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2020 Editorial Calendar
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FRAC's School Meal Debt Resources
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Eight Ways to Increase Participation in Afterschool Suppers
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10 Facts Every Candidate Should Know About Hunger
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Refundable Tax Credits Are Critical To Reducing Poverty and Hunger For Women, Children, and Families and Should Be Expanded
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Afterschool Meals Program Fact Sheet
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Tools You Can Use — Increase Participation in Afterschool and Summer Programs
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Developing an Afterschool Meals Outreach Plan
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Child Nutrition Reauthorization: Priorities to Improve and Strengthen Child Nutrition Programs
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Initiatives to Make SNAP Benefits More Adequate Significantly Improve Food Security, Nutrition, and Health
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SNAP Strengths
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Protect the Federal Nutrition Programs
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The Role of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program in Improving Health and Well-Being
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In this three-part blog series, FRAC’s Founding Executive Director, Ron Pollack, explores FRAC’s role in the expansion of three programs: WIC, SNAP, and school meals.
When the Food Research & Action Center (FRAC) began its work 50 years ago, the political context and the programmatic infrastructure for ending hunger in America were significantly different. They contrast quite significantly with the situation today.
A full, fair, and accurate census is a necessary precursor to our nation’s efforts to address poverty and food insecurity. Below is a quick overview of the census, why the census is so critical to addressing hunger, and why anti-hunger advocates need to get involved in census-related activities.
Are you missing out on the National Anti-Hunger Policy Conference? While nothing will compare to sharing advocacy experiences with 1,000+ of your peers, we’ll be livestreaming and live-tweeting a selection of speaker sessions and workshops!
Recent Publications & Data
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On February 10, 2020, President Trump released his fiscal year (FY) 2021 budget proposal, which recycles many of the harmful proposals in the president’s previous budgets. In it, he proposes huge cuts to overall U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) funding and devastating cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and child nutrition programs. The proposed budget ignores recent congressional rejection of similar proposals and wholly disregards the critical role that the federal nutrition programs play in alleviating hunger and poverty in the U.S.
This analysis highlights areas of the budget that fund key anti-hunger and anti-poverty programs and how the proposed budget, if implemented, would harm the health and well-being of millions of people in our country. See FRAC’s statement on the cuts.
Read the report - Fact Sheet
With implementation of the new Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Inadmissibility on Public Charge Grounds final rule beginning February 24, 2020, anti-hunger and nutrition stakeholders have important roles to play in providing basic facts about the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and other public benefit programs and in providing referrals to reliable legal resources on public charge questions.
This Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) is designed to educate anti-hunger and nutrition stakeholders on the DHS public charge rule and how the rule intersects with the food security take the place of legal advice from an immigration attorney.of immigrant families. This FAQ does not constitute legal advice or take the place of legal advice from an immigration attorney.
Read the FAQs - Fact Sheet
The Trump Administration’s new Department of Homeland Security public charge rule does not include receiving free or reduced-price school meals. The new rule directly impacts a relatively small group of people, but it is expected to have a broader “chilling effect” that will reduce the number of immigrant families applying for benefits, including school meals. This resource helps make sense of the landscape by answering key questions.
Read the report - Advocacy Tool
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) recently issued a proposed rule that would roll back important aspects of the current school meal nutrition standards and significantly unravel the progress made under the Healthy, hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010.
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