Tiny children at Julian T. Saldivar Elementary School line up in their classrooms promptly at 10 am before walking down a hall and through double doors into the cafeteria, where lunch trays that were planned months in advance are doled out.
As they sit talking quietly with classmates, that food—Chinese orange chicken, rice, roasted garbanzo beans, broccoli, a fruit cup, and milk—disappears.
Trina Nelson, the executive chef for the Dallas Independent School District, says that her team puts great effort into creating meals kids will eat. That starts at DISD’s central kitchen at the Maria Luna Food Service Facility, in southern Dallas. Breakfast, lunch, and sometimes dinner are made there and trucked to each school, where workers organize them quickly before the school day starts.
Join the Conversation
The latest news and headlines from Urban School Food Alliance
Baltimore City Public Schools: Behind the scenes: How City Schools’ Food and Nutrition team prepares for the new school year
Oct 2, 2025
Back-to-school means different things to different people, but for the Food and Nutrition team, it marks the...
Urban School Food Alliance Membership Welcomes Baltimore County Public Schools as Newest Member, Increasing Reach to 4.5 Million Students
Sep 29, 2025
USFA Expands Membership furthering vision of being the leading change agent for school nutrition WASHINGTON,...
TIME: Why It’s So Hard to Make School Lunches Healthier
Aug 25, 2025
Students at the Tahoe Truckee Unified School District in California dine on locally sourced fruits and...
IDFA: Dairy Companies Slash Added Sugars by Nearly 60% in School Milk as New School Year Begins
Aug 21, 2025
“The Urban School Food Alliance applauds the work of the IDFA and milk processors for continuing to put student...