[1][2][3][4] Lunch shaming is often blamed on the limited meal budgets public schools have to work with in the United States, which would lead many schools to pursue any outstanding debt in order to recoup costs.
[5][2][6][4] According to attorney Jessica Webster, "This is a financial transaction between school district and a parent.
Kids shouldn't be placed in the middle or ever fear being turned away from the lunch counter.
"[7] Many states in the US have outlawed practices that single out students who have school lunch debt.
[5][4] Webster was part of the Legal Services Advocacy Project team that wrote the legislation,[8] signed by Governor Tim Walz in 2023, that made Minnesota the third state to offer free breakfast and lunch to all public school students.