You are here: Los Angeles Education S.F. Education Examiner

Caroline Grannan

S.F. Education Examiner
Caroline Grannan was an editor at the San Jose Mercury News for 12 years. Currently she contributes to a number of Internet sites dealing with education and schools. She is a San Francisco public school parent, advocate, and volunteer and has followed education politics locally and nationwide.

  

Examiner Feeds

These websites were picked by the S.F. Education Examiner as useful resources.
Jay Mathews: Class Struggle -- Washingtonpost.com - 17 hrs ago Jay Mathews: Class Struggle -- Washingtonpost.com - 7 days ago Jay Mathews: Class Struggle -- Washingtonpost.com - 14 days ago Jay Mathews: Class Struggle -- Washingtonpost.com - 14 days ago Jay Mathews: Class Struggle -- Washingtonpost.com - 21 days ago

Education information, blogs and resources

Showing entries for Category: funding


Mayor Newsom, please help green our school lunches

July 13, 2:00 PM
by Caroline Grannan, S.F. Education Examiner
 
 
Mayor Newsom got dirt under his nails yesterday when he planted vegetables in the new Slow Food Nation Victory Garden outside City Hall, showcasing his commitment to encouraging healthy diets for San Franciscans.

The mayor could make a further big difference in the diet of San Francisco's young people by supporting expanded salad bars in SFUSD schools. 

In 2007-08, the city gave SFUSD $514,000 to be used for opening and operating salad bars in 25 schools. In the proposed 2008-'09 city budget, SFUSD still receives $234,000 from the Department of Children, Youth and Their Families to help maintain the existing salad bars, but that's all.

This represents a cut of almost 55% from last year's funding, and makes it financially challenging for the district to open any more salad bars at the more than 75 schools which still do not have one. (In my view, these are expenses that the city – not school budgets -- should be picking up. Feeding the community's kids isn't an educational expense – it's a community commitment to young people's health.)

Meanwhile, in the last couple of weeks it became clear that the DCYF budget contained about $3.2 million more than had been anticipated. As previously posted here, the mayor's office swooped in at the last minute with some proposed allocations for that money that ignited controversy because of the lack of public input, and the vague and indirect benefit that students and schools might reap from most of those items.

This would have been a perfect opportunity for Newsom to propose restoring the $280,000 of funding for more salad bars. I hope the goal of serving better food to our city's poorest children hasn't fallen off his priority list.


Topics: funding , Mayor Newsom , school food
   Subscribe   Feed

Comments

Name:  
Email Address:  
Comments:  

More from S.F. Education Examiner

Kids may be the losers when improvisation hijacks budgeting process

July 3, 12:00 PM
Maybe it’s politics as usual, but San Francisco's city budget includes a new windfall of money for children’s programs, and a confused and inconsistent process for allocating it means that the money may well not go where it’s needed... Read More
Topics: children's programs , funding

Flak over Newsom's budget changes: Kids' services cut to fund 'gimmicky' projects?

June 23, 4:20 PM
San Francisco parent, children’s advocate and volunteer Stefanie Eldred raises concerns about city funding for children’s programs, posting on the SFSchools listserve. Here’s what’s bothering her: “The Mayor, in the last... Read More
Topics: children's programs , funding , Mayor Newsom