Mom left outraged after teacher throws son’s school lunch snack away in front of entire class

We all need to eat healthy, and habits start when we’re children. What we enjoyed eating and being fed in our younger years tends to have an impact on our food cravings as we get older.

This, of course, includes what we eat at school. In some schools, the lunches and breakfasts provided aren’t always the healthiest, meaning some parents would rather pack their own kids’ lunches.

I always took a packed lunch to school, but looked on at the kids eating fries and chocolate treats with envy. Today, I’m glad I didn’t eat that food every day.

But, in a school in Canada, parents have complained after staff took the healthy eating drive a little too far.

PDP

In Durham, Ontario a healthy eating initiative was introduced in schools, one where children were not only served healthy lunches but encouraged to bring healthy food from home.

But in one school, a child was left distraught after his homemade slice of banana bread was taken away from him and thrown in the trash at snack time.

Upset and confused

Staff cited the reason as it having chocolate chips in it.

The boy, who was only 4 at the time, was left upset and confused. When he went home and told his mom, she complained to the Ajax school principal.

Mom of two, Elaina Daoust, said she was infuriated that her son’s food had been thrown out and that instead he had to eat the grapes out of his lunch box.

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“He came home with a chart (listing healthy snack ideas) and told me he and the teacher talked about it and healthy choices. She also sent a note to me. I was really, really, really mad for several reasons,” Elaina told The Star.

More than 30 parents have said their children have had food confiscated from them.

Lessons on healthy eating

A few of the items that were thrown out were juice boxes, Goldfish crackers, fruit snacks, granola bars, chocolate milk, and string cheese.

Flickr / Stock image

Durham Catholic District School Board says lessons on healthy eating are part of the school curriculum.

“There is nowhere in our policy or procedures that says our staff is allowed to take food away from a student,” says James MacKinnon, a teaching and learning consultant with the school board.

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