| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
April 21, 2004, 10:30
AM |
CONTACT: Kimberly Perry
PHONE: 202-986-2200 x3020 |
While Federal Nutrition
Programs Reach Many,
Thousands More People And
Federal Dollars
Are Left Behind
(Washington, D.C.) April 21, 2004– D.C.
Hunger Solutions called on the District
of Columbia agencies and community-based
organizations today
to better maximize the use of federal nutrition
programs like school breakfast, child care
food programs, and summer food programs.
This call
comes in connection with a new report released
today by the Food Research and Action Center.
The divide between affluent Americans and
those low-income adults and children worrying
about where their next meal will come from
is serious and worsening. This trend should
spur federal and state policymakers to take
aggressive steps to assure greater use of key
federal nutrition investments, according to
the Food Research and Action Center’s
new report, State of the States: A Profile
of Food and Nutrition Programs Across the Nation.
“
If we take better advantage of these nutrition
programs, most of which are 100% federally funded,
we could reverse the high rates of hunger and
food insecurity in the District, as well as fight
childhood obesity and assure that D.C.’s
children enter school each day prepared to learn,” said
Kimberly Perry, Director of D.C. Hunger Solutions,
a project of the Food Research and Action Center.
Updated with the latest data derived from
official government sources for federal Fiscal
Year 2003 and school year 2002-2003, State
of the States provides a comprehensive state-by-state
snapshot of the extent of hunger, and of each
state’s and the District of Columbia’s
use of federal nutrition resources to address
needs. The federal nutrition programs covered
are: Food Stamps, School Lunch, School Breakfast,
Summer Food, the Child and Adult Care Food
Program (CACFP), WIC, The Emergency Food Assistance
Program (TEFAP), and the Commodity Supplemental
Food Program (CSFP). Even though the District’s geographic
compactness should make these programs easier
to operate than in the 50 states, and thus the
District’s use of them should be way above
average, the District’s reach still leaves
many behind. Findings include:
- Only 42 students eat school breakfast for every
100 students who eat school lunch, slightly below
the national average. If the District performed
as well as the best performing states, Oregon,
Mississippi, and West Virginia - where 55 students
eat breakfast for every 100 who eat lunch - an
additional 5, 415 children would eat a healthy
morning meal and an additional $1,114,987 in
federal reimbursement would flow back into the
District’s economy.
- There have been dramatic decreases in the
District’s Child and Adult Care Food Program,
which experienced a 19.3% drop in participation
over the last 10 years. Nationally participation
is up 9%.
- After feeding 24,000 children in the summer
of 2001, the District only fed 14,000 children
in the summer of 2002, and then tried to pick
up the pieces in 2003 but, only fed 19,000. Although
participation has dropped significantly in the
summer food program within the District and there
remains much public scrutiny for the way the
City administers the program, participation across
the country is also very low, therefore the District
held the number 5 spot, naturally.
- 68-86% of the eligible population for the
Food Stamp Program is participating and numbers
increased considerably over the last year, but
growth should continue due to the legal immigrant
benefit restorations as a result of the 2002
Farm Bill, in which many legal immigrant children
and adults may now be eligible.
This report should serve as a wake-up call
to District leaders in both the public
and private sectors. There has to be collaborative
work to
maximize the use of these important federal
anti-hunger programs. We need to accelerate
initiatives like
the Universal School Breakfast Program,
implementation of the recommendations of
the Mayor’s Blue
Ribbon Task Force on Child Nutrition, and
outreach activities to expand the food program
in child
care settings,” said Perry. Click
here to download the State of the States
2004 report.
Email this article
Printer friendly page
|
|
|