Summer is here, and school will be out for more than two months. For many low-income families, that's bad news. Not only do their kids have little or nothing to do, but it can be an especially hungry time for them. Approximately 16 million children receive free or reduced-price meals during the school year from the National School Lunch Program, but only a shamefully small fraction of them receive a free lunch or breakfast during the summer either from a summer extension of the NSLP or through the separate Summer Food Service Program.
-
Summer Lunch Crunch
Herman Schwartz: It's going to be a hungry summer for low-income kids on vacation from school lunch programs.
-
Legal Legacy
Herman Schwartz: Four new books explore the impact of Bush appointees on the newly politicized Supreme Court and the power they wield over our public and private lives.
-
How Do We Know FISA Is Working?
Herman Schwartz: The illegality of the Bush-approved NSA domestic spying program seems obvious, especially with the passage of FISA in 1978, which requires electronic surveillance to be conducted only with a court order. But in 1983, years before Bush and 9/11, there was some question if the legislation was effective protecting the civil liberties of Americans.
-
Cannabis Interrupted
Herman Schwartz: The Supreme Court's medical marijuana decision was a major setback for common sense.
-
Out With Gerrymanders!
Herman Schwartz: Many problems with our electoral system are not easily remedied, but gerrymandering can be.
-
Lady Day
-
The Court's Terrible Two
Herman Schwartz: On the final day of the term the Supreme Court issued alarming 5-to-4 rulings on school vouchers and drug testing.
Even more troubling is that the number of children receiving lunch during the summer has steadily gone down in recent years, dropping to 2.8 million in 2005 from a high of 3.1 million in 2000, even though the number of needy children has gone up by 1.3 million during those years, as poverty levels have risen. A recent report by the US Conference of Mayors found that in the twenty-three cities surveyed, requests for food assistance by families with children increased by an average of 5 percent in 2006.
The current summer food programs are not likely to do much better. Under the Summer Food Service Program, which is the main one, the Agriculture Department reimburses qualified sponsors--school systems, recreational programs and other public or nonprofit organizations--for meals served at sites chosen to maximize access to low-income children. It appears, however, that many, if not most, poor parents don't know these programs exist, and even when they do, they often find it hard to get the children to them. Also, finding sponsors and sites is difficult because the reimbursement rates for the food are inadequate (they were cut in 1996 as part of the assault on welfare), the qualification criteria are strict and the administrative requirements cumbersome. Finding volunteers to staff the sites is not easy either, especially in poor neighborhoods, where many people are working two or three jobs just to get by.
A more rational summer food program would not depend on getting the children to the food but on getting the food to the children. Not directly, which could raise complicated distribution problems, but in the same way food is provided today through the food stamps program: by making electronic benefit cards available to all children eligible for the National School Lunch Program, for use by their parents at participating food outlets. This would eliminate the parent-awareness problem, the search for sponsors and sites, the elaborate red tape and the reimbursement inadequacy. Summer school and other activities would continue, but the sites where only food is provided could be abandoned.
The chances of such a program being adopted, however, are nil. Food advocates are struggling to hold on to what they have in the face of Bush Administration efforts to cut food stamps and other social programs, so that even a limited pilot program has little or no chance of being adopted.
Some improvements can be made, however. The District of Columbia has had a remarkably high participation rate in recent years. Through a strong grassroots marketing program that starts at the beginning of the school year and uses community organizations, ads at local movie theaters, supermarket in-store announcements, and a steady stream of fliers, radio and TV ads, the District reached an 84 percent participation rate at 376 sites last summer. Much of what it does is not expensive and can be replicated by other local governments and school systems.
Congress could also improve the summer food program. For example, legislation sponsored by Senator Richard Lugar in 2000 that cuts the paperwork and increases reimbursement rates has significantly raised participation in the nineteen states that were previously at the bottom. That legislation can and should be extended to all fifty states. So far Congress has refused because the estimated cost range is $25-$75 million over five years. That's $5-$15 million a year, barely a flyspeck on the federal budget.
Malnutrition affects a child's ability to learn, her physical and emotional health, and overall prospects for a decent life. A nation that can find hundreds of millions--billions--of dollars for tax cuts for the rich, military adventures and bridges to nowhere can surely afford to feed its hungry children.
- Get The Nation at home (and online!) for 75 cents a week!
- If you like this article, consider making a donation to The Nation.

Buzzflash
del.icio.us
Digg
Facebook
Newsvine
Reddit