Published 20 March 2019
Buckie Got It, St. Kitts and Nevis News Source
“Breakfast is one of the most important meals of the day,” he said during a visit to the school on March 20. “There are students that are studying at a very young age and they need their food to be able to concentrate well during the course of the day.”The programme runs every morning from Monday to Friday, said Minister Grant. He added that it has been designed to satisfy around 75 students per day.The minister said that the breakfast usually starts off with bush tea, and the wholesome meals consists of sausages, eggs, sardines and bread.He said that the programme came about when he was approached by teachers who explained to him that some of the children were arriving to school without having breakfast. The teachers said that those students were having a hard time during the day.“So we designed a programme and it is running very well,” he said. “In fact, we started with about 20 to 25 children and now we are running it with about 75 of them per day.”
Over the course of the next two weeks, the programme will be catering to 100 students per day, said the minister.
“We started this programme at 5:00 a.m. where my wife and I would start to prepare the breakfast,” he said. “That was when it was 25, but now it’s 75 or so it’s becoming a real task to get up at 5:00 a.m. to produce that.”
As a result, two stoves and a refrigerator were purchased, said Minister Grant.
“So, we are going to start producing the breakfast on the site here at the kitchen at the Tyrell Williams for the just about 100 students in the next two weeks,” he said.
The minister stated that this is a yeoman’s service and thanked the principal and staff of the Tyrell Williams Primary School for allowing the programme to thrive.
“I think that it will auger well with the students in this community,” he said.
Minister Grant stated that seeing the success of the programme, the Verchild’s High School has reached out to him to have it replicated there for about 25 of its students.