... More
districts outsource their food services, but
some raise questions about personnel relations
and savings.
It's such a simple mandate: Prepare healthy,
nutritious meals for the schoolchildren so they
can go about the business of learning.
But operating a school district food service
department is anything but simple. Even in the
smallest districts, food service operations are
businesses that must comply with many more rules
than those in the private sector. School food
service departments must operate as nonprofits,
yet they need to make enough money to be
self-sufficient. There are federal nutritional
guidelines to follow, and the meals have to be
attractive to hard-to-please consumers who are
inclined to complain about "mystery meat."
In fact, most people take the school food
service department for granted, says Donna
Wittrock, president of the American School Food
Service Association and executive director of
food and nutrition services for the
73,000-student Denver Public Schools. Few
outside the food service operation understand
the difficulty of balancing government
regulations and nutritional worries against
marketing and customer service.
"Most people in a school district don't have a
clue how food service operates," Wittrock says.
Outsourcing Options
It's no wonder an increasing number of school
districts across the nation are turning to food
service contract management companies to take
over some or all of the responsibility. It's a
trend not without controversy. At stake are the
reputations of the districts' own food service
departments and the welfare of longtime
employees, who fear they will get dismissed in
the struggle to save money.
The K-12 school food service market is wide open
today as far as contract management companies
are concerned. Although the actual number of
school districts using outside contractors to
manage their food operations is sketchy because
no agency tracks the practice, the figure pales
in comparison with the saturated
higher-education market. According to a 2000
study by the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, food service management companies
operate in almost 17 percent of U.S. schools.
Outsourcing food services comes in all shapes
and sizes. Some districts completely turn over
their operations, including hiring and firing
employees, to contract management companies.
Others might limit the arrangement to
purchasing. Sometimes the management company can
play only a consulting role.
"There may be some cost efficiencies associated
with doing it one way or the other, but it is
really a function of what's going on in the
district," says David DeScenza, regional vice
president of sales for Compass Group's
Chartwells Division, which contracts with 519
school districts around the country.
The practice is more prevalent in some states
than others. Figures from Chartwells show that
70 percent of New Jersey school districts
outsource food services, and more than 20
percent of Michigan's districts do. Florida
encourages school districts to investigate
outsourcing opportunities as cost-savings
measures, but other states are neutral about the
practice.
Contract management companies expect their
market share to expand as fiscal pressures on
school districts increase. Those pressures are
forcing school system leaders and their
governing boards to examine every budget item
for cost savings.
Purchasing Efficiency
Food service management companies say they can
save school districts money through their
purchasing power and other efficiencies, freeing
up funds for the classroom.
"Food is what we do," says Jeff Wheatley,
president of the schools division of Aramark
Corp., which ranks as the nation's largest food
management company in the K-12 market with 420
school district contracts in 20 states. "We're
going to bring a better product to the table,
allowing a district to focus on what it does
best--educate kids."
That's what Kent Barnes, superintendent of the
4,300-student Holly Area School District in
Michigan, finds attractive about his district's
relationship with a food service management
company.
On a typical day, Barnes has a lot on his plate.
He spends much of his time dealing with test
scores, the school board, employee relations and
an ever-tightening budget. His district's school
cafeteria operation is the last thing he wants
to worry about.
And most of the time he doesn't, owing to the
district's seven-year relationship with
Chartwells. The Holly district's food service
manager, a Chartweils employee, plans the menus,
ensures the district complies with federal food
service regulations and keeps tabs on whether
the service breaks even.
Barnes is so pleased with how things are going
that he's wondering whether the district should
expand its partnership with Chartwells by
allowing the company to assume control over the
entire food service operation, including payroll
and personnel relations. "It's a wonderful team
effort," Barnes says. "Quite frankly, with
[Chartwells] here, I don't worry about food
service."
District Initiative
Critics of private-sector involvement in food
operations don't dispute that large companies
can offer school districts economies of scale.
But their bulk purchasing deals aren't the only
way to save money, and profit is always a factor
when the public sector deals with proprietary
businesses for contractual services, says Jodi
Mackey, director of child nutrition and wellness
for the Kansas Department of Education.
"I personally think there's no more work
involved in hiring a qualified food service
director to manage the program," says Mackey,
who estimates that only five of the 303 school
districts in her state employ proprietary firms.
"A qualified, capable food service director can
do everything for a school district that a
management company can."
