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Archive for the ‘Nutrition’ Category

Connecticut Food Bank encourages home and community gardeners and farmers to plant an extra row of produce this spring as part of its Plant a Row for the Hungry campaign. The program’s goal is to increase the number of gardeners, farmers, schools, places of worship, youth and community groups and businesses that make a difference by adding a row of seedbeds or donating their surplus produce to Connecticut Food Bank and other local hunger-relief organizations. Donations are tax-deductible to the extent allowed by law and donor receipts are provided.

“Every extra tomato, squash or watermelon goes a long way to help feed those who don’t have enough to eat,” said Nancy L. Carrington, Connecticut Food Bank’s President & CEO. “In Connecticut, one in seven families is affected by hunger and we all know the importance of providing nutritious fruits and vegetables to people in need.”

Since Connecticut Food Bank launched the Plant a Row for the Hungry campaign in 2006, the program has collected thousands of pounds of fresh produce for people struggling with hunger in Connecticut.

Any fruit or vegetable that gardeners prefer to grow can be accepted. Suggested plantings include spinach, kale, cucumbers, broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, carrots, peas, green beans, tomatoes, sweet peppers, eggplants, summer and winter squash, zucchini, beets and garlic.

Clean, fresh produce can be dropped off at a local food pantry or Connecticut Food Bank’s warehouses in East Haven, Fairfield and Waterbury. To find a local food pantry that accepts fresh produce donations in the area, visit www.ampleharvest.org.

For details about Plant a Row or to request a program speaker for your organization, call Carolyn Russell, Connecticut Food Bank’s Product Donation Coordinator at 203-469-5000.

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March is National Nutrition Month® and Connecticut Food Bank is recognizing the event in honor of the more than 50 million Americans who lack access, at times, to enough food for an active, healthy life. Connecticut Food Bank provides food assistance to more than 300,000 people who are served by its 650 member programs in six of Connecticut’s eight counties. Last year it distributed 2.4 million pounds of fresh fruits and vegetables to those suffering from hunger.

“National Nutrition Month presents a wonderful opportunity for Connecticut Food Bank to educate and promote its nutritious food programs to the public,” said Nancy L. Carrington, Connecticut Food Bank’s president and CEO. “It also allows us to encourage more people to become involved in helping us promote healthy food choices at our local agencies and to the hungry individuals we serve every day.”

In September 2010, Connecticut Food Bank launched the operation of a Mobile Food Pantry that brings nutritious items such as fresh fruit, vegetables, whole grain goods and dairy products directly to individuals in need. The program is convenient for people in need who may not have the transportation or financial means to access resources for fresh, nutritious products. The Pantry makes monthly visits to neighborhoods in Bridgeport, Danbury, Middletown, New Haven, Plainfield, Torrington and Winsted.

In addition, Connecticut Food Bank operates a Kids’ BackPack Program that provides nutritious meals to children on weekends when they do not have access to school meals. The program currently serves 1,700 students from 65 schools in 15 school districts. Each Friday, the students discreetly receive two whole grain cereal products, two shelf-stable milks, two protein-based entrees, two healthy snacks, and two 100% juice boxes to take home.

National Nutrition Month® is an education and information campaign promoting nutrition, sponsored annually by the American Dietetic Association (ADA). The mission of the ADA “is to promote optimal nutrition and well-being for all people by advocating for its members.” ADA is the world’s largest organization of food and nutrition professionals, including more than 67,000 members of mostly registered dieticians and dietetic technicians, registered.

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On December 9, the House of Representatives unanimously passed the Weekends Without Hunger Act (H.R. 5012), which Feeding America has been working to pass. This bill would support community efforts to feed low-income children during weekends and long school holidays. If the bill passes the Senate before Congress adjourns for the year, it would result in new opportunities for food banks to feed children on the weekends when they don’t have access to child nutrition programs. Help us urge the Senate to pass this important legislation.

Here’s how you can call your Senator:

Dial 877-698-8228 and enter your zip code to connect directly to your Senator’s office.
Deliver this simple message: Please bring the Weekends Without Hunger Act (HR 5012) to the floor and pass it this year!

Please take a moment to call your Senator today!

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The child nutrition bill, which will be before the House on Wednesday, December 1, impacts over 41 million children in every community across the country, yet Congress is at risk of letting it slip away. While child nutrition may not command the megaphone like the tax debate, it should. Our children’s health is no small thing.

That’s because the cost of poor nutrition is staggering, and not just to the individual child. In 2005, the impact of our nation’s hunger problem was estimated at over $90 billion per year – $800 million in Connecticut alone. And the annual health care cost of obesity is estimated at $147 billion dollars a year.

Our leaders often remark that there is no greater investment that we can make than in our children. These numbers demonstrate that’s not just a feel-good saying. The child nutrition bill matters to our children, it matters for Connecticut and it should matter to Congress.

Please call or contact your Congressperson and ask him or her to help hungry kids. Call 877-698-8228 or visit http://www.congress.org to locate your Representative.

Congress must not miss this opportunity to invest in our children.

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Remember the Oct. 13 blog entry, titled SNAP/Food Stamps vs. Nutrition, that was posted on this site?

