An Act To Allow for the Recovery and Redistribution of Food in Public Schools
Sec. 1. 20-A MRSA §6602-A is enacted to read:
§ 6602-A. School food recovery and redistribution
For the purposes of this subsection, "share table" means a cart or table on which students may place surplus food that is still in its original packaging or peel for consumption by other students or donation.
Sec. 2. Rulemaking; Food Code. By October 1, 2019, the Department of Health and Human Services, Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention and the Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry shall amend the rules jointly adopted by those departments, titled "State of Maine Food Code 2013," 10-144 C.M.R. Chapter 200 and 01-001 C.M.R. Chapter 331, to implement the provisions of this Act.
Sec. 3. Food share tables; guidance for schools. To encourage and facilitate the ability of public schools serving any grade from kindergarten to grade 12 to recover surplus food and redistribute it first to students in the school and then, if there is remaining surplus food, to local food banks, food pantries, soup kitchens and similar nonprofit organizations, the Department of Education and the Department of Health and Human Services, Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention shall collaborate to revise and disseminate, by October 1, 2019, to public school food service programs throughout the State the Department of Health and Human Services, Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention's health inspection program guidance titled "Food Sharing Tables - Guidance for Schools." The revised guidance must include at a minimum:
1. Information on food waste in general and recommendations for how schools can reduce the volume of surplus food they generate, including, but not limited to, conducting food waste audits, eliminating trays in cafeterias, establishing longer lunch periods, scheduling lunch periods after recess and establishing "offer versus serve" policies that allow students to decline some of the food offered;
2. Guidance on how schools can create share tables in their cafeterias on which students may place surplus food that is still in its original packaging or peel for consumption by other students or donation;
3. Information related to allowing students to take food when they leave the cafeteria as long as that food does not require temperature control for safety;
4. Information on cost-effective, safe and sanitary means by which schools:
5. Information related to allowing food on a share table to be redistributed to students outside the cafeteria but within the school by school personnel who are not school food service program staff, including teaching, administrative and nursing staff, as long as the food is:
6. Information relating to allowing donation of surplus food to food banks, food pantries, soup kitchens and similar nonprofit organizations.
summary
This bill requires the Department of Health and Human Services, Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention and the Department of Education, by October 1, 2019, to collaborate to revise the Department of Health and Human Services, Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention's health inspection program guidance titled "Food Sharing Tables - Guidance for Schools" and disseminate the new guidance to public schools in the State.
The bill requires the Department of Health and Human Services, Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention and the Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry to grant public school food service programs a variance under the departments' jointly adopted rules regulating food safety in order to allow public school food service programs to collect food that was taken from the food service line by students and placed on a share table and to redistribute that food through the food service line; to allow students to take food from a share table and consume that food in the same breakfast, lunch or snack period or at another time; to allow students to place unwanted, eligible food items on a share table at any time during their breakfast, lunch or snack period; and to allow school staff members under certain circumstances to collect and redistribute food from a share table.
The bill does not mandate the creation of share tables within schools or require schools to purchase additional food or materials.