Peggy Noonan’s
recent Wall Street Journal column about the need for bipartisanship in health
care policy, speaks to what we are witnessing and achieving in our own
work: “America is in trouble, with huge
problems. The people are … desperate for a sense that improvement is actually
possible.” https://www.wsj.com/articles/partisanship-is-breaking-both-parties-1506640056
One
of the most important things Share Our Strength is doing, in addition to
relieving the terrible hardship suffered by hungry kids, is demonstrating,
irrefutably, that improvement is actually possible. Childhood hunger has
been reduced by at least 30% since we began the No Kid Hungry campaign.
It is at its lowest level in many years. Adding more than 3 million kids
to school breakfast, high SNAP participation, low unemployment, and economic
growth have all played a role.
Last
week the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities led by our board member Bob
Greenstein reported that child poverty, now at 15.6 percent, is at a record
low, half of what it was in 1967. And last month USDA reported that 17.5% of
children (1 in 6) live in food insecure households, but only 8.8% of kids (less
than 1 in 10) live in a household with at least one food insecure child. https://www.ers.usda.gov/webdocs/publications/84973/err-237.pdf?v=42979
That
the American people are “desperate for a sense that improvement is actually
possible” underscores the need to emphatically embrace and promote the
anti-hunger community’s success. Organizations like ours often experience
a “success paradox” feeling tension between dramatizing the severity of the
problem, and showing progress that tells stakeholders the severity has been
diminished and they are getting a great return on their investment.
However that is a false choice akin to a winning NFL football team feeling they
have to keep the score close or the fans will stop coming to cheer. Just the
opposite is the case. Fans cheer victory. Investors invest in success. Besides,
the truth is that even though there has been great progress, significant and compelling
need remains.
At
a time when our nation, battered by tragedy, divided politically, is desperate
for good news, we have some: childhood hunger and child poverty rates are
dropping, lives are being saved and changed. And having
proven that we can feed kids in record numbers, we earn the opportunity and
responsibility to help prevent the next generation from being hungry in the
first place.
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