Finger Food 
� Students in Pennsylvania are giving the lunch lady the finger.

����A new system which uses fingerprint scanners to let kids pay for school lunches is 
getting raves from students and school administrators, but is making privacy advocates 
nervous.

The scanners make stealable lunch money, lose-able swipe cards and the stigma of being 
known as the free-lunch kid things of the past, says Walter Curfman, superintendent of 
the Tussey Mountain School District in western Pennsylvania.

�You always have your finger with you, unless you cut it off,� he said.

But Andrew Shen of the Electronic Privacy Information Center worries about how well 
the information will be protected from being spread around throughout the government.

�Once you have a collection of fingerprints starting from such an early age, I can 
imagine this being used for other purposes in the future� such as law enforcement, he 
said. 

Popular System

The system from Altoona, Penn.-based Food Service Solutions is currently being piloted 
in middle and high schools at Tussey Mountain and neighboring Penn Cambria School 
District in rural western Pennsylvania, and Lower Merion School District in suburban 
Philadelphia. So far, it�s unique to the Keystone state, FSS president Mitch Johns 
said.

It works on a debit account system � parents put money in, and students order food. 
When the account runs low, a letter goes out to the parents. Parents can also restrict 
students� shopping �a la carte� � buying extra food not on the day�s set menu. 
Students can also choose to buy items with cash.

So far, kids have taken to the new system, said Tussey Mountain cafeteria director Deb 
Stepisianos. Though the kids goof around a bit � putting the wrong finger down and 
such � so far only three sets of parents have opted out of the program, she said.

And as Tussey�s system was a beta test, they�ve had some trouble with the software, 
choking up lunch lines.

�When it works, it�s wonderful,� she said. 

Going Too Far?

The scanning system was developed in response to a federal regulation requiring that 
cafeterias hide who�s getting free or reduced-price lunches, Curfman said.

But cafeterias that use swipe cards or PIN numbers and debit accounts fulfill the same 
requirement and are often cheaper to run, according to Dennis Waiter, national 
marketing director at ARAMARK, which operates cafeterias at 350 school districts 
across the nation.

FSS� system costs Tussey Mountain about $50,000 for its four schools plus $4,000-5,000 
a year for maintenance, Curfman said. A swipe card system from SNAP Systems, the 
nation�s largest purveyor of such systems, would cost between $28,000-60,000 for a 
district that size, plus about $3,000-4,000 a year for maintenance, according to 
Gloria Calvo of SNAP. 

FSS wants to expand its fingerprint system for use in attendance taking and on school 
door locks, as the use of biometric scanners is spreading in U.S. schools. Eagen High 
School in St. Paul, Minn., for instance, has been using fingerprint scanners to check 
out books at the school library since last academic year.

Fingerprints have the stigma of criminality, privacy advocates said, and there�s no 
guarantee the data wouldn�t get out to law enforcement authorities or other agencies 
later in the game.

�At some point my bet is, somebody�s parents are going to file some sort of a 
lawsuit,� said Anne Cavoukian, data privacy commissioner for the government of Ontario 
in Canada. �I think you�re going to have some litigation on your hands: �why are you 
treating our children like common criminals?��

Students� biometric data � such as fingerprint records � is considered a student 
record and falls under the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, a 1974 privacy 
law. In most cases, the law says parents have to give written permission every time a 
student�s records are released to an organization other than the school system.

But there are exceptions to FERPA that are different for every school district in the 
nation. Usually, lawyers said, schools have to give up their records if a judge or a 
district attorney asks. Districts differ on whether private lawyers can also grab 
student records for use in lawsuits, and when the police can do it. 

No Clear Picture

Of course, that�s if the police could even make use of the fingerprint scan data � and 
whether they can is unclear.

FSS uses a fingerprint scanner from Groupe Sagem, a French company. The Sagem scanner 
doesn�t store images of fingerprints. Instead, it records a few dozen points on a 
fingerprint and turns the location of those points into a number. The way the system 
is currently configured, it�s more than 99 percent efficient for up to 3,000 kids, 
said Steve Ketcham, a programmer for Food Service Solutions.

You can�t recreate fingerprint images from the data in the system, but if law 
enforcement had a similar system, they could match up the numbers. And Ketcham said 
FSS� system is a �stripped down version of the AFIS,� a fingerprint-recognition system 
used by law enforcement.

But Johns insists the numbers produced from the finger scanners can�t be used by any 
other system.

�I see no way for that process to be used by anybody else,� he said. 

Copyright � 2001 ABC News Internet Ventures. 


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