“More low-income children than ever started
their school day with a healthy breakfast in the 2015-16 school year" With
this sentence, the Food Research and Action Committee’s annual breakfast scorecard
released yesterday confirmed the historic progress that has been made over the
past ten years, the period of time in which Share Our Strength’s No Kid Hungry
campaign’s number one priority has been expanding school breakfast to all kids
who need it. For the full report, see @ http://frac.org/wp-content/uploads/school-breakfast-scorecard-sy-2015-2016.pdf
433,000
more children were getting school breakfast last year than the year before,
increasing the national average from 44% in 2006 to 56% in 2015-16, a clear
majority of eligible kids getting the food they need to succeed.
433,000 kids, in your
neighborhood and mine who are getting off to a better start each day. 433,000
kids making America stronger and more competitive thanks to government policies
that enjoy bipartisan support and are both compassionate and pragmatic.
The
progress described above did not come easily. Nor was it due to any one
organization. Just the opposite. Every time the larger anti-hunger
community encountered an obstacle to kids getting breakfast, we worked together
to knock it down. Thanks for the hard work and support that enabled our team to
play such a meaningful role.
Poverty
and food insecurity are still way too high in America. But by virtually every
measure childhood hunger is decreasing. Childhood hunger is a solvable problem
and the new breakfast scorecard is evidence that public-private partnerships
are solving it.
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