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Food Services


Meal Menus | Summer Meals | Meal Prices & Payments | Meal Policies | Benefits of Breakfast | Peanut Butter Protocol | Work in Food Services

All menus are in PDF format. If you are in need of assistance when accessing the menus, please email Public Information Specialist Zach Ribert.

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Summer Meals

All children in the Salmon River Central School District community are eligible for free lunch this summer.

The free meals are available for kids and teens up to 18 years old to enjoy from July 8 to Aug. 16. The hours are Monday through Friday 11 a.m. to 12 p.m..

This year, lunches provided at Rainbow Park, Bombay Park and Westville Fire Department must be consumed onsite. This is a new requirement from the Child Nutrition Knowledge Center at the New York State Education Department.

Lunch will be served at the following sites that must be eaten onsite:

We understand that many families like to pick up the lunches and drop them off to their children during lunch breaks. As a result, the Salmon River Central School District was granted special permission to allow families to pick up lunch at the Akwesasne Library this year.

In order to pick up lunches at the Akwesasne Library site, families must enroll their children by filling out this online registration form by Friday, June 14 (via Google Forms). Please note that only children who are enrolled for the lunches at Akwesasne Library will be able to pick up. If a child is not enrolled, they may instead choose to eat lunch onsite at Rainbow Park, Bombay Park or Westville Fire Department.

If you have any questions about the Summer Feeding Program, please contact School Food Service Manager Nicole Foster.

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Breakfast & Lunch is Free for All Salmon River CSD Students

All enrolled students at Salmon River Central School District are eligible to receive a healthy breakfast and lunch at school for free during the 2023-24 school year.

This change was made possible by the Community Eligibility Provision through the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The provision is a non-pricing meal service option for school districts that are located in low-income areas to help improve food security. The USDA will reimburse Salmon River for the cost of these meals. À la carte items and extra meals are available for students, but they will need to be purchased separately.

To ensure the district’s ability to continue this program in the future, all Salmon River families are asked to complete and submit a Household Income Application (via LINQ Connect). That form will also help determine whether your child(ren) may be eligible for other programs. If you have any questions, please contact the Food Service Manager.

Meal Prices & Payments

2023-24 Student Meal Prices

  • Breakfast – FREE
  • MS & HS Lunch – FREE
  • Elementary Lunch – FREE

Payments

The district utilizes LINQ Connect to make easy and secure payments.

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Meal Charging and Prohibition Against Meal Shaming

It is the District’s goal to provide students with access to nutritious no- or low-cost meals each school day and to ensure that a student whose parent/guardian has unpaid meal charges is not shamed or treated differently than a student whose parent/guardian does not have unpaid meal charges. Unpaid meal charges place a large financial burden on the District. The purpose of this policy is to ensure compliance with federal requirements for the USDA Child Nutrition Program and to provide oversight and accountability for the collection of outstanding student meal balances to ensure that the student is not stigmatized, distressed, or embarrassed.

View Policy 5660: Meal Charging & Prohibition Against Meal Shaming.

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Benefits of Breakfast

Eating breakfast as a child is important for establishing healthy habits for later in life. Schools that provide breakfast in the classroom to all students have shown decreases in tardiness and suspensions as well as improved student behavior and attentiveness. What you eat for breakfast can have an impact on learning. One study showed that eating breakfast food high in fiber and low in sugar for breakfast helped students sustain the cognitive effects of breakfast. School Breakfast provides ¼ the recommended amounts of protein, calcium, iron, vitamin A, and vitamin C for the day.

Eating breakfast can help improve math, reading, and standardized test scores. Children who eat breakfast often behave better in school and get along with their peers more than those who do not. Breakfast helps children pay attention, perform problem-solving tasks, and improves memory. Children who eat school breakfast are likely to have fewer absences and incidents of tardiness than those who do not. By eating breakfast, students get more of important nutrients, vitamins and minerals such as calcium, dietary fiber, folate and protein. Studies have shown that children who eat breakfast on a regular basis are less likely to be overweight. 

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Food Services By The Numbers