School Cafeteria Meal Ordering and Payment Safety 2020
Pandemic tips and tactics to minimize risk and keep your community safe.
Pandemic tips and tactics to minimize risk and keep your community safe.
For more than a decade, Joe Satorhelyi has run the IT department of School Day Cafe, a California foodservice nonprofit serving four school districts and feeding thousands of students seven days a week.
Back-to-school time comes with lots of administrative tasks for parents and school staff. In July of 2019, Milford Exempted Village School District, located outside Cincinnati, Ohio, decided to make things much easier by switching their family payment systems to PaySchools Central and PASS (Pay at School Systems).
“I love that we have relationships with the PaySchools people,” Rachel said, “and I’m never switching again.”
Like all organizations today, school districts small and large are challenged by the need to oversee and maintain hundreds if not thousands of computers and peripherals. Staying abreast of inventory, OS and software updates, security concerns, and replacement schedules is daunting.
Did you know that filling out a free-or-reduced price school meal application each year can benefit not only your family but also your children’s schools?
On October 8, 2021, Joe Biden signed the bipartisan K-12 Cybersecurity Act of 2021 into law.
With the 2018-2019 school year fast approaching, Shannon Solomon was ready to move to a new cafeteria cashiering and lunch payment system.
Ten years ago, six of every ten transactions were in cash, according to Forbes. Today, cash is used for just three in ten transactions. And just a decade into the future, it’s predicted that number will plummet to one in ten.
Free-and-reduced meal applications can also serve as a district household income survey, assisting your schools in qualifying for federal and state programs.