School Sends Son’s Lunchbox Back Over “Unhealthy” Item
Administrators now check what parents are packing, criticizing the content when it doesn’t match guidelines. Times have changed from the days when you carried lunch to school. A mother in…

SILVER SPRING, MARYLAND – JANUARY 14: Consumer Product Safety Commission employee Stacy Summerville (L) and her daughter Jayda Mayfield, 10, select their lunch in the cafeteria at the The Tommy Douglas Conference Center January 14, 2019 in Silver Spring, Maryland. Summerville and her daughter accepted free meals for furloughed federal workers and their families offered by the Amalgamated Transit Union. The labor organization will continue to offer meals for federal employees affected by the shutdown all week from 12 p.m. to 6 p.m. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
(Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)Administrators now check what parents are packing, criticizing the content when it doesn't match guidelines.
Times have changed from the days when you carried lunch to school.
A mother in Australia had her child's lunchbox sent back along with what she calls a "condescending" note, declaring her sausage rolls were not healthy enough.
The paper, which she shared to Facebook, read, "There were lots of great choices in this lunchbox however sausage rolls [are] too high in fat… (Please provide nutrient value if they are homemade)."
The mother isn't backing down, revealing in her post that she stands by her cooking.




