School in Plymouth served local Cornish beef for its roast dinners every Thursday, but has now switched to gammon as a cheaper alternative.
Chicken is on the menu less often, replaced instead with cheaper turkey.
The school is one of almost 70 around the city served by the same catering company, which is changing menus because of price rises.
Head teacher Bernadette Kennedy said she was pleased the school was still managing to offer a "healthy roast meal", but added: "Some children stopped having roast dinner, and when we asked them why, they said they really liked the roast beef and Yorkshire pudding.
"That's sad, because with the roast meat comes a lot of offer around vegetables that they might not otherwise try."
More than half of the children at the school are entitled to free school meals, and teachers say for some it can be their only meal of the day.
Even the potatoes have become more expensive as their caterer's Cornish supplier has faced rising fertiliser and fuel costs.
Laca asked its members about costs and shortages, and more than 160 companies provided information.
Between them they are responsible for the meals of more than a million pupils.
More than 60 of them said they had either switched from British meat to meat from abroad, or were considering doing so soon.
Grocery basics such as pasta, oil, frozen vegetables and fish were among the worst affected, in this large snapshot of the impact of rising food prices on school dinners.
Caterers reported seeing cost increases of between 20 to 30% for many products, with prices often fluctuating weekly.
Laca said one catering company had reported the cost of 10kg of prepared potatoes rising from £10.46 to £15.50, and boxes of 60 eggs going up from £9.79 to £13.39.
The cost of minced beef, used to make lasagne or burgers, rose by 11% overnight in recent days, it said.
Brad Pearce, national vice-chairman of Laca, said the long-term impact of Covid, the war in Ukraine and rising fuel costs were all having an effect on what his members could put on school plates.
Many caterers were also struggling to recruit staff for school kitchens.
"The costs that are coming forward make it impossible for us to continue, unless some very difficult choices are made," Mr Pearce said.
Those included moving to more processed food or buying meat from abroad, he added.
"That's something that we don't want to do, but in order to keep food on the plate we have to look at all options."
Laca members provide 80% of the school catering service in England and Wales.
Assist FM, the body representing Scottish caterers, says its members are expressing similar concerns.
How much are school dinners?
The rising costs matter because the budget is limited by what parents are willing to pay, and government funding.
Schools in England set the price they charge parents, so the cost of school dinners will vary. Laira Green Primary charges £2.20 per meal, for example.
The government pays for free school meals for state school pupils in England from Reception to Year 2, and for older children from families with low incomes. It costs £2.41 per meal for younger children and about £2.47 for older ones.
Child poverty campaigners, as well as school caterers, say costs are rising faster than funding, at a time when for many families a hot meal at school has become more important.
In Wales, the rising cost of food may have a knock-on effect on the funding needed for ambitious plans to offer a free school meal to every child in primary school.
There are mandatory food standards which school meals are meant to meet, and caterers say they are still managing to do that, but it is becoming increasingly difficult, although they are allowed to substitute foods.
The government said it would continue to give help to the most vulnerable people in response the rising cost of living, and added that it had expanded access to free school meals "more than any other [government] in recent decades".
Children and families minister Will Quince told the PA News agency schools must "manage their own individual budgets" but that he would continue to watch funding for free school meals "very closely because I've got to ensure that children up and down the country are getting a healthy nutritious meal at lunchtime".
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