That argument worked in Ohio's 7,200-student
Brunswick City Schools, a suburban district 25
miles south of Cleveland. More than a decade
ago, the school board there hired ARA, now
Aramark, to run the district's ailing food
service program. After three years, the program
still operated in the red, says Mary Grace
Kenny, the district's food service coordinator.
In 1994, the school board considered switching
to another company and possibly closing the
kitchens in some schools. Some veteran food
service staff feared that a new company would
eliminate full-time positions and cut benefits
to slash costs. So they devised a plan. The
employees asked the school board to give them a
year to run the food service department. If it
wasn't in the black by then, they would agree to
step aside and let the outsiders run the show.
"We felt that since all of us lived and worked
and had children and grandchildren in the
Brunswick school system that we could do a much
better job than an outside company," says Kenny,
who at that time was managing an elementary
school cafeteria.
Employees made concessions to effect the change,
including giving up paid holidays and snow days.
But the self-operated program broke even in the
1994-95 school year and has operated in the
black ever since.
Now a committee of food service employees runs
the department. Kenny oversees it, filing state
reports and centralizing orders. The department
makes enough money to purchase its own equipment
and pay salaries and retirement benefits.
Any way you slice it, outsourcing can be a
sticky prospect for school districts.
The monthly magazine School Foodservice and
Nutrition, published by the American School Food
Service Association, addressed the simmering
debate in its December 2003 issue. Angry letters
to the editor appearing a few months later left
no doubt about the controversial nature of the
subject. One reader called the articles
"inflammatory" and "biased" and said she
wondered whether she should renew her
membership.
With membership from self-operated food service
operations and those that hire contract
management companies, ASFSA sits squarely in the
middle of the fray. The association takes no
official position on the subject, however.
"What we're concerned about, no matter who's
running it, is that the program is providing
nutritious meals for kids," Wittrock says.
That's the primary concern of food service
management companies, too, adds DeScenza. His
company has been in the K-12 food service market
for 30 years, working mostly in small to midsize
districts. But the company of late has won some
contracts with larger districts. Chartwells
currently provides food services in one-third of
Chicago Public Schools.
Marketing Meals
The ability to purchase food at lower prices
is a big part of contract management companies'
appeal, DeScenza says, but it's not the only
plus. Outside management offers more than just
buying power. These companies have at their
fingertips marketing resources and products that
are out of the reach of most self-operated
school food service programs, DeScenza says,
adding the companies also can offer training and
education for food service workers.
Contract management companies can tap into a
wealth of interesting recipes and the experience
of food service experts to revamp cafeteria
offerings and increase student participation.
That, in turn, increases revenue for the food
program, freeing up money in school districts'
general funds for educational needs, contract
management executives contend.
When participation rates in school lunch
buying increase, school districts profit in
other ways, too, says Bill Gerichter, a senior
vice president with Sodexho School Services,
which manages food operations in almost 470
school districts nationwide. Title I funding and
E-rate funding are awarded based on the numbers
of students on free and reduced-price lunches.
In districts where the firm runs the school
cafeteria, Sodexho aims its marketing at
parents, encouraging eligible families to apply
for free or reduced-price breakfasts and
lunches.
Marketing school meals is an important part
of what contract management companies can offer.
Karl Sprague, food service director for the
3,300-student Great Bend School District in
west-central Kansas, has worked for both
self-operated food service departments and those
run by proprietary management companies. When he
worked for the latter, he had access to
appealing giveaway items such as Frisbees to
lure students to the lunch line.
In Brunswick, Ohio, Kenny has no doubt that
the school food service staff benefited from the
marketing techniques employees learned during
the time Aramark managed the operation.
Cafeteria workers learned how to make meals more
appealing to students. Those ideas, gleaned a
decade ago, still work, Kenny says.
It's amazing what a little salesmanship can
do for, say, spinach. In the Holly, Mich.,
school district, where a Chartwells employee
plans the lunch menu, spinach dip with
vegetables is a popular offering.
"It's the way it's marketed," says Barnes,
the superintendent. "It's the way it's packaged.
It's the way it's delivered."
There's hardly a limit to what contract
management companies can do for the school
lunch, even turning the lunchroom into a
facsimile of a shopping mall food court, says
Carolina Lobo, vice president of marketing for
Aramark's school support services. "Breakfast in
the classroom, on the school bus, anything to
deliver food in an unconventional way," she
says.
