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The Supreme Court weighs cities ability to manage a growing homelessness crisis, anti-Israeli protests spread to college campuses nationwide, and more states consider legislation to ban firearms at voting sites and ballot drop boxes.

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Report: Fewer MO Kids Getting Summer Meals

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Monday, June 10, 2013   

ST. LOUIS - For every 100 children in Missouri who receive free or reduced-price meals at school, only about eight get the same benefit during the summer months. A new report from the Food Research and Action Center (FRAC) says about 359,000 Missouri children get free or reduced-price meals at school, but fewer than 30,000 receive the free summer meals.

One problem is that summer food is often tied to summer school or enrichment activities. And, according to Jeanette Mott Oxford, executive director of the Missouri Association for Social Welfare, budget cuts have meant fewer of those programs.

"I think it's important to acknowledge that children can lose some ground in the summer if we don't put some focus on this," she said. "The healthier foods that are available through these programs can help fight childhood obesity, and the enrichment programs that are there really help kids not lose ground academically, either."

The report says Missouri's summer meal participation was down just over 34 percent last year, one of the biggest drops in the country. About half the states saw participation drop in 2012 from the previous year. Challenges include transportation, especially in rural areas.

Crystal FitzSimons, FRAC's director of school and out-of-school-time programs, believes that for low-income kids, summer meals should get the same priority as school-year meals.

"The summer nutrition programs have not responded to the increased need that has been caused by the recession and its aftermath," said FitzSimons. "Hundreds of thousands of additional kids are participating in school lunch, and we don't see the same increase in the summer food program."

Summer meals are served at almost 600 sites across Missouri. Gary Wells, community partnership director for Operation Food Search, said people looking for a meaningful volunteer opportunity should sign up to help.

"It's so easy to toss around numbers, but unless you see the name is 'Jim' or 'Sally' and what they look like, or whether they like the meal or why they came to the meal, it's just a number," he declared. "It has a lot more value when you see the positive impact it has on these kids."

This year, the USDA has made it a goal to increase the summer meals served nationwide by 5 million.

See the report at frac.org.




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