FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Erik Peterson 703-739-3900 ext 124 epeterson@schoolnutrition.org
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (March 28, 2008) –- Early next month, more than 700 school nutrition professionals will discuss the crisis in funding for school meal programs and urge the Congress to require science-based, yet practical, uniform national school nutrition standards to govern the sale of all foods and beverages available during the school day. The School Nutrition Association’s (SNA) 36th annual Legislative Action Conference in Washington, DC, March 2-5, 2008, will bring together school nutrition directors and supervisors, nutritionists, state child nutrition directors and foodservice industry representatives.
The emphasis on nutrition standards will build from efforts related to the drafting of the Farm Bill last year. This year however, as the national economic picture becomes more uncertain, school nutrition professionals will also provide lawmakers with the facts on school meal costs. The child nutrition programs are both under pressure to serve nutritious meals to more low-income children while being pinched by increased food, labor and milk costs.
“The federal government currently reimburses schools $2.47 for each balanced, healthy meal provided to children from families making 130% of poverty or less. A latte costs more. This is not adequate to cover the cost of producing a school meal,” said Mary Hill SNS, president of SNA. The costs of food, transportation, labor and benefits, training, equipment and indirect expenses, are all increasing rapidly and meal charges as well as federal, state and local financial support for the child nutrition programs have not kept pace.
The key legislative issues the School Nutrition Association (SNA) is advocating for this year are:
Activities of the 36th Annual Legislative Action Conference at the J.W. Marriot Hotel in Washington, DC will also include:
The School Nutrition Association is a national, non-profit professional organization representing more than 55,000 members who provide high-quality, low-cost meals to students across the country. The Association and its members are dedicated to feeding children safe and nutritious meals. SNA is the only association devoted exclusively to protecting and enhancing children’s health and well being through school meals and sound nutrition education.
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Alexis Steines (703) 739-3900, ext. 175 asteines@schoolnutrition.org
Global Child Nutrition Foundation Gala to Recognize Achievements in International School Feeding
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (February 27, 2008) -- The Global Child Nutrition Foundation’s 5th annual A Possible Dream Gala will take place Tuesday, March 4, 2008, and honor several champions of child nutrition, including the 2008 recipient of the Gene White Lifetime Achievement Award. The gala supports the Foundation’s mission to raise awareness about the global epidemic of child hunger and the school feeding programs that are stopping its spread. Events begin at 7:00 pm at the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center in Washington, DC
All proceeds from the gala benefit the Global Child Nutrition Foundation (GCNF), an organization striving to ensure that children worldwide have a better future through effective and sustainable school feeding programs.
Edward Cooney, Executive Director of the Congressional Hunger Center, is this year’s recipient of the Gene White Lifetime Achievement Award. Mr. Cooney has spent his professional career dedicated to the cause of feeding hungry children. At the Congressional Hunger Center, a nonprofit anti-hunger training organization which exemplifies a bipartisan approach to ending hunger, Mr. Cooney oversees the Bill Emerson National Hunger Fellows Program which provides year-long leadership development for emerging leaders in the fight against hunger in the United States. He also oversees the Mickey Leland International Hunger Fellows Program which sends talented US citizens to the world’s poorest countries to continue the fight against hunger.
Previous gala honorees have included former Senator George McGovern, former Senator Robert Dole and Catherine Bertini, former executive director of the U.N. World Food Program. The award is named for GCNF founder and board president Gene White, an extraordinary woman who dedicates her life to children and the benefits that good nutrition can provide them.
Former U.S. Secretary of Agriculture and current Motion Picture Association of American chairman and CEO Dan Glickman will serve as master of ceremonies for the event. Several members of Congress are also expected to attend as is Emmanuel Ohene Afoakwa, a professor at the University of Ghana and a leader in international school feeding program development.
“The A Possible Dream Gala is a wonderful event that showcases the efforts made by child nutrition advocates and the school nutrition community, “ said GCNF Board member and past School Nutrition Association President Janey Thornton, Ph.D, SNS. “Through the gala, we can raise awareness about the necessity of international school feeding programs to provide children in developing countries with good nutrition and an education.”
The Global Child Nutrition Foundation (www.gcnf.org) is a nonprofit corporation whose mission and vision are to help the nations of the world nurture young bodies and advance young minds through the time-tested practice of school-based nutrition. The School Nutrition Association (www.schoolnutrition.org) is a national, non-profit professional organization representing more than 55,000 members who provide high-quality, low-cost meals to students across the United States.