That blog entry talked briefly about the current debate of limiting recipients of food stamps (now called the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program or SNAP) from using their federal benefits to buy soda and other sugary drinks.

FeedingAmericaYou should check out The Huffington Post to find out what Feeding America thinks about the issue. Feeding America is the national network of food banks that includes Connecticut Food Bank.

In an Oct. 22 posting on the website, Feeding America President and CEO Vicki Escarra shared her perspective on the issue of SNAP/Food Stamps vs. Nutrition.

“This argument against SNAP recipients using their benefits to purchase snack and other unhealthy foods is one I find disappointing. Food insecurity and participation in federal food assistance programs does not make a person ignorant about good nutrition and healthy food choices,” Escarra said.

“While Feeding America focuses on distributing more fresh fruits and vegetables, we often hear from parents who rely on food pantries that their children really appreciate that their monthly food box contains the occasional offering of sweets or chips—not because they gobble up snack foods every chance they get, but because once in a while, it’s nice for them get to have a special treat, like all of the other children whose parents can afford to buy those things,” Escarra said.

Click here to view Escarra’s full perspective.

Posted by Gladys Alcedo, Communications Coordinator of Connecticut Food Bank

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Editor’s Note: Below is a guest post from Elaine Piraino-Holevoet of PIROET Design, who initially posted the entry on her blog, called ontheroadtogreenness. The blog is a tale of one person’s lifelong journey to becoming a good person living a green lifestyle. It is also the story of the people she has met, the things she has tried, the places she has traveled, and the ideas she has encountered along the way. These are all recounted in the hope of getting others to join her on her quest to save the planet. The blog entry below is reprinted with permission.

VegetablesMany who go without meat on Monday have made a conscious decision to do so—perhaps to improve their health or because they are concerned about climate change. Some are vegetarians or vegans and go without meat every day for ethical reasons. Whatever the motivation, it is a privilege when one can make the choice.

For too many others, actively choosing to “go meatless” is not a possibility. In order to feed their family, or to relieve their hunger, they will eat what is served at the soup kitchen or what comes in the donated bag of groceries, whether it is meat or vegetable, syrupy or salty, funny colored or natural, or tastes like it comes from a can. They will do this on Monday, on Tuesday, on Wednesday, and on all the other days. Some days they may not eat at all. As we observe Meatless Monday, let’s think for a moment about those who can’t choose to join us.

The recession is over according to the National Bureau of Economic Research. And I heard from a niece who works for a company which sells shipping supplies that new orders are on the rise. But even if the recession IS over, recovery will take a long while. The statistics for those living in poverty are way up. The August jobless rate in my state was 9.1 percent, and that figure does not include those who have given up looking for work.

Connecticut Food Bank, an organization I know very well, just sent me a solicitation reading:

“The severe effects of the economic crisis and high unemployment are still being felt. Many families with children are going hungry, and are desperately seeking emergency food assistance—some for the first time in their lives. Proud seniors in our communities are barely surviving on fixed incomes. They are unable to afford both their medicine and meals… Connecticut Food Bank distributes more than 16 million pounds of food a year to 650 food-assistance programs. These agencies are much-needed lifelines—providing groceries and hot meals to 300,000 hungry men, women and children. A successful Thanksgiving Appeal will go a long way toward fighting the problem of hunger here in Connecticut.”

Connecticut Food Bank is one of 200 food banks which are members of Feeding America, the nation’s largest food bank network. In its August newsletter, Connecticut Food Bank references a study released in July by Feeding America that reports 15.9 percent of Connecticut children under the age of 18 are hungry or at risk of hunger. More than 100,000 children in the state with the highest per capita income!

In less developed nations, scores of people are in dire straits daily, particularly when natural disasters strike. Oxfam is often a first responder to emergencies as the recent floods in Pakistan and the earthquakes in Haiti. There are many other groups working on hunger relief. I merely reference three I happen to know and trust.

Times may be tough. But if you are reading this post on a computer or a mobile device, chances are that you are able to take some action, even if it is a small one, to help alleviate hunger. In this season of harvest and plenty, let’s remember those less fortunate, in our country and around the world.

I often blog on food or food issues on Monday in support of Meatless Monday, one of several programs developed in the Healthy Monday project, founded in 2003 in association with Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and Syracuse University’s Newhouse School of Communications. Meatless Monday’s goal is “to help reduce meat consumption 15 percent in order to improve personal health and the health of our planet.”

Posted by Elaine Piraino-Holevoet of PIROET Design, a supporter of Connecticut Food Bank and designer of Connecticut Food Bank’s semiannual newsletter, Connecticut Food News

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As we become a more nutrition-minded society, the issue of nutrition and hunger has hit center stage.

Radio Microphone GraphicOn Tuesday, Oct. 12, “On Point with Tom Ashbrook,” a national broadcast on NPR, took on the issue of hunger, food stamps, sodas and fat.

The show, titled “Food Stamps & Nutrition Controversy,” focused on what our New York City neighbors are trying to do in their community: asking the U.S. Department of Agriculture to bar its recipients of food stamps (now called the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program or SNAP) from using their federal benefits to buy soda and other sugary drinks.

The show featured the following guests:

If you missed the show, listen here and tell us what you think of the issue.

Posted by Gladys Alcedo, Communications Coordinator of Connecticut Food Bank

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