Showing posts with label childhood hunger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label childhood hunger. Show all posts

Saturday, August 20, 2016

Pallone Highlights Importance of Summer Meals Programs in Edison






FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 19, 2016


NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ – Today, Congressman Frank Pallone, Jr. (NJ 06), visited the Kiddie Keep Well Camp in Edison, NJ to highlight the importance of federal food aid, including critical summer meals programs. Lisa Pitz, Program Director of Advocacy, Outreach & Education, NJ Anti-Hunger Coalition also joined Pallone at the camp.

Displaying image001.jpgNational summer meals programs, provided through the United States Department of Agriculture’s Summer Food Service Program, were created forty years ago to help vulnerable students get nourishment when school is out of session. Under the current program, federally reimbursed meals are available to kids at sites around the country, including schools, faith-based programs and community centers. According to the latest USDA data, 15.8 million children live in households facing a constant struggle against hunger. On an average day during last school year, a record 21.7 million low-income children received free or reduced-price lunches. In New Jersey over 400,000 children qualify for free or reduced price lunch.

Congressman Pallone discussed the importance of reauthorizing child nutrition programs under the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act, which expired in September 2015. While summer meal programs continue, he stressed the need to make sure the programs are funded and reach those that are most in need.

“Hunger doesn’t take a vacation. The summer food program ensures that when schools let out for summer break, millions of low-income children do not lose access to the school breakfasts and lunches they rely on,” said Congressman Pallone. “I will continue the fight in Congress for needed funding for child nutrition and school meal programs – we owe it to our country’s most important resource, our children.”

The Kiddie Keep Well Camp is dedicated to providing summertime fun and enjoyment to the less privileged children of Middlesex County. Each summer the camp accepts about six hundred children, ages 7-15, from an applicant pool of 800 to 1000 children for one of four 11-day sessions at no cost to the families. The camp asks school nurses to recommend students to the camp, and also receives referrals from guidance counselors, principals and the New Jersey Department of Youth and Family Services.


Sunday, February 7, 2016

Independent: Backpack Crew packs food to help families


There's a good article in this week's Independent about some great people trying to make a difference by feeding hungry kids in Monmouth County. The Backpack Crew 

From the Independent:

By KAYLA J. MARSHStaff Writer

RED BANK — For many families in Monmouth County, the free/subsidized lunch children receive during school is sometimes their main and only meal of the day, according to local officials.

What happens though when they are not in school or are just feeling hungry because they do not have full meals at home?

One local nonprofit is working to answer these questions.

“It is hard to believe that lunch is the best meal of the day for these kids,” said Suzanne Dice, founder of The Backpack Crew. “You never think that it is your own community, that it could be your neighbors.”

The idea for The Backpack Crew came a year after superstorm Sandy when Dice was listening to a local teacher talk about her school and how there were families still struggling to get by.

“My husband and I always wanted to start a program and we talked about it, but it was always just something [to do] down the road,” Dice said.

“This woman was basically asking for prayers for her school and the families who were still trying to get back on their feet from Sandy, and when I heard this story, I was so moved and just felt like we needed to do something.”

Cindy Squassoni, a member of The Backpack Crew team, said she feels after the storm all that was discussed were problems residents were having with insurance companies or other issues.

“I don’t think anyone really heard about the long-term impact that [the storm] had on these families, these people who lost their jobs because of it, who were never homeless before that suddenly were and who could provide for their family beforehand but couldn’t anymore,” said Squassoni. “It was new for them and I think this teacher brought all of that to the conversation.”

Based out of The United Methodist Church of Red Bank at 247 Broad St., The Backpack Crew was founded in October 2013 and is dedicated to delivering weekend groceries to families in need and raising awareness about childhood hunger.

Here is how it works. Families are assigned their own backpack, which is delivered to the school each Friday filled with groceries such as macaroni and cheese, canned vegetables, oatmeal packets, granola bars, peanut butter and fruit cups. In the backpack is two days’ worth of breakfast, lunch, dinner and snacks. The backpack is then returned to the school on Monday to be refilled.

“We have limited space in those backpacks but we make the most out of it and jam as much as we can into those bags,” Dice said.

After starting out with one school, The Backpack Crew has expanded to feed families in five different schools throughout Red Bank, Middletown and Highlands.

“When we were designing this program with the first school nurse, our main number one goal was to keep it private for the families,” Dice said. “We wanted families to feel comfortable in accepting the help. I don’t know any of the families or their names. We know how many adults and children are assigned to each bag since every bag has a number, so we know how many to pack for, but we drop off the bags to the nurse and that is where it ends for us.”...

Continue reading.


Saturday, January 10, 2015

The Backpack Crew: Small Steps To Eliminate Hunger In Our Schools




I first posted about The Backpack Crew last March, since that time its founders, Keith and Suzanne Dice, have been making a big difference in the lives of local Middletown school children and their families that find themselves with not enough to eat by providing the kids with backpacks filled with non-perishable, nutritious foodstuffs that help them get through the weekends, when school lunches programs are not available.

