Thank you, Mr. Chair and the committee, for inviting me to speak today.
The Coalition for Healthy School Food is a network made up of more than 380 non-profit member organizations and over 150 endorsing organizations from all provinces and territories.
We've been advocating for a cost-shared national school food program for over a decade. We were very pleased when Canada joined the rest of the G7 by introducing the national school food policy and signing bilateral agreements with all provinces and territories.
We celebrate the tabling of the national school food program act, as we've been communicating that we'd like Canada to follow this best practice seen in other countries.
A recent World Food Programme report stated that all the evidence shows that school meal programs are one of the smartest long-term investments any government can make.
This bill is important to Canadians. The national school food program is about levelling the playing field and allowing children and youth across the country to eat well, be ready to learn and have equal opportunities to succeed. These programs help parents, especially women, reduce their stress and the time they spend preparing school meals. If breakfast and lunch are served, they also help families with two kids save $2,600 to $3,800 in annual food expenses.
Like many countries, Canada has been living through a food affordability crisis, and the national school food program has emerged as an important tool to help families with cost of living pressures. Our vision is that this program will support all families and children over time, which the legislation has committed to. We hope this is a first step in addressing this issue together. As you think about how to continue helping families with affordability pressures, we hope all parties and all members will appreciate that building out the national school food program is a ready-made tool that will have a real impact.
I'll continue to look at school food program benefits.
Intentionally designed programs can create a market for regionally grown food, grow local food economies and support communities. You and your colleagues can allocate funding to the “buy Canadian in the school” food program concept proposed in the April 2025 Liberal platform costing plan. The 2025 EAT-Lancet Commission also speaks about the strong potential of sustainable school meal policies to promote climate resilience, as well as more sustainable and equitable food systems.
These benefits can all be realized through the excellent national school food policy that supports the act. Specifically, the policy's principles are that programs be the following: accessible, without stigma or barriers; health-promoting, wherein food is nutritious and consistent with Canada's food guide, and where children and youth develop healthful behaviours, attitudes, knowledge and skills; inclusive, providing culturally appropriate food and engaging students in the broader community; flexible, wherein food is locally sourced where possible and reflective of local and regional circumstances; environmentally sustainable and adequately resourced; and accountable, with consistent and transparent monitoring and evaluation to make sure programs achieve policy objectives.
Given the importance and potential of the national school food program, we're very pleased that this program is included in this bill. This will allow organizations across the country to benefit from stable funding and, in turn, implement programs in a gradual and planned manner.
I would like to share our three recommendations.
The first is that you and your colleagues quickly pass the National School Food Program Act.
For our second recommendation, we want to see the full potential of the policy's vision and principles realized. We'd like to see strong mechanisms put in place for the Government of Canada to continually and incrementally work towards, monitor and report on the comprehensive implementation of the policy's vision, with each of the principles and objectives done in collaboration with the provinces, territories and indigenous governing bodies.
Third, the government should promote the national school food policy in all public communications of the act to ensure that the policy's details are recognized and understood.
We urge you to pass the national school food program act into legislation and then continue to build the program, including increasing your investment and working to ensure greater provincial and territorial involvement so that there's true equity of access. It's critical that these programs be adequately funded so that all children and youth can be nourished at school, as food affordability remains a top issue for families.
We look forward to continuing this conversation with you and working to achieve the full potential of this program.
Thank you.