Since the pandemic was declared and many schools transitioned to virtual learning, many districts have continued to provide free meals to students in need through the Summer Food Service Program and the Seamless Summer Option with help from a laundry list of waivers approved by the US Department of Agriculture to simplify paperwork and allow participants to pick up food rather than consume it at feeding cites.

Just as many of those waivers and programs were set to expire, USDA last week extended many necessary waivers for schools to continue providing free meals to qualifying students through the end of September and committed to “continually calculating remaining appropriate funds [through the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act] to determine how far we may be able to provide waivers in the future.”

However, citing funding uncertainty, the department ​stopped short of legislators’ request to extend the Summer Food Service Program and Seamless Summer Operation nationwide, which would waive area eligibility to alleviate school administrative burdens and allow other community organizations to distribute meals, as they were able during the first months of the pandemic.

Against this backdrop, several non-profits, food manufacturers and food service providers have stepped in to help school districts feed students and their families safely during the pandemic. Among those is Revolution Foods, whose CEO Kristin Groos Richmond discusses in this episode of FoodNavigator-USA’s Soup-To-Nuts podcast​ how the pandemic has complicated and heightened the need for feeding students. She also shares best practices for feeding children this fall, whether classes are held online, in the classroom or a hybrid of both. And finally, she calls on food and beverages manufactures to help fill the gaps not directly addressed by the school meals program, such as feeding students on the weekends and ensuring their caregivers and siblings who are not in school also have enough to eat.