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School dinners: 'A decision was taken without due diligence'

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Published Date: 16 June 2008
AFTER nursery children received a second round of fish paste sandwiches for lunch last week there are at last signs that the council is sorting out the city's school meals fiasco.
Education chiefs told the Evening News only days ago that they would take immediate action to improve the quality of the lunches after a nutritionist examined samples we had obtained and branded them "unhealthy". It is our intention to hold them to
that and hopefully the series of meetings which have taken place since our investigation will result in positive action being taken.

But it is a pity things ever came to this and the blame for this ludicrous situation lies squarely on the shoulders of the "budget group" who made the decision in the first place to axe the hot meals service.

Clearly from what has emerged since, this decision appears to have been taken without due diligence. It has to be assumed it was arrived at purely on cost grounds with little thought to the welfare of the children affected. The justification is that the closure of six school kitchens and serving packed lunches to 14 out of 18 council nurseries and to primary and secondary pupils on a Friday would save the council £500,000 a year.

In seeking further to defend the measure the council also cited a decline in the numbers of children taking school meals. It seems odd that they have since stated it is their intention to consult with teachers and parents over ways to encourage more children to take school meals.

For who in their right mind would think that serving up fish paste or cheese paste sandwiches could do anything but rapidly accelerate the decline in take up? It is certainly a less attractive proposition than previous menus which offered items like roast turkey and breaded haddock.

It is not good enough for councillors, including education leader Marilyne MacLaren and deputy leader of the council Steve Cardownie, to turn around after the event and say that they are disappointed with the standard of packed lunches being served.

The time to question the quality and nutritional value of the alternative to hot meals was prior to the decision to axe them being taken. It would have been the first question that any responsible parent – given the opportunity – would have asked. If any assurances were given at all with regard to quality they appear to have been swallowed without proper examination.

The council's handling of this issue certainly does not live up to Mrs MacLaren's boast that healthy eating and high quality school and nursery meals are a "high priority".

But if she and her coalition colleagues are serious about living up to this we look forward to them taking positive action soon to reassure parents that this is still the case.





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  • Last Updated: 16 June 2008 10:01 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Schools in Edinburgh
 
1

The_Doctor,

The Real World 16/06/2008 11:39:30
Edinburgh City Council: White Elephants before children.

By saving £500,000 a year (I question this figure) and removing perhaps the only proper meal for some of the poorest kids in the country, the Council will save enough money to lay a massive 200 yards of tramLINE!

I'm glad to know that ECC has its priorities straight...
2

,

16/06/2008 12:54:55
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
3

Steven P,

edinburgh 16/06/2008 12:56:05
I'm no councillor apologist, but isn't it about time that some local government official was held accountable for the state of school meals (and several other failures within council run services). There must be somebody employed by the council to manage and monitor school meals (as a council operation there are probably about 250 - each doing SFA about it).
4

Alberto.,

16/06/2008 12:59:56
what kind of mentality do those running the school meals service have in supplying this seemingly 'rubbishy' food to our children - and don't tell me it's simply 'No Funding' available, especially when our Highly paid MSP's an Councillors, who can well afford to pay for whatever type of meal appeals to them -and yet are given a subsidy to provide meals for them - and no doubt the 'Honesty box' still goes un-noticed day after day, and causes no concern to them!

Dishonesty beating Honesty as a best Policy - hands down apparently!!

By the amount of money our elected Political members and Councillors are rewarded with, by way of salary and expenses - subsidised meals for them should cease immediately, the 'mythical and failed Honesty Box' should be abandoned (as it already appears to have been by many!) and full payment should be demanded from all diners!
5

Linda,

Edinburgh 16/06/2008 13:14:36
Agree with Steven P. Whoever was monitoring this should go. Seems nonsense to waste millions of Citycoffers on one unwanted Tram line when much more pressing needs.
6

PG,

Edinburgh 16/06/2008 13:28:10
Surely when these decisions are made, someone's job is to research if there is any conflict in policy? Joined-Up Government? They can barely manage Joined-Up writing!
7

The_Doctor,

The Real World 16/06/2008 14:09:35
#2

Swamp life is well aware that the Tramline is a White Elephant, and that millions of pounds are being creamed off from "non-essential" services like education and community healthcare to pay for this fiasco.

As you are clearly of low intelligence, I shall explain it for you. With the removal of ring-fenced budgets for services such as education and care of the elderly, the Council is now free to move money from these services to other pet projects. Such as the Tramline.

Every pound spent on that travesty is a pound less for other services. Therefore EVERY story about Council budget cuts is relevant to the Trams gravy-train. QED.
8

Graham P,

Edinburgh 16/06/2008 16:00:09
...and if the council were to install a public toilet made of solid gold, the anti-tram whingers would bang on about how the council could have used money from the trams to make it it of platinum instead.
9

,

16/06/2008 16:25:47
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
10

A Mrs,

edinburgh 16/06/2008 17:08:09
why dont they keep one of the schools earmarked for closure open, that way that school could provide the meals for the nurserys.

 

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