A6 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 2022 Merkley: He called Putin’s Millions of children will miss healthy school meals when pandemic relief expires actions on Ukraine a war crime By ALLISON AUBREY National Public Radio When schools pivoted to virtual learning early in the pandemic, the National School Lunch Program was thrown into chaos. Millions of chil- dren rely on school meals to keep hunger at bay, so school nutrition directors scrambled to adopt new, creative ways to distribute food to families. Some of these changes were improvements on the status quo, they say. And as part of pandemic relief legislation, the federal food and nutrition services agency waived the requirement that schools serve meals in a group setting, increased school- year reimbursement rates to summer levels for school food programs and granted more fl exibility in how food is prepared and packaged. “It was a game changer,” said Donna Martin, who heads the school nutrition program, in Burke County, Georgia, a rural district that has a high rate of food insecurity. Schools started preparing bag lunches and other grab-and-go options for parents to pick up at school and take home for their kids, and even used buses to bring meals, sometimes days-worth, to pickup spots in diff erent neighborhoods. For Martin, the new fl exibility meant that instead of preparing indi- vidual meals, as usually required, she used her budget to go all in on healthy ingredients, and she started sending boxes of fresh food home to families, enough for several days. “We were able to give whole heads of broccoli and whole heads of caulifl ower and unusual fruits and vegetables,” Martin said. The econ- omy of scale from bulk buying these ingredients was a win. “We could give much better food,” she said. Even though kids are back in school, Martin said many of her pan- demic innovations are worth keep- Karen Ducey/Getty Images Nutritionist Shaunté Fields and bus driver Treva White, left, deliver meals to children and their families in Seattle. ing. But the waivers that gave her that fl exibility – and a boost in fed- eral funds – are set to expire at the end of June. Health policy experts say the fl exibility has served children well. “When you improve the ability for the country to deliver food to chil- dren, to families, you improve the health outcomes of Americans,” said physician Ezekiel Emanuel, co-di- rector of the Healthcare Transfor- mation Institute at the University of Pennsylvania. The pandemic shone a spotlight on the links between poor nutrition and chronic illnesses such as diabe- tes and obesity, as well as the risk of serious illness from COVID-19, so Emanuel said initiatives that make child nutrition programs more effi - cient should continue. Martin said the expiration of the waivers and increased fund- ing “is going to be a disaster for my program.” For instance, with the summer coming up, and a return to the rules that require kids to be served meals in group settings, much of her budget will be used on transportation costs instead of healthy ingredients — sending buses around to kids’ homes where they will be required to eat on the bus in order to comply with the rules that kids are fed in congregate settings. “Our county is so rural that the kids do not have a way to get to the schools to eat at the schools so the buses have to take the food to them,” Martin said. She describes the eff ect on her program as “catastrophic.” Bus drivers are in short supply around the country, gas prices have spiked, and infl ation has led to higher food prices. “We’re going to have to really cut back on the quality of the meals,” Martin said. School food directors and nutri- tion advocates lobbied lawmakers on Capitol Hill to include an extension of the waivers in the omnibus spend- ing package that President Joe Biden signed last week. But that eff ort was unsuccessful. “Congress failed kids, bottom line,” said Lisa Davis, who leads Share Our Strength’s No Kid Hun- gry Campaign. A wide coalition of anti-hunger advocates and school nutrition professionals agree that Congress needs to act. Because of the failure to extend the nutrition waivers, “many schools and community organizations will have to stop or scale back meals over the summer. ... This puts children at risk of missing more than 95 million meals this summer alone,” Davis said. She said her organization will keep working towards a solution. For now, the U.S. Department of Agriculture has its hands tied. Agri- culture Secretary Tom Vilsack does not have the power to renew waivers. That power rests with Congress. “We are disappointed that we weren’t able to secure needed resources and fl exibilities to help school meals and summer feeding programs deal with the serious chal- lenges they are facing,” a spokesper- son for the USDA told National Pub- lic Radio. Restaurant: Couple negotiated for six months Continued from Page A1 The Allens opened at the corner of Cottage and Pacifi c Way in the late 1980s. T he restaurant gained favor with locals, visitors and food- ies from all over, with glowing reviews from leading food and wine publications. At the start of the pandemic, the restaurant closed, but the Allens reopened as a bakery and micro market. Arora felt at home as soon as he entered. “I wasn’t interested in fl ipping it upside down,” he said. “I wasn’t interested in any radical transformation.” Arora loved what the Allens had created: a social hub with food involved. “There’s good wine and beer involved. There’s morning cof- fee involved, but it’s a hub,” he said. “And all the pieces fi t together.” They negotiated for about six months before announcing a deal in February. While terms were not disclosed, the Allens retain ownership of the building. The family bought the restaurant, the fi xtures and equip- ment. They dropped the “bakery” in the name and will reopen as Pacifi c Way Cafe and Marketplace. The Aroras plan to continue serv- ing pastries and coff ee in the morn- ing. They’ll reopen the former cafe space and expand the micro mar- ket with specialty items. One side room will contain