logo
Woonsocket School District awarded $25K grant for kitchen upgrades

Woonsocket School District awarded $25K grant for kitchen upgrades

Yahoo04-04-2025

Apr. 3—WOONSOCKET, S.D. — In school cafeterias, a good meal can be the difference between a sluggish afternoon and a productive day. Thanks to a $25,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Food and Nutrition Service, Woonsocket School District is upgrading its kitchen with state-of-the-art equipment that will improve the quality, nutrition and efficiency of meals served to students.
The funding, awarded through the National School Lunch Program Equipment Assistance grants, will allow the school to purchase two six-pan Unox combi ovens. These ovens will enhance meal preparation by ensuring food is cooked evenly, improving food safety and allowing for healthier cooking methods, such as steaming fresh vegetables.
The National School Lunch Program Equipment Assistance grants are designed to provide funds for schools to purchase food service equipment. The equipment they purchase must be used to serve healthier meals, improve food safety and/or help to support the establishment, maintenance or expansion of the School Breakfast Program.
"A well-rounded school meal program can be a vital contributor to a school's success," said George Seamon, interim director of the Department of Education's Child and Adult Nutrition Services. "These grants will help the Aberdeen and Woonsocket school districts make kitchen upgrades that ultimately benefit students and staff."
The grant is part of the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2024, which allocated $10 million nationwide to support schools participating in the National School Lunch Program. Woonsocket is one of two South Dakota districts to receive funding, with Aberdeen School District awarded $8,832.44.
Jessica Anderson, Woonsocket's Food Service Director, applied for the grant after seeing an increasing demand in the school's meal program. As student enrollment continues to grow, so has participation in school breakfasts and lunches.
"With that increase, the need to prepare larger amounts of food has also grown," Anderson said. "Our current equipment just isn't able to handle that demand efficiently. If we fill our oven completely, the food doesn't cook evenly, which decreases the quality and safety of what we serve."
The new combi ovens are designed to provide more precise cooking, ensuring that food is cooked thoroughly and at the right temperature.
"A new combi oven will improve the quality of school meals through a more efficient cooking process," Anderson explained. "The sealed chamber, combined with better heat exchangers and airflow, will allow for faster and more even cooking."
One of the biggest advantages of the new combi ovens is their ability to steam fresh vegetables while preserving their nutritional value.
"This oven will give us the opportunity to prepare fresh vegetables using steam, which will help keep them tasty and appealing," Anderson said. "Children are said to 'eat with their eyes,' so by making vegetables look more attractive, we have the potential to increase participation in our lunch program."
In addition to steaming, the combi oven will allow food service staff to poach, roast, bake, blanch, rethermalize and proof dough, greatly expanding menu options.
"There are some recipes we'd love to try that require proofing pastry dough, but right now, we just don't have the equipment to do that," Anderson said. "This grant is giving us the tools to expand what we offer to students and provide high-quality meals that meet nutritional guidelines while tasting great."
Woonsocket School District also participates in South Dakota's Farm to School program, which connects schools with local farmers and ranchers to provide fresh, locally sourced ingredients for student meals. Since 2023, donated beef has been processed for school lunches, while fresh fruits and vegetables add variety and nutrition. According to Anderson, the program supports local agriculture while ensuring high-quality meals for students. However, with the USDA cutting funding for Farm to School and Beef to School programs, the district's ability to continue next year remains uncertain.
The new ovens will be installed in time for the 2025-2026 school year, bringing noticeable changes to the school's meal program. Anderson hopes the students and staff will appreciate the improved meal quality, particularly the fresher, more appealing steamed vegetables.
Beyond improving meals, the grant also provides financial relief for the district.
"Receiving these grant funds means we don't have to take money from an already tight budget to purchase this equipment," Anderson said. "With food costs continuing to rise, it becomes harder to find available funds for kitchen upgrades. This grant makes a huge difference for our program and, ultimately, for our students."
The Woonsocket School District currently serves 275 students in grades PreK-12, and with these kitchen upgrades, the school hopes to continue enhancing the meal program to better serve its growing student population.
"My main goal is to always put a high-quality product on the plate — something that meets guidelines, looks good, and tastes great," Anderson said. "I want all of our students to participate in our meal program, enjoy what we serve, and leave the cafeteria feeling full and ready to take on the rest of their day."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

$400,000 grant will help fund solar field planned at Erie County Technical School
$400,000 grant will help fund solar field planned at Erie County Technical School

Yahoo

time17 hours ago

  • Yahoo

$400,000 grant will help fund solar field planned at Erie County Technical School

