Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 13— - SCHOOL LUNCH PROGRAMS › § 1769c
The Secretary must set up and run one system so states can make sure local school food programs follow the law and the nutrition rules for school lunches and school breakfasts. State education agencies must require local food service authorities to follow the nutrition rules, check them through audits and supervisory reviews on a 3-year cycle (or another period the Secretary sets), pick schools for review using Secretary-approved criteria, publish easy-to-understand final results for the public, and send annual results to the Secretary. If a local agency is chosen because it has a high level or risk of administrative errors, the state must do an extra administrative review of its processes (like applications, certification, verification, meal counting, and claiming). If the agency fails, the state must make it write and carry out a correction plan, provide or get technical help, and do a followup review. If the agency fails both an initial and followup review, the Secretary may require the state to hold back funds equal to any overpayment during the error period (from the date of the wrong claim until it is fixed, or until 60 days after that date for the first followup after July 1, 2005, or 90 days for later followups). Recovered funds go back to the Secretary and can be used for training, technical help, state reviews, or the child nutrition account; a state may keep up to 25% for program integrity work if it submits and gets approval for a plan. Local agencies judged high-risk must have a different person check initial eligibility decisions before telling families. That check must be done quickly and must not delay the decision more than 10 operating days. Families must be told the decision right away. Local and state agencies must report review results to the Secretary, who will publish yearly error results by state, number, percentage, and type. The Secretary will also help states monitor programs and do management evaluations. Congress authorized $10,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2011 through 2015 to carry out these monitoring activities. The Secretary or a State may fine schools, school food authorities, or State agencies for severe mismanagement, ignoring requirements, or repeated violations. Fines must come from non-Federal money and are limited to 1% of relevant reimbursements or funds for the first finding, 5% for the second, and 10% for the third or later findings.
Full Legal Text
The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 1769c
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73