Only about 3 percent of its students are poor enough to receive free lunches.
In the 2007-2008 school year 60% of all students receive free or reduced price lunches.
In 2004, 62% of the school received free lunches; by 2008, that number had decreased to 56%.
Nearly 80 percent of the school's 1,200 students receive free or discounted lunches.
In 2010, the district reported that 272 students received free or reduced price lunches, due to the family meeting the federal poverty level.
For the same school year, 54.07% of the students received free or reduced-cost lunches.
For the same school year, 40.95% of the students received free and reduced-cost lunches.
His formula would give more money to districts with large numbers of students poor enough to receive free lunches.
In the 1995-96 school year, slightly more than 10 percent of the students qualified to receive free lunches, according to state records.
Poor children are defined by the district as those receiving free lunches under the Federal school-lunch program.