News May 07 2026

PATH lunches reinstated at Greater Portmore High

Updated 10 hours ago 2 min read

Loading article...

Students at Greater Portmore High School in St Catherine are now receiving lunches under the Programme of Advancement through Health and Education (PATH) programme, after a temporary suspension was announced this week. 

“All is well as we speak,” Board Chairman Horace Bennett told The Gleaner when contacted yesterday.

He declined to comment further on the matter. 

In a notice to parents earlier this week, the school announced the suspension of the lunch programme for students on PATH, citing financial constraints. 

The PATH lunch programme is a Government initiative that provides free or subsidised school lunches to vulnerable students, often ensuring meals at least three days per week. The Government provides $250 daily per PATH student. 

It aims to improve nutrition, attendance, and academic performance for students in need.

The school, in its notice, had urged parents to send students with meals until further notice.

However, speaking yesterday during a post Cabinet press briefing, Terry-Ann Thomas Gayle acting chief education officer in the Ministry of Education said schools do not have the authority to suspend PATH meals. 

“That’s quite unfortunate what happened at Greater Portmore,” she stated.  “Our principals are leaders of the institutions; there are funds that are still within an institution that can be used at all times to ensure that our students are fed. It is the policy of the Ministry that no child should come to school and not be fed.”

She revealed that she learnt of the matter via the media, and stated that funds have since been deposited in “all accounts of our schools”.

“As leaders within our institution we are to make the necessary arrangements to ensure that our students are fed at all times. The Ministry is here. I was made aware of it in the media. At no time did I receive a phone call that there was this issue,” she said. 

Calls and messages to the school principal, Ricardo Ross remained unanswered up to late yesterday. 

The PATH lunch programme has been criticised over the years for the qual­ity and adequacy of meals provided to stu­dents. Critics have also argued that the per-day alloc­a­tion avail­able for PATH stu­dents is not enough to cover a nutritious meal. 

In March last year, Education Minister, Dr Dana Morris Dixon announced the expansion of the school feeding programme, with 256 schools –189 primary and 56 secondary schools earmarked for a special nutrition programme. 

“We’ve seen where a number of our children are coming to school without any breakfast,” the education minister said. “We’ve seen that for those schools that provide lunch and [the children] are on PATH, a cash transfer programme for poor families], that is the only meal they may have. So, we’ve had to be very realistic as a ministry and we’ve looked at that and we recognise that we have to do better,” she said at the time.

Follow The Gleaner on X and Instagram @JamaicaGleaner and on Facebook @GleanerJamaica. Send us a message on WhatsApp at 1-876-499-0169 or email us at onlinefeedback@gleanerjm.com or editors@gleanerjm.com.