At Texas' largest school district, the
211,000-student Houston Independent School
District, school lunch participation has
increased 37 percent since the district hired
Aramark to run its food service department, says
Adriana Villarreal, a district spokesperson The
district serves 245,000 breakfasts and lunches a
day, and the food service program has been
commended by the state's Department of
Agriculture for its focus on nutritional
offerings, Villarreal says.
Students have more choices with Aramark,
which has introduced healthier versions of kid
favorites such as pizza, tacos and spaghetti, as
well as 53 "Heart Healthy" menu items that
contain fewer than 3 grams of fat and 40
milligrams of cholesterol per serving, she says.
The Atlanta Public Schools have outsourced
food services for five years, first with Aramark
and now with Sodexho. With 85 schools and 55,000
students, the district's food service program
has operated in the red for the last 20 years,
says Marilyn Hughes, director of school
nutrition services. The district has used money
earmarked for classrooms to prop up the
cafeteria operation. District administrators are
hopeful that an outside company with expertise
in finding cost efficiencies in inner-city
districts eventually will help bring the
department into the black.
Although 70 percent of the department's
employees are paid directly by the school
district, Sodexho is able to replace employees
who resign or retire with part-time staff.
However, food service managers remain employees
of the school district.
"It does give you some options for being able
to lower your labor costs," Hughes says.
A Human Toll
But that savings comes at the cost of human
capital, and that's a political price some
school boards don't want to pay until they're
pushed against a wall by budget constraints,
says Gerichter, Sodexho's senior vice president.
In fact, employee costs and labor relations
are the biggest obstacles to privatizing food
services, says Michael LaFaive, director of
fiscal policy for the Mackinac Center, a
Michigan-based think tank that advocates
privatizing public services. When it's done
correctly, outsourcing saves school districts
money, LaFaive contends, arguing that the
biggest savings result when districts completely
relinquish control of their food service
departments. Outside management can better stem
the rising expense of benefits packages, he
says.
LaFaive concedes some school communities
can't make that leap, usually for personal
reasons. "Superintendents have to see spouses
and employees that have been laid off at the
store and the bank. While the savings are good
in theory, they cost the superintendent
relationship capital."
Employee unions usually resist privatization
moves. The Michigan Education Association filed
suit in 2000 against the tiny Arvon Township
School District in the Upper Peninsula over that
district's bid to outsource food services and
other non-instructional services, which would
have freed up more than $30,000 for
instructional purposes. The school board
eventually tabled the plan.
Concern for his employees has Barnes, the
Holly, Mich., superintendent, moving cautiously.
In recent years, the Michigan state legislature
has decreased allocations to school districts as
the economy has wobbled, and many districts
subsequently have been forced to cut their
budgets. Barnes is looking for ways to save
money. Completely outsourcing the district's
food service department likely would yield
savings, but he isn't certain how such a change
would affect food service employees, many of
whom have worked there more than 20 years and
are vested in the retirement system.
"Could we do it? Yes," Barnes says. "Should
we do it? And how will it impact our employees?
We don't want any of our employees feeling
displaced."
Sprague, the food service director in Great
Bend, Kan., rarely has seen a school district
move to contract management without causing some
employee upheaval during his 30 years in the
field. Longtime employees at the top of the pay
scale contribute to the high cost of a
self-operated food service. Generally, when
contract management companies run the show,
labor costs must be contained, often by turning
full-time positions into part-time ones and
reducing benefits. Lowering salaries and
benefits makes it more difficult to attract
reliable employees because "they drive off the
good, old-time help," Sprague says.
Cost Issues
Districts with struggling food service
programs have many places to turn to besides
contract management companies, said Wittrock,
the American School Food Service Association
president. The ASFSA and state school food
service associations can help evaluate programs,
as can state departments of education and the
Association of School Business Officials.
Sometimes districts need stronger leadership in
the food service department, and outside
consultants may pick up on the weakness.
Still, Wittrock recommends that districts
considering outsourcing thoroughly research
their options before abandoning self-operated
programs.
Requests for proposals from proprietary firms
should be specific and detailed, and proffered
contracts should be studied carefully, she says.
District administrators should check with their
state's department of education to make sure
special rules don't govern such arrangements,
too. Before making a decision, school boards
should ask their district's current food service
department to offer a proposal, keeping in mind
it likely won't be as smooth as a for-profit
company's pitch.
