Marketplace for Tuesday, June 23, 2015
Jun 23, 2015

Marketplace for Tuesday, June 23, 2015

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Airing on Monday, June 23, 2015: Massachusetts has scrapped the decades-old method of defining low-income students in public schools based on income information submitted on applications for free and reduced-price lunches. The new measure relies on whether families receive benefits like food stamps, and it has “reduced” the number of kids classified as poor. Marketplace looks at this new assessment, its potential impact on school funding and whether it will catch on in other states. Next, Darden Restaurants, owner of Olive Garden and LongHorn Steakhouse, announced plans to separate part of the business into a real estate investment trust.  Marketplace looks at how this spin-off/lease-back works and how it makes money for Darden and other companies using it.

Segments From this episode

My First Job: Animal Chef

Jun 23, 2015
Peanut butter pine cones or dead mice, anyone?

Rewriting the recipe for healthy fast food

Jun 23, 2015
Eateries like Chipotle and Taco Bell ditch GMOs and dyes, but to what benefit?

Facial Recognition: An Eventuality

Jun 23, 2015
Tracking technology companies will "ask for forgiveness, not permission."

To measure poverty, states look beyond free lunch

Jun 23, 2015
As more schools opt to feed all students, officials find other ways to rate need.

Good Humor rolling out ice cream trucks for tour

Jun 23, 2015
Tweets, not rings, will herald the arrival of the vehicles.

Darden's real estate play

Jun 23, 2015
Olive Garden's owner will spin off part of its business into a REIT.

The challenge in pairing the sick with social services

Jun 23, 2015
In this corner of healthcare, it’s not one size fits all. It’s one size fits one.

Airing on Monday, June 23, 2015: Massachusetts has scrapped the decades-old method of defining low-income students in public schools based on income information submitted on applications for free and reduced-price lunches. The new measure relies on whether families receive benefits like food stamps, and it has “reduced” the number of kids classified as poor. Marketplace looks at this new assessment, its potential impact on school funding and whether it will catch on in other states. Next, Darden Restaurants, owner of Olive Garden and LongHorn Steakhouse, announced plans to separate part of the business into a real estate investment trust.  Marketplace looks at how this spin-off/lease-back works and how it makes money for Darden and other companies using it.

Music from the episode