cafe seating and the second a wine room. Including dining in the fi replace room and cov- ered outdoor area, the restaurant will have a combined seating of 52. The restaurant will be dine in, takeout or some combination of the two. “It’s going to be a hybrid,” Arora said. To add to the menu, the Aroras purchased the recipes and the trailer from the former Pacifi c Crab Co., the business founded by Rhenee Mady and her husband, David Far- rell, who moved to Wisconsin. The Aroras will bring Pacifi c Crab Co. to the Portland Seafood & Wine Festival in late March and the Crab, Seafood & Wine Festival in Astoria in late April . For now, Arora said the career change has invigorated him. He said he can “never say never,” but doesn’t have the capacity to con- tinue his consulting at present. “Revitalizing the Pacifi c Way space in a way that respectfully hon- ors its Gearhart heritage is my No. 1 priority and focus,” he said. “I’m getting up in the morning and I can’t wait to get to work. I haven’t had that feeling in — I don’t know how many years.” Continued from Page A1 “We’re talking about some- thing on a scale far — like, many orders of magnitude — larger with the Snake River dams, and fi erce, fi erce opposition from many stake- holders in that region in terms of the possibility of removing the dams,” he said. “So I don’t want to understate what an intensive eff ort it would take to pursue that mission.” Merkley pointed out that salmon populations have declined in other rivers, as well. “They are having trouble everywhere, so the dams aren’t the only issue, ” he said. The senator, who has made the environment a priority, said that “we have to drive the transi- tion from fossil fuels to renewable energy,” such as solar and wind. “We have to do it really fast,” he said. “The amount of carbon diox- ide building up in the atmosphere is actually accelerating — that, for all the talk and intensity of everything we’re doing, it’s not decreasing, it’s not slowing, it’s accelerating.” Merkley’s comments come a few weeks after President Biden announced the U.S. would ban imports of oil, coal and liquefi ed natural gas from Russia in response to the invasion of Ukraine that began in late February. He called Russian President Vladimir Putin’s actions a war crime. “It is considered a war crime to directly target civilians, and he is targeting schools and hospitals and cities, which is what he did in Chechnya,” Merkley said. “But in this case, the Ukrainian people are much more prepared to resist. And we need to do everything we can to help them have those tools of resis- tance. We need to help them on the humanitarian side.” The confl ict, he said , represents a clash between diff erent visions of government . “Ukrainian people have fought for the vision of freedom of assem- bly, freedom of speech, freedom to have fair elections,” Merkley said. He cautioned that the U.S. should avoid a direct military confl ict with Russia; an escala- tion could lead, he said, to World War III or nuclear war. “That’s the line that we have to carefully trod here,” he said. Rick Gray, of Cannon Beach, suggested a policy for Merkley to pass along to the White House: “For NATO and the U.S. to accept all of the Russian POWs and desert- ers and give them warm, comfort- able custody for the remainder of the war.” He said the policy would relieve Ukrainians of having to guard them while undermining the Russian war eff ort. Merkley noted that, under the rules of war, POWs have protected status. G oing further and “inviting them and knowing they’ll be well treated is not a bad idea.” Filibuster reform Laurie Caplan, of Astoria, a leader with the progressive group Indivisible North Coast Oregon, asked about cooperation in the Senate . “It feels like the Republican Party is just determined to block anything so they can make Pres- ident Biden look bad, and so they can make Democrats look bad, and so they can make democracy look bad and weak — and be weak,” she said. Merkley pointed to his push to reform the fi libuster. The senator advocated for a “talking fi libus- ter,” where a senator who wanted to hold up a bill had to continually speak in public. The minority party would know it couldn’t sustain the tactic indefi nitely, the majority party wouldn’t want the legislative process stalled, so there would be a two-way incentive to negotiate, he said. To reform the fi libuster required 50 votes — Vice President Kamala Harris would have served as a tie- breaker — but Merkley could only get 48. All Republicans voted against it, and so did U.S. Sen . Joe Manchin, a West Virginia Democrat, and U.S. Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, an Arizona Democrat, arguing that the fi libuster encour- ages cooperation. Merkley said the current system rewards a minority party’s obstruc- tion and “really encourages parti- san paralysis.” Failure on the fi l- ibuster meant that voting rights legislation never came up for a vote in the Senate. “I am really disappointed that I couldn’t get two more people to reform the Senate last year,” he said. “We’ve got to get there. It is not serving the American people well.” Forum: Coming Wednesday Continued from Page A1 director of the Astoria-Warren- ton Area Chamber of Commerce, hopes people stay until the end. “Because we’re going to start out with a lot of, ‘H ere’s what we can’t do,’ and ‘H ere’s why we can’t just sweep the streets and get rid of loitering’ and those types of things JOIN US FOR 2022 OREGON SPRING BREAK PROGRAMS MONDAY - FRIDAY, MARCH 21 - 25, 2022 EDU LABS - DAILY AT 10AM AND 2PM • EDU CART - DAILY AT 11AM AND 1PM FREE WITH MUSEUM ADMISSION • DETAILS AT HTTPS://WWW.CRMM.ORG/YOUTH--FAMILY.HTML OPEN DAILY 9:30 TO 5:00 • 1792 Marine Drive, Astoria, OR • 503.325.2323 • www.crmm.org that ... people are asking for,” Reid said. “But at the end of this, we really want to get to, here’s what the police department can do. Here’s what the city can do. Here’s what we as individual businesses can do. “I hope that at the end of this we get to individual actions, collective actions, that actually do move us forward.”