The work that the Dice's have been doing hasn't gone unnoticed, recently the John Burton of the Two River Times wrote a nice article about their endeavor:
MIDDLETOWN – For the community at large, hunger can be silent, unseen, but still very much a part of the community. But it is very much something that affects lives and has to be addressed. 
So found out Keith and Suzanne Dice, a young Middletown couple who have been taking steps to deal with hunger and food insecurity establishing a program they call the Backpack Crew. 
The couple has been working as a ministry of the United Methodist Church, 247 Broad St., Red Bank, with the church’s support and assistance. 
The Backpack Crew currently fills 25 packs with mostly non-perishable, nutritious foodstuffs (plus some durable fruits and vegetables), delivering them to an unidentified township primary school. The idea, they explained, is to make available the food for the weekend for students enrolled in the free and reduced cost lunch program and their families, to ensure they have enough to carry them through when the kids are not in school. 
The couple declined to identify the school to preserve the families’ confidentiality.
The idea arose when the Dices were talking to a family friend, who teaches at the school, who told them about families still struggling a year after Sandy. Starting the program in Oct. 2013 they were quickly struck by how prevalent the problem is in their suburban area. They modeled their program on one established in North Carolina. 
“The face of a hungry person is not what most people would picture,” Suzanne said.
“First of all we couldn’t believe it was here in our area,” Keith acknowledged. “It surprised me and once we found out about it we knew something had to be done.
“Originally we said if no one was willing to do this we’ll do it ourselves,” Keith continued. 
Suzanne and Keith each week bring the backpacks, which are numbered, to the school, with the school nurse distributing them to the children on a Friday, with the kids returning the packs on a Monday, the Dices explained. 
Keith and Suzanne approached their church leaders about coordinating their efforts, getting assistance in collecting food. “We couldn’t do it without the church’s help and support,” Suzanne said. 
Church representatives have recently dedicated a room at the church to store the collected food centralize the program. 
Suzanne and Keith have also set up some food collection boxes in Middletown and Atlantic Highlands to add to what is available for distribution. 
Hunger in the abstract is an insurmountable problem, of course. But the Dices believe that with many making small steps it can be solved...
Continue reading

If you would like to help out by donating gift cards, supplies or food stuffs, here is an updated list of drop off locations where you can leave your items:

1. United Methodist Church of Red Bank at 247 Broad Street. (parking lot in back and a grocery cart is by the office for donations)

2. ZPT Zino Personal Training at 4-10 West Garfield Ave Atlantic Highlands (you may as well stay and try a class. People there are awesome!)

3. Dance with Melody in Middletown- Shop Rite Plaza

4. Nephews Skateboard Shop and Gallery Main Street Port Monmouth

If you can't make it out to one of the drop off locations you can contact the Keith or Suzanne to arrange a local pick up or to  find out how you can get involved and help The Backpack Crew program continue- check out their Facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/thebackpackcrew or contact by email at backpackcrewnj@gmail.com



Saturday, November 1, 2014

“A Place at the Table”: Film on Hunger in the U.S. - Nov. 2



Please join us for a Showing of the Movie

“A Place at the Table”
Starring Jeff Bridges!

50 Million Americans—1 in 4 children—don’t know where their next meal is coming from. A Place at the Table tells the powerful stories of three such Americans, who maintain their dignity even as they struggle just to eat. In a riveting journey that will change forever how you think about the hungry, A Place at the Table shows how the issue could be solved forever, once the American public decides—as they have in the past—that ending hunger is in the best interests of us all.



Sponsored by Monmouth Center for World Religions and Ethical Thought
and
The Social Action Committee of the Unitarian Universalist Congregation

When: 7:00 PM on Sunday, November 2, 2014

Where: Community Room
The Unitarian Universalist Meetinghouse
1475 West Front Street, Lincroft, NJ

Admission: Free

Following the movie there will be a Panel Discussion and Q&A featuring:

Barbara Scholz, Advocacy and Programs Director of the
FoodBank of Monmouth and Ocean Counties

Debbie Keszler, Director of the Food Pantry of the
Lutheran Church of the Reformation, W. Long Branch

Gayle Topper, Chair of the Social Action Committee of
Temple Beth Miriam.

Moderator: ClaraGee Stamaty Ziment

In lieu of Refreshments, please bring a personal care item or nonperishable food item for distribution to those in need.

For more info, call Dan Ciaglia 732-284-6312


Wednesday, March 26, 2014

The Backpack Crew: Helping Local Displaced Middletown Families Fight Hunger




It would take 218,000 school buses to hold all of America’s hungry children. Some of those children are right here in our area.

 The Backpack Crew was started this past October to help one of our local Middletown elementary schools who still have families displaced from Superstorm Sandy. We provide healthy food for kids who need a little extra to get through the weekend by providing backpacks full of groceries to struggling families every weekend - when there is no school lunch to rely on.

As a ministry of The United Methodist Church of Red Bank, there are currently 19 families utilizing the program for a total of 48 children being fed. Plans are in the works to continue the program throughout the summer for hopefully even more families.

To find out how you can get involved and help The Backpack Crew program continue- check out their Facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/thebackpackcrew or by email at backpackcrewnj@gmail.com