John Legend Forks Over $5,000 to Help Pay Lunch Bill Debts for Seattle Public School Students
Legend sent a $5,000 donation under his birth name, John Stephens, to a campaign that initially sought to raise more than $20,000 to pay every student’s outstanding school lunch bill balance, according to .
The campaign was started by Seattle resident Jeffrey Lew, who wanted to “ease the burden” for families struggling to pay for nutritious meals for their children at school. Lew’s wife recognized Legend’s birth name and asked her husband to confirm the donor’s identity.
Legend tweeted his support for the campaign on Twitter.
My pleasure! We should have free lunch for all of our public students!
— John Legend (@johnlegend)
The campaign has been so successful, Lew told the Times, that it raised more than $43,000 and will be expanded to pay students’ lunch debts in Tacoma and Renton as well.
Across the country, there have been reports of schools throwing out students’ meals or engaging in “” —making kids wear a special wristband, have their hand stamped, or perform extra chores — if their families can’t pay. A introduced in Congress aims to end these practices, and activists have called on school districts to offer free lunch to all students.
In New York, Lunch 4 Learning activists say there are about whose families struggle to pay the estimated $315 annual cost of school lunch for each child.
Amazing work in Seattle ! We’re trying to get free school lunch in NYC. Everyone: Please support along with me!
— rachael ray (@rachaelray)
Read more about the lunch affordability gap here.
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