A report on the reach of summer breakfast and a companion piece to FRAC’s Summer Nutrition Status Report: Hunger Doesn’t Take a Vacation, released on June 13, which focuses on summer lunch participation.
Read the reportA report on the reach of summer breakfast and a companion piece to FRAC’s Summer Nutrition Status Report: Hunger Doesn’t Take a Vacation, released on June 13, which focuses on summer lunch participation.
Read the reportAdvocates and state Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) agencies can improve access to SNAP for people with disabilities by disseminating accurate information about the program, opting for program practices that best serve people with disabilities, and partnering with people with disabilities and the organizations that support them.
Read moreSummer Nutrition Program resources to share with your constituent services staff in order to locate sites in your District and help ensure more children have access to nutritious meals this summer
Read moreThis guide offers a comprehensive understanding of Combined Application Projects (CAP), how they serve populations of older Americans and people with disabilities, and best practices for executing them.
Published June 2017
Read the reportAn overview of SNAP overall trends, 2001-2007 trends, and 2008-2010 trends.
Read moreEconomic, health, and food security impacts of the SNAP Program.
Read more1 in every 5 SNAP households contains a person with disabilities.
Download the graphicDescribes promising practices that can help increase the reach of breakfast during the summer, including serving breakfast later in the morning, providing breakfast on weekends, promoting breakfast participation, incorporating activities for children, and maximizing economies of scale.
Read moreThis report measures the reach of the Summer Nutrition Programs in July 2016, nationally and in each state. Published June 2017.
Read the reportFact Sheet on The Anti-Lunch Shaming Act, S. 1064 and H.R. 2401, which would end practices that single out children who do not have money in their school lunch account or in hand to pay for their meal.
Read moreOn Tuesday, May 23, 2017, President Trump released his FY 2018 budget proposal. The devastating cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) reflect a callous failure to recognize the critical role SNAP plays as a first line of defense against hunger for tens of millions of Americans. This review is a summary of proposed reductions to SNAP and an overview of how other critical nutrition programs and other social safety net programs fare in the president’s budget.
Read moreSummer is finally here which means that you should be implementing your outreach plan and working out the kinks to your summer nutrition operations that naturally arise at the beginning of the year.
Read moreThis guide highlights best practices at the state and local levels to establish unpaid meal fee policies that protect children from stigma, ensure that eligible children are certified for free and reduced-price school meals, and make certain that children get the nutrition necessary to learn at school.
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