Fight for Schools has been termed as “appalling” the connection that the Biden administration has drawn between transgender policy and school nutrition. This connection was made by the Biden administration. Some of the comments that were made by Ian Prior are as follows:
The president of a conservative advocacy group criticized the Biden administration for using lunch money to hold “school districts hostage” in response to the revelation made by the Department of Agriculture that it would require select schools to allow trans pupils to use the bathroom of their chosen gender. This revelation came as a result of the revelation made by the Department of Agriculture that it would require select schools to allow trans pupils to use the bathroom of their chosen gender. He referred to this strategy as one of “taking hostages.”
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According to the Food and Nutrition Service (FNS) of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), schools that are eligible to receive grant money are required to make it abundantly clear in their policies that discrimination based on a person’s gender identity or sexual orientation is not tolerated. It was necessary for the educational institutions they adhere to this commitment. It was also suggested that an investigation should be carried out into any claims of such prejudice that may have been made.
“What you’re seeing here is truly the Biden administration saying, ‘You are going to do what I want or I am going to remove your lunch money,'” Fight for Schools Executive Director Ian Prior said in an interview with The News God. “What you’re seeing here is genuinely the Biden administration saying,” It is shocking and unconscionable that the federal government would intervene and link the school meal and nutrition programs to this sort of extreme ideology.
Only two of the many nutrition-related programs that fall under the scope of FNS are the Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) Program and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). The National School Lunch Program, which is overseen by the USDA, provided meals to over 30 million kids daily before the COVID-19 pandemic.