The Erie County Technical School has been awarded a $400,000 state grant to help fund a solar array on school grounds. The Solar for Schools grant from the state Department of Community and Economic Development is among 73 awarded statewide. The almost $23 million in grants will help schools reduce electricity costs, Pennsylvania Education Secretary Rick Siger said in a statement. "Energy is one of the top expenses for schools, which is why investments in solar energy can help to maintain long-term financial stability and improve the quality of education they offer students," Siger said. "Those savings can then be channeled into more resources for our teachers and students, and also create good-paying, clean-energy jobs and job training opportunities." Penncrest School District in Crawford County was awarded a $336,960 Solar for Schools grant. The school plans to build a .5-megawatt solar farm on five to seven acres behind the school at 8500 Oliver Road in Summit Township. About 1,000 solar panels would be installed to produce enough power to provide about one-third of the school's electrical needs, saving about $75,000 annually, tech school Executive Director Matt LaVerde said. The estimates are based on solar assessments from a number of industry entities, LaVerde said. The school spends about $225,000 annually for electricity for multiple buildings and for multiple labs with a variety of power-drawing equipment. "We estimate we will save between $3 million and $5 million on electricity over 20 years, and that will be a big deal for all of our 11 member school districts," LaVerde said. The solar field also would reduce the complex's carbon footprint and help it achieve energy independence. The school plans to add solar panels annually. "Our plan is to add to the array every single year, even if it's just by a handful of panels to teach students the installation process," LaVerde said. The biggest benefit of the solar project, LaVerde said, would be the "living lab" on school grounds. "It will be a teaching tool for our students," LaVerde said. "That's one of our main motivations for this project. Renewable energy is not going away, and this will provide opportunities for hands-on learning right on our site." And that will benefit industry and communities as well as students, acting state education Secretary Carrie Rowe said. "These projects turn school buildings into living laboratories where students gain real-world experience in clean energy technology," Rowe said in a statement. "Whether it's through hands-on STEM education or technical training in solar installation and maintenance, this initiative prepares students for in-demand careers and helps ensure Pennsylvania's workforce is ready to lead in the 21st Century economy." Total cost of the solar project is estimated at $1.2 million. The Solar for Schools grant and government renewable energy incentives are expected to cover more than $900,000 of that cost. In Girard Township: Erie County's first commercial solar farm "The lift for us locally will be about one-quarter of the cost, and we expect that will be paid off in energy savings in four to five years," LaVerde said. The solar field could be completed next summer. Contact Valerie Myers at vmyers@ This article originally appeared on Erie Times-News: Coming to Erie County Technical School: A solar energy field

Cactus (WHD) Gets a Buy from Barclays
Cactus (WHD) Gets a Buy from Barclays

Business Insider

time2 days ago

  • Business Insider

Cactus (WHD) Gets a Buy from Barclays

Barclays analyst David Anderson maintained a Buy rating on Cactus (WHD – Research Report) on June 18 and set a price target of $53.00. The company's shares closed last Wednesday at $45.49. Confident Investing Starts Here: Easily unpack a company's performance with TipRanks' new KPI Data for smart investment decisions Receive undervalued, market resilient stocks right to your inbox with TipRanks' Smart Value Newsletter According to TipRanks, Anderson is an analyst with an average return of -1.0% and a 46.08% success rate. Anderson covers the Energy sector, focusing on stocks such as Baker Hughes Company, Cactus, and TechnipFMC. The word on The Street in general, suggests a Moderate Buy analyst consensus rating for Cactus with a $53.67 average price target, representing a 17.98% upside. In a report released on June 3, Stifel Nicolaus also reiterated a Buy rating on the stock with a $57.00 price target.

'Amber waves of grain' recede in America's heartland as wheat farmers struggle
'Amber waves of grain' recede in America's heartland as wheat farmers struggle