And if districts decide contract management
is the right move, a district administrator
still must audit the food service program to
ensure that USDA guidelines are followed and
that food quality is maintained, Wittrock says.
The Janesville, Wis., School District struck
up a partnership in 1995 with Marriott Food
Services, now owned by Sodexho. At the time, the
10,400-student district offered hot meals at its
middle and high schools, but the kitchenless
elementary schools served only prepackaged
meals. The school board wanted to offer a better
lunch option and turned to outside management.
As part of the district's agreement with
Marriott, the company installed new equipment in
the schools and offered employee training. The
district agreed to pay back the company over
time. The Janesville administration was
satisfied overall with the services Marriott
offered. "It could have been a long-term
arrangement," says Doug Bunton, the district's
finance director. "It just didn't work that way
financially."
The arrangement cost the district more than
it anticipated. Although Marriott paid service
workers, union contracts stipulated employees be
paid union wages, which drove up costs. The food
service program operated in the red under
Marriott's management, and the school board
underwrote it with monies from the general fund,
Bunton said.
Because self-sufficiency had been a primary
goal of the contractual arrangement, Bunton said
the school board opted to revert to
self-operation after four years. The district
bought out its contract with Marriott, and the
department has operated in the black for the
last several years, even setting aside some
money to replace older equipment.
Business Acumen
Certain costs related to running a food
service program are fixed, and conscientious
food service directors can exercise as much
purchasing power as large companies by looking
for the best deals, says Diane Smith, manager of
food services in the Shawnee Mission School
District in Overland Park, Kan. Her self-run
department serves 24,500 meals daily, and she
oversees 54 kitchens and 340 employees.
"It's basically running a business," she
says. "It's a huge business. To me, whether
you're making widgets or doing this, a lot of it
is the same concept."
Like any businessperson, Smith regularly
monitors her department's expenditures. She
tracks how much food is prepared and how much is
consumed. She checks portion sizes and looks for
waste. When food service positions become
vacant, she evaluates whether that position
should be filled. And she constantly assesses
her department's marketing and customer service
techniques, looking for areas of improvement.
"In my district, I just try to run the
program," Smith says. "I feel that we're there
to serve the children."
RELATED ARTICLE: Competencies for food
service chiefs.
"Outsourcing" is such a buzzword these days
that when a school district's food service
department hits troubled waters, there's often
talk of hiring an outside company to take over.
But food service experts, such as Deborah
Carr of the National Food Service Management
Institute at the University of Mississippi, say
districts should take a look at the leadership
of their food operation before discontinuing a
self-operated program.
Congress authorized the institute in 1989 to
provide information and services to help improve
school nutrition programs. To that end, research
scientists at the institute are studying what
works and what doesn't. Over the last decade,
the institute has gathered a list of
competencies essential for school nutrition
directors and managers. The competencies and
skills are outlined in two research reports
available on the institute's website.
Hiring a food service director with
experience and skills can save money over time
and ease the angst of worrying about whether to
hire a proprietary management firm. "In today's
world, with discussions of obesity and
accountability, why would you not want the most
competent individual you could get?" Carr says.
The institute's reports include 12 areas in
which school administrators should be
well-versed, ranging from customer service to
food production and procurement to personnel
management and marketing. Each area is broken
down into competencies, and each competency
includes detailed knowledge and skills that food
service managers need under their belts.
For example, the report recommends that
competent food service directors should
understand customer service, including how to
improve presentation of meal options.
On the issue of program accountability,
competency means complying with state and
federal regulations and providing technical
assistance to food service staff and other
support staff. Under financial management, the
institute recommends directors be able to
establish measurable financial goals for the
food service program and be able to use
efficient management techniques to ensure good
record-keeping.
Without national standards for food service
directors, it can be difficult for cop district
executives to know what they should expect when
they hire someone to run the food service
program. Cart says.
"School officials should recognize the
competencies as a foundation of knowledge to
review, assess and interview the most competent
job candidates." she adds.
The reports are available on the institute's
website:
www.nfsmi.org/
Information/Research.html.--Kate Beem
RELATED ARTICLE: Directory of food service
firms.
In the world of school food service
outsourcing, the field isn't crowded. More than
1,200 school districts across the country
contract all or part of their food service
programs to one of the top three food service
management companies: Chartwells School Dining
Services, Aramark and Sodexho School Services.
But smaller companies enjoy a share of the pie,
too.
