The changes to school meals were approved in the budget earlier this year – with union chiefs hitting out at the health and jobs impact of the move.
A union has slammed plans to outsource the preparation of school meals which it says will lead to the loss of 50 jobs.
The changes to the current provision of meals in the region’s schools was a controversial part of the SNP administration’s budget approved in March.
It had come under criticism from Labour councillor Jen Preston, who said the region’s children deserved better than “frozen ready meals for lunch”.
But SNP councillor Gerry McLaughlan said the move was necessary as part of a package of “hard decisions” during the budget-setting process.
The heat has now been turned up in a letter from Tony Caleary from the Stirling branch of the Unison trade union to Stirling Council chief executive Brian Roberts, in which Mr Caleary outlines “grave concerns” over the plans.
In the letter, the union calls for the imposition of the changes to be “paused” until a full review of its impact is carried out – including on 50 jobs set to be affected.
Mr Caleary writes: “Unison are concerned that this budget savings proposal impacts on predominantly part-time, low-paid women who are effectively being de-skilled with the loss of over 50 posts. We believe that this could be an equality issue.
“It should also be noted that the catering staff are often the first point of contact for children in the school who are experiencing difficulties.
“They often highlight concerns around a child’s situation, in effect acting as safe-guarders.”
Unison Scotland local government lead John Mooney said: “Stirling Council needs to urgently pause these plans.
“They’re bad for staff, bad for children and bad for local businesses.
“No local authority should be seeking to sack low-paid workers and serve children unhealthier meals.
“This decision will have a negative impact on families and the local economy.”
A Stirling Council spokesperson said “Stirling Council is currently reviewing primary and nursery school meal provision as part of wider efforts to address a projected £12.25 million budget gap for the 2026/27 financial year.
“This review forms one element of a broader package aimed at achieving necessary savings across multiple service areas.
“All changes in service provision are underpinned by ongoing engagement with staff, trade unions, and communities as we navigate the financial challenges outlined in our budget planning process.
“The council would like to reiterate its commitment to no compulsory redundancies, and we are currently working on a package of support for those colleagues who are affected, which includes structured retraining programmes into other roles across the council, as well as upskilling support more generally.
“We remain committed to providing high quality, nutritional school meals that meeting all Scottish Government guidance.”

You must be logged in to post a comment Login