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Yahoo

'Amber waves of grain' recede in America's heartland as wheat farmers struggle

By Emily Schmall COLBY, Kansas (Reuters) -On a foggy morning in May, Dennis Schoenhals drove a carload of crop scouts around the wheat fields of northern Oklahoma, part of an annual tour to evaluate the health of the crop. But on some fields, Schoenhals and other farmers had already abandoned plans to harvest the grain for sale because prices had sunk to five-year lows. Farmers cut their losses early this year across the U.S. wheat belt, stretching from Texas to Montana. They were choosing to bale the wheat into hay, plow their fields under or turn them over to animals to graze. In Nebraska, wheat acreage is less than half of what it was in 2005. For farmers with crop insurance, damaged or unprofitable wheat fields can still earn revenue. But many agree that chasing insurance payouts is not the best business model. The Great Plains have long been celebrated for the "amber waves of grain" in the popular hymn "America the Beautiful." The region's states produce most of the U.S.-grown crop of hard red winter wheat, favored by bakers for bread. But with prices hovering around $5 per bushel, U.S. wheat farmers have reached an inflection point, with many forced to either lose money, feed wheat to cattle or kill off the crop. Interviews with more than a dozen farmers and analysts across Kansas, Nebraska and Oklahoma, along with a review of U.S. Department of Agriculture data, revealed a vast disparity in profit for wheat compared to other crops. This has led farmers to abandon more fields before harvest. In parts of the region, prolonged drought has lowered yields in recent years. Farm revenue has also suffered in years with healthy rainfall, as abundant global supplies have weighed on prices. Many have pivoted to corn, soy or livestock, often after generations of their family growing wheat exclusively. "They can't sustain that," said Schoenhals, 68, who raises crops and cattle near Kremlin, Oklahoma, and is president of the state's wheat growers association. "Eventually you either change to other crops if you're able to, or you go out of business," he said. Two years ago, severe drought drove farmers to abandon about a third of the U.S. crop. This year, healthy green stalks shot through the cracked soil, and farmers had expected to harvest the most bushels per acre since 2016. But wheat prices hit a five-year low in May. Every year since 2020, farmers have abandoned between a fifth and a third of the winter wheat crop, U.S. Department of Agriculture data show. Nationwide, corn and soybeans dominate crop fields, with wheat a distant third in planted acreage. Hard red winter wheat exports hit historic lows in 2024 after drought and lower prices in other wheat-producing areas of the world squeezed the U.S. commodity's competitiveness. In Kansas, the leading U.S. producer of hard winter wheat, the disparity between acreage and value is particularly stark. About 1.3 million more farm acres in Kansas were planted with wheat than with corn in 2024, USDA data show, but corn's value of production was more than twice as high. Plentiful global supplies have kept benchmark U.S. prices stuck at lows that discourage farmers from growing wheat, producers and analysts told Reuters. Supplies are so ample that droughts in important grain-growing regions of China and Russia this year have barely budged prices. 'We're below profitable levels for these guys,' said Darin Fessler, an analyst with Lakefront Futures in Lincoln, Nebraska, who grew up on a row crop farm in nearby Sutton. The way things stand, he said, many farmers have "eaten a lot of their own money and burned up working capital. These bankers are going to say: 'show me some profits or we're going to have some farm sales.'" HERITAGE BUT NO PROFIT Ties to wheat farming run deep in the Plains. Historically, European settlers in Kansas struggled to find a foothold until Mennonites from Ukraine arrived with seeds of Turkey Red wheat, a variety that proved able to withstand the area's dry soil, harsh winters and extreme temperature swings. The seeds spread to neighboring Oklahoma and Nebraska, where pioneers established homesteads in the sandy, light earth in which wheat thrived but other crops struggled. Hard red winter wheat has remained the main variety of wheat sown in the U.S. Images of golden stalks adorn hotel lobbies and road signs, and towns include the word in their names. Pulitzer Prize-winning author Willa Cather, a daughter of Red Cloud, Nebraska, wrote a celebrated poem describing "the miles of fresh-plowed soil, heavy and black, full of strength and harshness." Now, U.S. wheat growing is on a steady decline, with farmers finding surer profits from corn, soybeans or cattle. On the wheat quality tour in May, weeks before Nebraska wheat is usually harvested, no wheat could be seen for miles around Red Cloud. When Royce Schaneman joined Nebraska's wheat board 19 years ago, wheat fields stretched for 2.2 million acres across the state. Since then, acreage has shrunk to less than a million acres, he said. In Cheyenne County in southern Nebraska, the state's most productive wheat-growing land, about one in five fields was abandoned this year. "The feeling out in the country is not good," he said. Generations of farmers grew wheat because the crop thrived on rainfall alone. In recent decades, farmers have invested in pricey irrigation systems, experimented with hardier varieties and used fertilizer to improve yields. Agronomists have helped farmers grow more bushels per acre even as climate change has brought more drought and pests. Producers in the southern Plains have experimented with other types of wheat such as durum, the kind used for pasta, and a gluten-free variety, pursuing customers willing to pay more. Profits remain elusive. 'It's heritage, but there's no profit," said Lon Frahm, the CEO of Frahm Farmland, a 40,000-acre operation in Colby, Kansas. Surrounding Thomas County is now dotted with wind farms. Farmers there once grew wheat exclusively, he said, but they have started to diversify due to more frequent drought and global competition depressing prices. Frahm himself now mainly plants corn. He irrigates, fertilizes and harvests the grain using multimillion-dollar machines, then stores it in gleaming, 80-foot steel grain bins. His 7,000 acres of wheat sometimes produce just 5 percent of his farm's total output. "There's certainly profit in corn," he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store