The Booster | Dec. 2019 | Volume 93, Issue Three

Page 8

Food stamp cuts by Trump admin may affect students Donald Arbuckle Sports Editor

Free lunches at schools is a food assistance program that aims to feed students without having their parents pay for their lunches at school. Free lunches are targeted toward low-income families on food stamps or other forms of financial aid, but the Trump administration plans to put regulations on the number of people and families on federal food stamps. This, as a result, will cause students to lose eligibility for free and reduced lunches. According to “USA Today”, nearly 1 million students will be unable to get free lunches because they will not be qualified to receive this program. They propose cut of food stamps is intended to trim the cost of food assistance programs, but this will needlessly affect the students and challenge the school that serves these students. The biggest concern about limiting the families on food stamps is that when students are at school they will be unable to eat or receive food. There are also concerns about students not receiving assistance at home. Staff and faculty are even worried about the possible outcome of cutting food stamps The end of free and reduced lunches is a national action that will affect Scottsburg High School. There are around 2,700 kids in total that make up Scott County School District 47 percent of students are on free lunch and 9 percent of students are on reduced lunch. If the

Trump administration plans to go through with cutting food stamps, a large portion of students will be inevitably forced to pay for their lunches. These parents that rely on food stamps and other forms of financial aid will be forced to pay for their children’s lunch with money they do not have. “It isn’t the kids’ fault,” said Chris Routt principal of Scottsburg High School. “Look at a 5-year-old or kindergartner, it isn’t their fault.” According to the Kids Count Data Center, In Indiana, there is about 39.5 percent of students that are el-

56%

Staff Writer

The EMPOWER Youth Coalition continues to spread encouragement to Scott County by creating a new app. The app, EMPOWER Scott County, was released in October. “They have worked with Fanmaker to create our app and have selected items to use for incentives.This has taken place since September and we are just now ready to launch,” said Melinda Lowry, EMPOWER Youth Coalition coordinator. Within the app, administrators are able to create events that correspond to positive, resilience-building events. These events include sports games, club activities, com8

December 2019

News

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SCSD2 STUDENTS could be affected by this new regulation.

EMPOWER creates Beacon App for teens Tierra Combs

igible for free lunches and 7.7 percent that qualify for reduced lunches. That is roughly around 500, 000students that are apart of the food assistance program, and this number will be cut in half due to the limit on food stamps and other financial aid options. “This will affect more than students, it will affect our community,” Routt said. “What will happen when these parents have three kids and have to pay for their lunches? This isn’t just a national problem but a local one. State or local government might help in some way?”

munity events and EMPOWER meetings. When a user is present at an event, he or she can gain points, and members can save up points to earn EMPOWER-themed prizes. The idea for an app stems from two founding members of EMPOWER. “Utilizing Bluetooth technology to track participation was the brainchild of former EMPOWER leaders, Madelyn Shelton and Eliza Mount. A demo for this product was set up, and we were impressed with the possibilities that existed,” Lowry said. As EMPOWER Scott County is released, EMPOWER hopes that the app will encourage positive activities. The EMPOWER Scott County app is available for download on all devices.


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Articles inside

Team swims toward conference

1min
page 24

Bowling knocks down obstacles for season

2min
page 24

Players focus on individual goals, team pushes for win

1min
page 23

Team perfects aim for perfect season

1min
page 23

What’s in your sports bag?

1min
page 22

SHS senior athletes commit to college teams

3min
page 20

Arbuckle’s Advice

1min
page 19

Cheer will compete at Disney World

2min
page 19

Coaches use ‘take care of today’ motto to practice

1min
page 18

Team maintains successful MSC record

1min
page 18

Sport Highlights

1min
page 17

New streaming service provides more Disney content

1min
page 15

Dear Author... } “Aurora Rising” by Jay Kristoff and Amie Kaufman

1min
pages 13, 15

Self-stereotyping changes perception of yourself

1min
page 12

Dress up day stereotypes

1min
page 12

Weather, social media affect holiday mental illness

1min
page 11

HUMANS OF SHS

2min
page 10

Student leaves behind a legacy of love, laughter

3min
page 9

EMPOWER creates Beacon App for teens

1min
page 8

Food stamp cuts by Trump admin may affect students

2min
page 8

SHS Alumni elected to local City Councils

3min
page 7

Community says goodbye to Mayor Graham, welcomes Mayor-Elect Amick to office

3min
page 6

Four Horseman business to set up on Square

2min
page 5

Lack of auditorium creates problems

3min
page 4

HOCO needs semi-formal dress code

1min
page 4

Letter from the Editors

1min
page 3

club spotlight | FFA

1min
page 3
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