Strengthen School Lunch Program During Tough Economic Times

Part of: Ending World Hunger

We all can remember anxiously sitting at our classroom desks, waiting for the clock to tick to 2 or 2:30 marking the end of the school day. Yeah!! It is time to go home or on to sports or other activities.

But what if you went home and there was little or no food to eat? And what if this was the case day after day? What if your family just simply could not afford to get enough food into the house on a routine basis?

Unfortunately, this happens all too often to children living here in the United States. Many are not getting enough food during the day. With the current economic crisis, this problem is getting even worse. As an example, Mary Lou from the Manna Outreach emergency food pantry in Cincinnati, Ohio reports, "in 2008 we gave food to 4,590 families & in 2009 we had 5,662."

Cari Marchese of the People's Pantry in North Andover, Massachusetts points out that need "does not always equate to the actual numbers due to inability some have getting to a food pantry (loss of vehicle, etc.) for assistance." So numbers alone may not tell the extent of this worsening situation.

Many families need help in these tough times and children have the most to lose in their growing years.

The United States can provide much-needed relief by strengthening and
expanding its school lunch program. This would include an after-school meal initiative, as well as allowing more children to participate in the existing free and reduced-price school lunch and breakfast programs.

A legislation (S.990) put forward by Senator Debbie Stabenow of Michigan is a call to "expand access to healthy after school meals for school children in working families."

Another separate bill, the Hunger Free Schools Act by Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio, addresses expanding coverage of the school lunch program. Senator Brown said at a hearing last year ... "This legislation would make it easier for eligible students to enroll in the school lunch program by utilizing current technology and existing data to reduce our reliance on paper applications."

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Article Author: William Lambers

William Lambers is the author of Ending World Hunger. This book features over 50 interviews with officials from the UN World Food Programme and other charities discussing school feeding programs that fight child hunger. …

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  • 1 - Burro

    Mar 04, 2010 at 8:29 am

    I am curious if you have studied what the true "cost" of free school lunches is. Since these programs are funded with import tariffs, everyone pays for these programs throughout their whole life every time they purchase something that is imported. I would imagine the cost of paying higher prices for imports over the course of a lifetime would be more expensive than buying food for a 12 year period. Also, increasing the price of imports does nothing to increase the demand for these imports that would help the economies of many other countries that struggle to feed their people.

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