Colorado voters approved a ballot measure to provide free meals for all public school students, according to a call from The Associated Press.
By a comfortable 55 percent to 45 percent margin, they voted to create a program to provide those meals and help schools pay for them, according to election results.
The measure will help schools pay for the meals by raising $100 million a year by increasing taxes on the state's richest residents. Those making more than $300,000 a year will see their state tax deductions limited, increasing their taxable income.
The vote comes after the expiration of a federal program for universal free lunch started during the pandemic. That left states scrambling to restore funding.
Backers say nearly 70,000 Colorado kids can't afford school meals but do not qualify for free or reduced-price school meals either.
"I believe every kid should eat, no matter what income their parents have," said Maria Olvera, a voter and mother of a school-age daughter in Westminster, noting food is getting pretty expensive.
"No kid should be left behind," she said.
"This is a massive victory for hungry children," said Ashley Wheeland of Hunger Free Colorado.
The measure will also fund pay increases for frontline school cafeteria workers, helping deal with staff shortages and would incentivize schools to buy Colorado products.
There was no organized opposition to the measure. But critics said the program was unnecessary and too expensive. Some questioned whether free meals for all was needed, especially since low-income students will keep receiving free meals under current law.
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