Fress SHS: Quality of feeding has improved – CHASS

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The Conference of Heads of Assisted Secondary Schools (CHASS) has expressed surprise and disappointment over recent remarks by the Minister of Education, Haruna Iddrisu, regarding the quality of food served in senior high schools.

The Minister had raised concerns about what he described as the “poor quality of food” being served to students and hinted that the government may consider reversing its decision to allow school heads to directly procure food, one of the key promises in the NDC’s education policy.

The policy, outlined in the party’s manifesto, grants school heads and bursars the authority to purchase food locally as part of efforts to improve quality and efficiency in the school feeding programme.

Reacting to the Minister’s statement, National Secretary of CHASS, Primus Baro, said the comments were unexpected and had not been raised in any engagements with the Ministry or the Ghana Education Service.

“We have not received any formal reports suggesting that schools are serving poor-quality food. The feedback we’ve received rather indicates improvement since headteachers began procuring food themselves,” he told Citi News on Monday, May 5, 2025.

Baro clarified that while CHASS is not necessarily insisting on maintaining control over food procurement, the current arrangement was recommended due to persistent challenges under the previous centralized model, including delays and substandard supplies.

“We’re open to whatever decision government takes but expect that, if centralised procurement returns, food is delivered on time and in the right quantities.”

He also urged that concerns about food quality be handled internally and constructively, rather than in the media, to avoid creating a misleading impression based on isolated incidents.

On the issue of funding, Baro acknowledged some delays in recent disbursements due to administrative changes but confirmed that funds had since been released, although some arrears remain unpaid.

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Meanwhile, the Ghana School Feeding Programme (GSFP) has announced the immediate termination of contracts for all caterers engaged under the initiative across the country.

In an official statement dated May 2, 2025, the GSFP directed that no current caterer should provide meals for the third term of the 2024/2025 academic year.

“Please be informed that contracts of all caterers of the Ghana School Feeding Programme (GSFP) nationwide have been terminated with immediate effect. Accordingly, no existing caterer on the programme should cook for the third term of the 2024/2025 academic year,” the statement read.

The Secretariat, however, assured affected caterers that all outstanding payments for the previous term would be settled. “All outstanding arrears for the second term of the 2024/2025 academic year will be paid in due course,” it stated.

The termination, according to the GSFP, forms part of a broader restructuring effort aimed at improving the efficiency and impact of the programme.

As part of its ongoing restructuring exercise, the GSFP Secretariat will soon announce the modalities for the recruitment of new caterers,” the notice added.

Read the full statement below;