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Maryland Summer Food
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- Slide 1: Summer Food: Helping to End
Childhood Hunger in Maryland
Maryland Hunger Solutions
www.mdhungersolutions.org
- Slide 2: Roadmap for Today
• Role of summer food in Maryland
• Best practices
• Outreach strategies
• Resources
- Slide 3: Maryland Hunger Solutions
• Baltimore based anti-hunger organization
• Project of the Food Research and Action
Center
Goals
• Build awareness of hunger in MD
• Increase participation in the Food Stamp
and Child Nutrition Programs.
• Address food access issues.
- Slide 4: The Role of
Summer Food
- Slide 5: There is a Need for Summer Food
• More than 35 million Americans live in
households considered to be food
insecure.
• More than 12 million of them are children
- Slide 6: Hunger Doesn’t Take a Vacation
Fact: Only 1 in 5 kids who receive free
or reduced price meals during the
school year continue to receive meals
during the summer.
- Slide 7: Continuous Access to Healthy Food
School Breakfast
School
Summer Lunch
Meals
Afterschool Snacks
- Slide 8: Snacks and meals attract children to
summer programs
- Slide 9: Help combat childhood obesity
- Slide 10: Best Practices
- Slide 11: Goal:
Provide children with
access to healthy food throughout
the year.
- Slide 12: You Can:
• Operate your summer food program
as long as possible during the summer.
• Operate as an “open site”.
• Serve the maximum number of meals.
- Slide 13: Goal: Provide children with
healthy kid-friendly meals
and snacks
- Slide 14: If kids don’t like it, they won’t eat it.
• Focus needs to
be on nutritional
content and
appeal
• This is particularly important for
low-income children
- Slide 15: You Can:
• Write quality into your vendor
specifications and hold your vendor
accountable.
• Make sure the food you serve is healthy
and kid-friendly.
• Use local produce when possible.
• Hold taste testings with the kids.
- Slide 16: 3.
Goal: Help combat the child obesity
epidemic in Maryland.
- Slide 17: Hunger and Obesity
• Obesity is a national epidemic
• It impacts people in every ethnic group
and every income level.
• The same child can struggle with both
hunger and obesity.
- Slide 18: Study Finds Kids Gain Weight Over
Summer
Kids gain more weight when school's out
Schools do a better job at keeping students trim than parents, study finds
INDIANAPOLIS - The nation’s schools — under fire for unhealthy school
lunches, well-stocked vending machines and phys-ed cuts — may actually do a
better job than parents in keeping children fit and trim.
A study found that 5- and 6-year-olds gained more weight over the
Summer than during the school year, casting doubt on the assumption
that kids are more active during summer vacation.
The findings don’t reveal what’s behind the out-of-school weight gain, but the
researchers speculate it’s because the summer months lack the structure of
the school year with all its activities and daily comings and goings.
- Slide 19: You Can:
• Incorporate fresh fruits and vegetables and
whole grains into the meal patterns.
• Serve skim or low-fat milk.
• Offer physical activities.
• Include nutrition education.
- Slide 20: Nutrition Education
• Cooking classes
• Gardening
• Easy take home recipes
• Budgeting
• Field trips
- Slide 21: Goal:
Sponsors will operate their Summer
Food Program in the black.
- Slide 22: You Can:
• Serve both breakfast and lunch.
• Serve meals at times children are most
likely to participate.
• Be a sponsor for additional sites.
- Slide 23: You Can:
• Plan child-friendly menus
• Teach staff about the importance of
accurate meal counts
• Access lower cost food and supplies
through food banks
• Increase participation
at your site
- Slide 24: Outreach Strategies
- Slide 25: Get the Word Out
• P.S.A.s (radio and TV)
• Ads
• Neighborhood canvassing
• Phone banking
• 211 hotline
- Slide 26: Backpack Mail
• Send information home to parents through
backpack mail
• At least 2 weeks before school ends
• If possible, list neighborhood specific
information
- Slide 27: Advertise at the Site
• Post a banner or signs about Summer
Food at the site.
• Highlight the entrance that people will use
to access the site
• List all relevant information
- Slide 30: Hold a Kick-off Event
• Provide activities for the kids
• Invite:
• “Local celebrities”
• Public officials
• Members of Congress
• Media
• Goal= is to increase awareness
- Slide 31: Create Welcoming Environment
• Make sites as friendly and inviting as
possible
• Welcome kids from the community if it is
an open site
• Make sure that all staff at the site know
about the meal program
- Slide 32: Work with Community Partners
• Schools
• Religious organizations
• Food banks and pantries
• Utility companies
• Local businesses
- Slide 33: Resources
- Slide 36: Summer Food Standards of
Excellence
• Identify and promote quality summer
food sites
• Increase the quality of food served
and the site environment
• Increase participation
- Slide 37: You Can:
• Give the checklist to site supervisors for a
self-evaluation.
• Challenge sites to meet the bronze, silver
or gold level.
• Identify and honor quality summer food
sites.
• Use it as a brainstorming list for your
program.
- Slide 38: www.frac.org/afterschool
FRAC Navigation
Afterschool Funding
Afterschool Snacks
Afterschool Suppers
Summer Funding
Reimbursements
Model Programs
•Afterschool Models
•Summer Models
•Year Round Programs
•Afterschool & Summer Advocacy Efforts
The federal child nutrition programs provide critical funding for meals and snacks in
Increase Participation afterschool, summer, and before school programs. The federally-subsidized meals
•Outreach Materials and snacks attract children to out-of-school-time programs, where they can be
•Standards of Excellence active, engaged and safe while their parents are at work. The food also helps keep
Guides and Reports hunger at bay so children can fully participate in the activities going on at the
Contact Your State Agency program.
Providing healthy meals and snacks is particularly important given the rapidly
Afterschool Resource Center increasing prevalence of childhood obesity in the U.S. Since 1980 the number of
Home Page young people who are overweight has more than tripled. By providing healthy food,
nutrition programs can play a critical role in preventing obesity and improving
overall health.
FRAC’s Afterschool Resource Center provides a variety of information, best
Return to FRAC homepage practices, outreach materials, tools and strategies to help afterschool providers and
anti-hunger advocates get more healthy snacks and meals to children.
Click on the links to the left to learn more about these programs, how you can
participate, and ways to ensure that children have access to healthy and nutritious
meals.
NEW! FRAC's Child Nutrition Blog!
NEW! FRAC has developed a Summer Outreach Toolkit. Visit the toolkit page for
tips and materials to help you promote the Summer Food Program.
- Slide 39: REMEMBER:
• Summer food is very important to the
children in Maryland.
• Increasing participation benefits kids
and your program.
• The state agency and MD Hunger
Solutions want you to be successful
with summer food.