This list includes 10 food service management
companies that do business with school districts
in more than one state. Following the big three,
which are listed in order of the number of
school district contracts they hold, the
remaining firms appear alphabetically.
Most of the information was provided by
company officials.
Chartwells School Dining Services
3 International Drive Rye Brook, NY 10573
Contact: David DeScenza
877-586-9631
www.chartwells-usa.com
Chartwells, a division of Compass Group North
America, holds food service contracts with 519
school districts, running food service programs
at 3,500 school sites in 34 states, with the
highest concentration in Massachusetts,
Michigan, New Jersey and Washington. Food
Management estimated the company s annual sales
at $5.8 billion in 2003.
Aramark School Support Services
1101 Market St. Philadelphia, PA 19107
Contact: Jeff Wheatley
215-238-3000
www.aramark.com
Aramark runs school food operations in 420
school districts in 20 states. Districts range
in size from 2,000 to 40,000 students. In 2002,
the company bought Fine Host, a competitor in
the school food service field. An April 2004
report by Food Management magazine estimated the
company s annual sales for all services,
including school food operations, at $6.5
billion.
Sodexho School Services
7 Village Circle, Suite 120 Westlake, TX
76262
Contact: Rod Bond
817-541-3200
www.sodexhoUSA.com
Sodexho School Services provides lunch and
breakfast programs to almost 330 public school
districts in 38 states. The company says it was
the first contractor to meet the new dietary
guidelines for the USDA's National School Lunch
Program during 1996-97. Annual sales for all
services, including school food operations, was
$5.8 billion in 2003, according to Food
Management.
All Seasons Services
1265 Belmont St. Brockton, MA 02301
Contact: William Batchelor
508-559-9000
www.4allseason.com
With contracts in six school districts in
Massachusetts. New York and Pennsylvania, All
Sea sons Services is one of the smaller public
school food service providers, serving 14,850
students. Gross sales in the dining division are
$25 million with $3.2 million from K-12 public
school food programs. They also provide services
for business and industry, colleges and
universities and private schools.
Ceres Food Group
5150 N. Northwest Highway Chicago, IL 60630
Contact: John Koubek
773-385-5109
www.ceresfood.com
Ceres Food Group, a for-profit arm of the
Chicago Catholic Archdiocese, provides food
service to 27 school districts in Indiana,
Illinois and Wisconsin. The division's gross
annual review is $12 million with $6 million
generated from public school contracts. Ceres
markets to school districts that lack facilities
for on-site food preparation.
Fitz, Vogt & Associates
P.O. Box 819 Walpole, NH 03608
Contact: Bob Long
603-756-4578
www.fitzvogt.com
Operating revenue from four school districts
enrolling 3,700 students in New Hampshire and
Vermont and consultation in a fifth district
accounts for 3 percent of Fitz, Vogt &
Associates' total revenue of $38.2 million. The
company also contracts with independent schools,
colleges, camps, health care facilities and
assisted living facilities.
Metz & Associates
Two Woodland Drive Dallas, PA 18612
Contact: Toby Homer
570-675-8100
www.metzltd.com
Metz & Associates serves approximately
115,000 students in 38 school districts in New
Jersey, Ohio and Pennsylvania. Of the $60
million generated in corporate revenue,
approximately 50 percent is from school food
service business. The company also contracts
with higher education, health care, business and
industry and senior citizen programs.
Nutrition
202 South Third St. West Newton, PA 15089
Contact: Jerry Moore
800-442-2138
www.nutritionent.com
Nutrition contracts with 81 public school
districts in Ohio and Pennsylvania and serves
215,000 meals per day. The company has gross
revenues of $60 million annually, 80 percent of
which comes from school food services.
Taher
5570 Smetana Drive Minnetonka, MN 55343
Contact: Bruce Taher
952-945-0505
www.taher.com
Operating in eight Midwestern states, Taher
serves 150 school districts and 275,000
students. The largest district is 8,000
students; the smallest is 1,000 students. School
food service represents about 50 percent of
Taher's business.
Whitsons
379 Oakwood Road Huntington Station, NY 11746
Contact: Paul Whitcomb
800-813-5833
www.whitsons.com
Whitsons provides food service to 20 school
districts enrolling more than 100,000 students
in Connecticut and New York Total annual revenue
is $58 million, of which 51 percent is from
school food service.
RELATED ARTICLE: A menu for success in the
school cafeteria.
