WEBINAR-Healthy Communities, Healthy Schools

Overview

Children consume a significant portion of their daily calories at school; when schools have healthy foods and beverages in cafeterias and vending machines, children eat better. But what if families don’t have access to healthy food when their children come home from school?

Without access to healthy foods, a nutritious diet and good health are out of reach. And access to healthy food brings a triple bottom-line benefit to communities – a revitalized economy, new jobs, and better health. These benefits also advance equity, the fair and just inclusion of all residents in communities.

Join co-sponsors MomsRising and PolicyLink for a healthy food access portal webinar that will draw connections between efforts to bring healthy food to schools and the movement for healthy food access in communities across the country. Speakers will share their successes and strategies for overcoming challenges in their work and provide recommendations to the broader community of advocates and practitioners.

Featured Speakers:
•    Allison Hagey, Associate Director, PolicyLink (moderator)
•    Monifa Bandele, Senior Campaign Director, MomsRising
•    Sheilah Davidson, Policy Program Manager, School Food Focus
•    Dara Cooper, Director, New York Food and Fitness Partnership

Local Government Regulation of Farmers' Markets in Kansas

Overview

This resource provides a guide for those interested in working with local Kansas governments to use local laws to enhance and support the growth and vitality of local farmers’ markets. Please consider the questions posed in the guide in order to understand how to move forward and develop, refine, and enhance your community’s farmers’ market.

Policy Basics: Introduction to SNAP

Overview

The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly known as the Food Stamp Program) is the nation’s most important anti-hunger program.  In 2013, it helped more than 47 million low-income Americans to afford a nutritionally adequate diet in a typical month. Seventy percent of SNAP participants are in families with children; more than one-quarter of participants are in households with seniors or people with disabilities.

Chart Book: SNAP Helps Struggling Families Put Food on the Table

Overview

This chart book highlights some key characteristics of the more than 47 million people using the program as well as trends and data on program administration and use. 

A Closer Look at Who Benefits from SNAP: State-by-State Fact Sheets

Overview

The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly known as food stamps) is the nation’s most important anti-hunger program, reaching nearly 47 million people nationwide in 2013 alone. These fact sheets provide state-by-state data on who participates in the SNAP program, the benefits they receive, and SNAP’s role in strengthening the economy.

Food Access Market Analysis For Maryland

Overview

In Maryland, limited access to nutritious food is a statewide issue that affects both urban neighborhoods and rural communities. This report addresses the results from a study by The Reinvestment Fund (TRF) aimed at understanding the inequity of access in Maryland and providing a framework for the State as it works to address the issue.

Food Hub Feasibility Study: Northeast Kansas

Overview

The Douglas County Commission established the DCFPC in 2009 with the goal of strengthening the local food system for farmers, consumers and buyers in the greater Douglas County area. Between 2009 and 2012, the DCFPC worked with key stakeholders to consider strategies to strengthen the local food system. One priority was to investigate the potential for a food hub as a means to accelerate, strengthen and expand the local food system. In October 2013, the DCFPC selected SCALE to lead this examination.

The Local Food Movement: Setting the Stage for Good Food

Overview

This publication provides a brief history of the U.S. local food movement and its link to “good food” - food that is healthy, affordable, fair, and green - within the contexts of food access and health, food justice and sovereignty, the environment, and racial equity. The publication also contains a timeline that provides a sample of important U.S. events, policies, and statistics over the past 70 years that mark the growth of local food through the lens of the four elements of good food.

WEBINAR-Healthy Food Financing: From Advocacy to Implementation

Overview

Across the country local stakeholders are adopting methods and strategies to improve access to healthy foods by advocating for policy change. This webinar uses The Food Trust’s recently published Healthy Food Financing Handbook: From Advocacy to Implementation to discuss how these efforts have led to the creation of healthy food financing initiatives at the city, state and federal level. This webinar offers a roadmap for how to successfully advocate for initiatives that improve access to healthy food through the development of healthy food retail. Additionally, the webinar provides an overview of how healthy food financing initiatives are administered by government agencies, community development financial institutions, and food access organizations. 

WEBINAR-Public and Private Grant and Loan Programs to Create or Expand Healthy Food Retail

Overview

This webinar provides an overview of the “Find Money” section of the Healthy Food Retail Portal and provide examples of specific federal, state and local resources that can be tapped to create or expand healthy food retail opportunities in underserved communities.

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