Don’t let children go hungry this summer

by Sustain and Good Law Project

Don’t let children go hungry this summer

by Sustain and Good Law Project
Sustain and Good Law Project
Case Owner
Sustain is a charitable alliance for better food. Good Law Project is a not for profit that brings strategic litigation to protect the vulnerable
Closed
on 16th June 2020
£14,646
pledged of £20,000 target from 471 pledges
Sustain and Good Law Project
Case Owner
Sustain is a charitable alliance for better food. Good Law Project is a not for profit that brings strategic litigation to protect the vulnerable

Latest: June 16, 2020

The Government has announced a climb down

As you may have heard, the Government has announced a climb down and will now fund free school meals over the summer holidays. We will not, therefore, need to take any action in relation to this case…

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Families across the country are struggling to make ends meet. Many workers have lost their jobs or been furloughed, earnings have been slashed, and the price of the weekly shop has gone up. More and more are being forced to choose between paying their bills or putting food on the table. The Office for National Statistics reports that 2.6 million households are struggling to cover expenses such as energy and food. And we know that hundreds of thousands of children have had to skip meals because their families could not afford food. Many of us have seen this happen in our own communities.

The Government recognised the enormous scale of the problem when it introduced a food voucher scheme for children in England who are eligible for free school meals back in March. The scheme provided families with a voucher that could be spent at supermarkets to cover the costs of a child's lunch. It meant children could continue to receive at least one decent meal a day when schools closed during the COVID-19 lockdown.

Since then things have got much, much worse. One in eight workers expect to lose their job in the next three months and nearly a quarter think their hours will be reduced. Job losses and reductions in hours are much more common among lower-earning employees. This can be seen most clearly in demand on foodbanks: the Trussell Trust has reported an 89% rise in provision of food parcels and a 107% rise in provision of such parcels to children. This follows years of astronomical growth in demand. We know already that demand increases during the holidays because children aren't getting free school meals. Providers are worried they will not be able to cope this year. 

Despite this, the Government has specifically ruled out continuing the food voucher scheme over the summer holidays, and it has not otherwise committed to any meaningful or comprehensive way of providing free school meals over this period. Unless that changes, children across the country will go hungry.

Along with the food charity Sustain, we are taking urgent action to address this and we have written to the Secretary of State for Education Secretary Gavin Williamson MP to ask what action he will take to address the issue over the summer holidays. If he allows the nation’s poorest children to go hungry we will issue proceedings - urgently. You can read our letter to Secretary of State for Education here.

The outcomes of litigation are never certain. But we believe the case, and the issue it tackles, is compelling. With your support, we want to ensure that every child has food to eat - even when schools are closed. 

The details:
The Good Law Project and Sustain have instructed Jamie Burton of Doughty Street Chambers and Simpson Millar to act in this case, who are acting at reduced rates. 10% of the sums raised will go to the Good Law Project to help it develop and support further litigation in the public interest. It is our policy only to raise sums that we reasonably anticipate could be spent on this litigation. However, if there is a surplus it will go to support and enable other litigation we bring. Our founder, Jo Maugham QC, continues to work unpaid.



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Update 3

Sustain and Good Law Project

June 16, 2020

The Government has announced a climb down

As you may have heard, the Government has announced a climb down and will now fund free school meals over the summer holidays. We will not, therefore, need to take any action in relation to this case and will not collect sums pledged by you.

However, if you would like to support our ongoing work at Good Law Project you can do so here: https://goodlawproject.org/membership/  

Update 2

Sustain and Good Law Project

June 16, 2020

The Government's plans are inadequate

Sustain and Good Law Project have today written to the Government setting out why its proposals to ensure over 1.3m children do not go hungry are inadequate. You can read the Pre Action Protocol letter here.

The Government has responded to calls for extension of free school meal support over summer by claiming that a new £63 million local authority welfare assistance scheme should be used to help those who are struggling to afford “food and other essentials”. However, that money is not ring-fenced to feeding children entitled to free school meals - and is likely to be exhausted in part, if not entirely, by competing calls. Moreover, £63m is only just over half of the amount required to ensure free school meal provision for eligible children, even if the full amount were ring-fenced for this purpose alone.

The bleak reality is unless the Government changes course, hundreds of thousands of children will go hungry this summer. With your support, Sustain and Good Law Project will continue our legal challenge to ensure that doesn't happen.

Update 1

Sustain and Good Law Project

June 10, 2020

We have take the first formal step in proceedings

As you know, we wrote to Education Secretary Gavin Williamson last week, seeking confirmation of what action he will take to prevent children from going hungry over the summer school holidays.

Very shortly after our letter was sent, the Government announced by way of ‘lobby briefing’ that it would not continue the national school meal voucher scheme over the summer. We immediately wrote again to Gavin Williamson, seeking clarification of the position. The DfE responded to our letters to say that provision over summer is still being actively discussed, but did not deny that the voucher scheme had been discontinued. 

This is just not good enough. We will not stand by whilst the poorest children go hungry. In light of the Government’s wholly unsatisfactory response to our letter, and its premature decision to end the voucher scheme without an alternative means of support for families to take its place, we have taken the first step in the formal process of issuing judicial review proceedings. You can read our pre-action protocol letter here.

Your support, including sharing this page with friends and on your social media, is hugely appreciated. 

With your help, we can continue to hold the Government to account - and ensure that 1.3 million children don’t go hungry this summer.

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