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Teacher asks TikTok to help crush his students’ lunch debt. He got ‘insane’ response

“The best $20 I’ll spend in 2023,” one person told the middle school teacher. “You’re changing so many lives.”
“The best $20 I’ll spend in 2023,” one person told the middle school teacher. “You’re changing so many lives.” Screengrab from Garrett Jones' TikTok video

A Utah teacher was left stunned after he asked TikTok to help crush his middle school students’ lunch debt.

Inspired by the idea of raising money to wipe out the debt, Garrett Jones talked to the cafeteria staff at Rocky Mountain Middle School in Heber City to figure out exactly how much was owed.

They gave him a rough estimate of $8,600, he said in a TikTok video.

“At that point, I was like, ‘We’re not going to get that (much),’ but whatever we do is going to be cool, right?” Jones said. “We’ll make a little dent, we’ll change somebody’s life a little bit, which will be good.

“I was wrong.”

After Jones posted a video asking for donations, tens of thousands of dollars poured in — a response he called “insane.”

First it was $2,000, then $5,000, eventually climbing past $30,000, Jones, a seventh- and eighth-grade teacher at the school, told USA Today.

@cgj205 Kids can’t learn if they’re hungry and don’t deserve to be handed a bill for lunch at a place they have to be. School lunch should be free. #teachersoftiktok #teacher #schoollunch #middleschool #elementaryschool #highschool ♬ I hope yall are making some money - cash.bets

Jones’ video got more than 5 million views as of Feb. 22 and seemed to strike a chord with many who grappled with lunch debt in their childhood.

“The last thing a kid should be worrying about is how much they owe for meals at a place they’re legally obligated to be,” Jones wrote. “Kids can’t learn if they’re hungry and don’t deserve to be handed a bill for lunch at a place they have to be. School lunch should be free.”

“Makes me so mad this is still a thing,” one person commented. “I barely had food to eat at home and the school refused me lunch all the time because I didn’t have lunch money.”

“Literally the best $20 I’ll spend in 2023,” another person told Jones. “You’re changing so many lives.”

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This story was originally published February 22, 2023 at 12:01 PM with the headline "Teacher asks TikTok to help crush his students’ lunch debt. He got ‘insane’ response."

Alison Cutler
mcclatchy-newsroom
Alison Cutler is a National Real Time Reporter for the Southeast at McClatchy. She graduated from the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University and previously worked for The News Leader in Staunton, VA, a branch of USAToday.
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