BY RAYMOND YEAGLEY
The decision to outsource management
positions of our district's food service program
wasn't a hard one for our school board. The
program was maintaining a positive financial
balance by reducing the quality of meals.
Employee morale was at an all-time low, and
student participation was in steady decline.
Even so, some opposed our move to privatize
the food operation. I smiled as a couple of
board members reminded us of a "failed"
custodial outsourcing venture a few years
earlier that in my view had been a rousing
success. Admittedly, the contractor is no longer
in the district, primarily because of its
occasional "not quite in time" delivery system
for cleaning supplies, which became the catalyst
for a successful union campaign to return to
local management.
As a direct result of that venture into
outsourcing and the subsequent hiring of an
outstanding manager who understood what not to
jettison from the contractor's operation, we now
have better procedures, better equipment, better
spending priorities and, most importantly,
cleaner buildings than ever.
Multiple Success
Our board will be much less likely to abandon
its contract for food service management. Meal
quality and nutritional value have improved,
particularly in the a la carte line where
students no longer can purchase a bag of french
fries and call it a meal.
While some might suggest that food quality is
subjective, there also is the undeniable fact
that student participation rose in the first
year by 40 percent, from 350,999 to 491,748
meals served. Participation continued to grow in
year two, even after the novelty had worn off.
Finally, there is the financial picture. Meal
prices haven't gone down, but they are no higher
than they would have been without the private
contractor, and our program is on better
financial footing than at any time since 1989.
The new program is not without challenges.
Offering five meal choices every day and feeding
so many children have combined to create more
work. Food service employees are concerned that
the increased workload has left them with less
time to clean and has created stress in the
workplace. A campaign in some buildings to
return to a single-option menu has spawned cries
from a few teachers that having so many choices
is stressing 1st graders, although we have noted
that most young children handle the broader
array of choices on most restaurant menus with
confidence and alacrity.
A New Challenge
Our next question was much tougher: Would
benefits to children and the school district be
sufficient to warrant moving the production side
of our operation, primarily cooks and cashiers,
to the contractor?
Language that would give the
board the right to expand the outsourcing
initiative was the sole source of a standoff at
the bargaining table for more than a year. The
dispute brought faculty, staff and parents to
school board meetings to plead with the board
not to take any food service employees off the
school district payroll.
Our district relies heavily on data to inform
decisions. Board members wanted hard facts for
this one before making a commitment.
Initially, our search of literature found
little information on the topic of outsourcing
beyond the propaganda of organizations on two
extremes of the issue--those claiming
outsourcing is one of the greatest evils in our
society and those believing privatization to be
the solution to all government inefficiencies.
To address the lack of objective information,
we created a survey to look at outsourcing
issues, from food quality and price to employee
morale and comparative wage/benefit packages for
outsourced and district-operated programs.
Although the online survey was quick and easy,
any survey is an inconvenience. Ultimately, we
received too few responses to make the survey
results useful.
Fortunately, we later found some objective
literature that identified pros and cons of
outsourcing. I prepared a report for our school
board, relating what we had learned to the
board's program and negotiation objectives.
Ultimately, the board determined that, while
outsourcing the full operation could be
beneficial to the district, we could achieve the
major objectives in further outsourcing by
negotiating some new flexibility into the
contract. The bargaining unit found the
concessions to be much more palatable than the
prospect of outsourcing, and we reached a
tentative agreement in June.
Not surprisingly, this process reaffirmed that
most people's reality in such a volatile issue,
and whether a decision will ultimately be
supported, often may be influenced more by
emotional perceptions than by objective
information. We are pleased that, in this case,
objectivity and reason prevailed on both sides
of the issue.
Raymond Yeagley is the superintendent of the
Rochester School Deportment, 150 Wakefield St.,
Suite 8, Rochester, NH 03867. E-mail:
yeagley@rochesterschools.com
Kate Beem is a free-lance education writer in
Independence, Mo. E-mail:
ksbeem@comcost.net
COPYRIGHT 2004 American Association of School
Administrators
COPYRIGHT 2004 Gale Group
Bibliography for: "Hot potato in the school
cafeteria: more districts outsource their food
services, but some raise questions about
personnel relations and savings"
Kate Beem "Hot
potato in the school cafeteria: more districts
outsource their food services, but some raise
questions about personnel relations and savings".
School Administrator. FindArticles.com. 29 Nov,
2011.
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