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CEO says school district turned down his offer to pay lunch bills

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Originally Published: 24 JUL 19 16:38 ET

(CNN) -- The CEO of a Philadelphia coffee company says that the Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, school district that threatened to put children in foster care over unpaid lunch bills turned down his offer to pay the entire $22,476 bill.

La Colombe Coffee Roasters co-founder Todd Carmichael told CNN affiliate WNEP that he wanted to help these families because he received free and reduced lunch as a child, when his single mom had a limited income.

"No strings attached. We don't want an airport named after us. We'd just like this debt to be forgiven. You know, a lot of these people are struggling," Carmichael said.

He said the president of the Wyoming Valley West School Board told him no.

"I was angry. I was upset, and I just said, 'guys, don't give up. Just call them back. Maybe it's just emotion,' but that was it. They won't take our calls. They won't take anything," he said.

The Wyoming Valley West School District did not respond to CNN's requests for comment.

The district sent hundreds of letters last week that told parents that there have been "multiple letters sent home with your child" and that no payments had been made.

"Your child has been sent to school every day without money and without a breakfast and/or lunch," the letter read. It also said failure to provide children with food could result in parents being sent to Dependency Court.

"If you are taken to Dependency court, the result may be your child being removed from your home and placed in foster care," it read.

Luzerne County Manager David Pedri oversees the county's foster care system and says it is there to help families in crisis, not collect lunch money.

"We're not the boogeyman. We're not going to come in the middle of the night and take your kids," he said.

He says "generous and kindhearted people" have reached out to help.

"I've personally received five offers from both local and some other people from outside the state to pay off the lunch debts," he said, adding that he sent them to the school district for review.

School board officials told WNEP that they had gotten more than 100 offers from all over the country.

Board Vice President David Usavage told WNEP that he supported taking the money.

"If we can get it in one lump sum, why do we want to have to go out and go after people? You know, call them, write them letters, do whatever we were going to do," he said.

Officials told WNEP that they would talk to a lawyer about the possibility of accepting the money.

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