fighting childhood hunger: filling the gaps so kids learn & thrive

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FIGHTING CHILDHOOD HUNGER: FILLING THE GAPS SO KIDS LEARN & THRIVE

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Fighting Childhood hunger: filling the gaps so kids learn & thrive. Childhood Hunger: Where is it?. How is your school system impacted by student hunger? How big is the problem and how does it impact student achievement? What else can School Boards do to help?. First, some background on us. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Fighting Childhood hunger: filling the gaps so kids learn & thrive

FIGHTING CHILDHOOD HUNGER:

FILLING THE GAPS SO KIDS LEARN & THRIVE

Page 2: Fighting Childhood hunger: filling the gaps so kids learn & thrive

How is your school system impacted by student hunger?

How big is the problem and how does it impact student achievement?

What else can School Boards do to help?

Childhood Hunger: Where is it?

Page 3: Fighting Childhood hunger: filling the gaps so kids learn & thrive

• Umbrella organization bringing together a food bank, a Meals on Wheels, and a Community Kitchen (to prepare meals for delivery to at-risk children and homebound seniors & disabled)

• 1 of 7 Virginia Food Bank organizations

• Serves 36 localities in Central Virginia

First, some background on us

Page 4: Fighting Childhood hunger: filling the gaps so kids learn & thrive

FeedMore’s Objectives & Outcomes

ObjectivesChildhood Hunger

To reduce food insecurity and improve the nutritional status of high risk children.

Programs are targeted to fill the gaps year round when school meals are not available.

Senior Hunger

To reduce food insecurity by providing balanced, nutritious and appealing meals to seniors, people with disabilities and disadvantaged populations.

We strive to improve the quality of life of homebound individuals by providing supported through daily social interaction, safety checks and more.

Feeding FamiliesTo provide hunger relief for food insecure families and individuals in

need through CVFB food procurement and distribution, partner agencies and mobile pantries.

Page 5: Fighting Childhood hunger: filling the gaps so kids learn & thrive

Programs Overview

Page 6: Fighting Childhood hunger: filling the gaps so kids learn & thrive

Food Insecurity – across the U.S. County Type

High Food

Insecurity

Rate Counti

es

High CHILD Food

Insecurity Rate

Counties

All Counti

es

Non-metro/rural

59% 60% 43%

Metro 14% 26% 35%

Micro-politan

28% 14% 22%

U.S. Total

100% 100% 100%

The most food insecure (top 10%) counties are heavily concentrated in the south and are less likely to be metropolitan than average

2010 Feeding America

Page 7: Fighting Childhood hunger: filling the gaps so kids learn & thrive

Food Insecurity in Virginia

Page 8: Fighting Childhood hunger: filling the gaps so kids learn & thrive

In 2010, U.S. households with children reported

food insecurity at a significantly higher rate than

those without children, 20.2 percent compared to

11.7

Statewide, 17.6% of children are food insecure. We’re among the five states with lowest childhood food insecurity.

But, that’s still 1.8 million food insecure Virginia children.

Locality by locality, food insecurity rates range from

11.2% to 32.1% of the community’s children.

Severity of Childhood Food Insecurity

Page 9: Fighting Childhood hunger: filling the gaps so kids learn & thrive

Where are the localities with the highest rates of childhood food insecurity?Bristol, Galax City, Lexington City, Martinsville City, Henry, Bedford City, Dickenson, Page, Covington City, SmythWhere are the localities with the highest number of food insecure children?Fairfax, Virginia Beach, Prince William, Chesterfield, Loudoun, Henrico, Norfolk, Richmond, Newport News, Chesapeake

Childhood Food Insecurity in Virginia

Page 10: Fighting Childhood hunger: filling the gaps so kids learn & thrive

Childhood hunger – what is it?Food Insecurity Hunger Obesity

“Limited or uncertain availability of nutritionally adequate and safe foods or limited or uncertain availability to acquire acceptable foods in socially acceptable ways.”

“The uneasy or painful sensation caused by a lack of food. The recurrent and involuntary lack of access to food. Hunger may produce malnutrition over time… Hunger…is a potential, although not necessary, consequence of food insecurity.”

Young children who experience food insufficiency at any point during the child’s toddler years are 3.4 times more likely to be obese at 4.5 years old. This increase in risk was greater than the 2.5-fold risk increase associated with having an overweight or obese parent.

Page 11: Fighting Childhood hunger: filling the gaps so kids learn & thrive

29% of food insecure individuals are above 185% of poverty.

Poverty ≠ Food Insecurity

Page 12: Fighting Childhood hunger: filling the gaps so kids learn & thrive

“Children from families that report multiple experiences of food insufficiency and hunger are more likely to show behavioral, emotional, and academic problems on a standardized measure of psychosocial dysfunction than children from the same low-income communities whose families do not report experiences of hunger.”- Pediatrics Digest 1/1/98

Childhood hunger – what’s the impact?

Page 13: Fighting Childhood hunger: filling the gaps so kids learn & thrive

Childhood Hunger Solutions

For a child, hunger does not take a summer vacation, a winter break or a weekend off. 

Child Hunger focus shifted to address the need in four key time periods:

Afterschool: includes Kids Cafe, CACFP and Snack

Weekends and Vacations: includes BackPack Program

Summer: includes Summer Feeding

At Home: includes School Pantry

Filling the GAPS When School is Out

For children in need, multiple programs provide access to multiple food needs – resources must be available at the times when children need them most: in the summer, over weekends and school vacations, afterschool, and at home.

Page 14: Fighting Childhood hunger: filling the gaps so kids learn & thrive

Filling the gaps: Kids Café & Summer Feeding Programs

Target Population

Page 15: Fighting Childhood hunger: filling the gaps so kids learn & thrive

Filling the gaps: Back Pack Program

Food Insecure: If a child does not get enough food outside of school he/she is considered “food insecure.”

MMG 2011: There are children at risk in every county in the U.S.

Page 16: Fighting Childhood hunger: filling the gaps so kids learn & thrive

Blue Ridge Area Food BankCapital Area Food Bank (Northern VA)Fredericksburg Area Food BankFeeding America Southwest VirginiaFeedMore (Central Virginia Food Bank)Foodbank of Southeastern VirginiaFoodbank of the Virginia Peninsula

Virginia’s Food Banks

Page 17: Fighting Childhood hunger: filling the gaps so kids learn & thrive

Improved Learning, health, behavior“It really helps the kids with focusing—in the past they were so

lethargic on Mondays or experienced sickness because they’ve been without food.”

- City guidance counselor

“…she has been a different student; she words hard does her homework, and is making progress in the classroom. This has made a huge difference in her daily attitude, and we are sure the food is the primary cause.”

- County assistant principal

Connection with students! Parental involvement!

Impact of Hunger Relief programs

Page 18: Fighting Childhood hunger: filling the gaps so kids learn & thrive

Questions/Comments

Thank You!