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To: Petr Mamonov who started this subject4/24/2004 6:37:35 PM
From: R. Jaynes   of 26039
 
Akron schools start lunch fingerprinting program

Associated Press

AKRON, Ohio - Old-fashioned meal tickets are out. High-tech fingerprinting technology is in.

The school district here has begun implementing a $700,000 "iMeal" program that identifies students in school lunch lines using their fingerprints.

Students at one middle school were "enrolled" in the system Friday morning - a process that involved scanning their fingerprints. Students at three other middle school have already been signed up.

Students whose parents didn't want them fingerprinted can be issued a PIN number.

"It's a parental and student choice what to do," said Debra Foulk, coordinator of the Akron schools' Child Nutrition Services. "We don't encourage or discourage either option."

District officials said they expect the program to be running in all middle school cafeterias by the end of the school year.

The district originally had hoped to have the system in place beginning last fall, but Foulk said it took this long to get all of the components - new touch-screen registers, software and fingerprint-imaging scanners - in place.

She said the system will be added to high schools in the fall. It will not be used in the elementary schools, where all students began receiving free lunches this school year.

The system will replace the meal-ticket method that has been used in middle and high school cafeterias for nearly two decades. When students go through the lunch line, they will place their finger on a scanner that will identify them based on the stored template.

Whether students use fingerprints or PIN numbers, they will be able to pay as they go through the lunch line or draw from a prepaid account.

Only one other Ohio district, Garfield Heights, uses this fingerprint technology.
ohio.com
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