TBNEH Weekly Email -
October 30, 2019
Good morning everyone,

Thank you to everyone who attended the 2019 Sunshine Summit to End Hunger "Empowering Communities: Global Perspectives for Local Solutions". The event was a success and we look forward to working with you all, and our community members, to execute local solutions to fighting hunger. Special thanks to our sponsors - The Mosaic Company, Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, and Tampa Bay Rays - for making our 9th annual event, in partnership with Bread for the World and Florida Impact, possible.

Reminder: The next TBNEH members meeting will be on Thursday, December 12th. 

Thank you!

If you have anything you would like to include in the weekly newsletter, or if you would like to add someone to the distribution list, please email Lauren Vance, Communications Manager, at Lauren.Vance@NetworktoEndHunger.org.
In this week's newsletter:

(1) Comment Period Reopened: Proposed Changes to SNAP Could Leave Nearly 1 Million Children Without Access to Free School Meals - November 1

(2)  More Can be Done to Feed Hungry Children After School

(3)  When You Learn What Seniors Want: Community Assessment Survey of Older Adults Public Results Launch (CASOA) - November 15

(4) Pinellas Sheriff's 7th Annual Police Athletic League Benefit Breakfast - November 22
(1) Comment Period Reopened: Proposed Changes to SNAP Could Leave Nearly 1 Million Children Without Access to Free School Meals

USDA has reopened the public comment period for Categorical Eligibility in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. A surprise release of data that the USDA should have disclosed earlier underscores the deep harm of its proposed rule to limit access to SNAP: eliminating food assistance for 3.1 million people and jeopardizing free school meals for nearly 1 million children. 

Deadline to comment:  November 1 .

Go to the Food Research and Action Center website for additional info and to comment today.
(2) More Can be Done to Feed Hungry Children After School

WASHINGTON, October 23, 2019 — More than 1.3 million children benefited from afterschool suppers at school- and community-based programs on an average weekday in October 2018. That was a 10.4 percent increase from the previous year, according to the annual  Afterschool Suppers: A Snapshot of Participation report, released today by the Food Research & Action Center (FRAC). The report finds that one child received an afterschool supper for every 16 low-income children who participated in the National School Lunch Program in October 2018.

“We know that poor nutrition can lead to poor academic and health outcomes for children. The federally funded Afterschool Supper Program reduces hunger and draws children into enrichment programs that keep them active and engaged,” said Jim Weill, president of FRAC. “While the increase in participation is encouraging, much more can be done to ensure low-income children who rely on school lunch also can access afterschool supper.”

Although every state has room to increase afterschool meals participation in the 2019–2020 school year and beyond, some states saw relatively high participation in afterschool suppers in October 2018. The District of Columbia exceeded FRAC’s goal for states to serve supper to at least 15 children for every 100 who received free or reduced-price school lunch, providing 22 low-income children with an afterschool supper for every 100 who received school lunch. Two additional states came close to reaching this goal: California (14 to 100) and Vermont (11 to 100). Four states — Kansas, Maine, Mississippi, and North Dakota — increased the number of children participating in supper by more than 50 percent in October 2018 compared to October 2017.

Child Nutrition Reauthorization, currently being considered by Congress, provides an opportunity to streamline eligibility requirements to allow more children to receive afterschool meals. This, combined with more private and public funding for afterschool programs — including more investment of federal, state, and local dollars — would allow sponsors to reach more children with afterschool suppers.

“The combination of afterschool programs and suppers is a win-win,” said Jodi Grant, executive director of the Afterschool Alliance. “Healthy afterschool suppers ensure that children get the nutrition they need to participate in programs that offer them the opportunity to discover new skills and learn and experience new things, such as science, poetry, and community service.” The Afterschool Alliance will celebrate afterschool programs on October 24 with its annual national Lights On Afterschool.


Read more at www.frac.org.

The Food Research & Action Center is the leading national nonprofit organization working to eradicate poverty-related hunger and undernutrition in the United States.

(3)  When You Learn What Seniors Want: Community Assessment Survey of Older Adults Public Results Launch (CASOA)

Join the Pinellas Community Foundation and the Area Agency on Aging of Pasco-Pinellas on November 15, 2019 from 10am-12pm, as the funding partners of CASOA unveil the results of this landmark local survey. You will have the chance to listen to a panel of experts discuss the vibrancy and needs of our aging community. Learn ways you can make a positive impact on the wellbenig of our seniors.

The Community Assessment Survey of Older Adults, or CASOA, is a printed survey that was sent to 10,000 randomly selected households across every Pinellas and Pasco zip code in which at least one resident was known to be aged 60 and over. The Pinellas Community Foundation and the Area Agency on Aging of Pasco-Pinellas joined forces to conduct this comprehensive needs assessment of the area’s aging community.
(4) Pinellas Sheriff's 7th Annual Police Athletic League Benefit Breakfast
Friday, November 22, 2019
Hilton St. Petersburg Carillon Park
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Sponsorship Opportunities Available or $50 per Individual Ticket
Business Casual Dress | Valet Parking Available | Emceed by Jenn Holloway
If you have anything you would like to include in the weekly newsletter, or if you would like to add someone to the distribution list, please email Lauren Vance, Communications Manager, at Lauren.Vance@NetworktoEndHunger.org.
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