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Release No. 0266.11
Contact:
Office of Communications (202) 720-4623
Printable version
USDA Official Visits Wyoming to
Highlight Ways to Provide Nutrition to Low-Income Kids
CASPER, WY, June 21, 2011 -Today, USDA Deputy Under Secretary for Food,
Nutrition, and Consumer Services Janey Thornton addressed the need for more
Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) sites across the country to feed
low-income children when school is out. During the 2011 Wyoming School Nutrition
Association Conference in Casper, Thornton was joined by Wyoming dignitaries and
officials including Senator John Barrasso (R-WY), Congressman Cynthia Lummis
(R-WY), and Wyoming's Superintendent of Public Instruction, Cindy Hill. The
three day event includes more than 150 participants and 200 children.
"Each year, millions of Americans struggle to provide healthy meals to their
children during the summer," said Thornton. "Thanks to our valued partners, more
stakeholders in Wyoming and around the nation are aware of the nutrition gap
low-income children face when school is out of session."
During the regular school year, more than 21 million children nationwide
receive free and reduced-priced meals through the
National School Lunch Program, yet little more than 3 million kids are fed
in summer meals programs. Thornton emphasized the Administration's commitment to
feed more hungry children this summer. She also touted renewed efforts by USDA
and partners to highlight the important nutrition benefits provided by the SFSP
and other healthy meal options available for low-income children across the
country. This summer:
- Let's Move! Faith and Communities (part of First Lady Michelle Obama's
Let's Move! initiative) will work with partners to host new feeding
sites at congregations and neighborhood organizations;
- the Corporation for National and Community Service's 515 AmeriCorps
VISTA Summer Associates will work at anti-hunger organizations across the
country to feed more children in programs, including the SFSP;
- sponsors will benefit from
new waivers to simplify existing regulations in the SFSP to streamline
ways to feed low-income children when school is out;
- several states will test innovative enhancements to the SFSP, including
the provision of food backpacks to provide assistance over weekends, and
meal delivery to reach children in rural areas;
- and last week Secretary Vilsack kicked-off the first National Summer
Food Service Program Week, a week-long awareness campaign promoting
initiatives across the nation aimed at nourishing low-income children during
summer months.
USDA's
Food and Nutrition Service (FNS) oversees the administration of 15 nutrition
assistance programs, including the Summer Food Service Program and other child
nutrition programs, that touch the lives of one in four Americans over the
course of a year. These programs work in concert to form a national safety net
against hunger. Visit
www.fns.usda.gov for information about FNS and nutrition assistance programs
and go to
http://www.fns.usda.gov/ech/ to see how you can help end childhood hunger.
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Last modified:
11/27/2012
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