The breakfast club

MILLBROOK — This fall, students at the Millbrook High School might start their day with breakfast — at the school. On Monday, Aug. 29, Superintendent Lloyd Jaeger discussed with the Board of Education the new breakfast program.“We are excited to start a high school breakfast program as one of our offerings for the high school students, and we think it will be received with popularity,” said Jaeger. “We have our high school kids charging out the door without their home breakfast. Having that available at the high school will be a nice opportunity for a service to the kids but also as a revenue enhancer.”The exact time breakfast will be served is still being discussed by administrators, but board members are considering 7:15 a.m. to 7:30 a.m. “We may perhaps be able to extend first period, which would run closer to 8 a.m., with this smaller window,” said Craig Wolff, board member. “We can’t open it up too early. But we also don’t want kids bringing breakfast to class. So it’s a very short window. Some of the buses arrive as early as five minutes after 7 a.m., so it does remain a supervision issue.”Students who want to eat breakfast would be allowed off the buses. This choice is what Wolff believes will cause the supervision issue because the administration may have a difficult time preventing students from getting off the bus and not ordering breakfast.“The past discussion with Principal Kossman was how do you supervise this? And it’s not easily done,” said Wolff. “It’s going to be a challenge. Part of the things discussed were changing the route of entry for those taking advantage of breakfast. Making it so students who are buying breakfast are entering the building in an area closer to the cafeteria. We just need to make sure there aren’t any implications for traffic and unsafe routes.” Jaeger said he hopes that the new program will be beneficial for students while also helping the district’s revenue. John Rudy, vice president of the Board of Education, asked Wolff how long the program would last if financially the program remains in the red.“We are going to look at it for five weeks and completely evaluate it at the end of the third semester,” said Wolff. “But I would say under no circumstance would we be able to continue the program if it’s bringing us any further into the red.”

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