
Educators raise alarm about childhood hunger
Teachers across the country are growing increasingly worried about childhood hunger, with three-quarters reporting students come to school hungry, a nationally representative survey of U.S. teachers found.
Why it matters: The growing fears among educators come at a time when food prices remain high five years after the onset of the COVID pandemic and a growing percentage of Georgia public school students are eligible to receive free or reduced-price lunches.
The big picture: Proposed cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, a federal food assistance program serving more than 41 million Americans, could exacerbate an already dire issue, experts say.
Around 40% of SNAP benefits go to children, per USDA data.
What they're saying:"SNAP is one of the most effective tools we have as a nation to address childhood hunger," Sarah Steely, director of No Kid Hungry Virginia, told Axios.
"It provides families with that extra help to put food on the table so that kids can have access to consistent nutrition all year round, especially filling the void during school breaks."
The latest: Nearly 8 in 10 (78%) of teachers said they were concerned about food insecurity in the communities where they teach, per a survey of 1,000 K-12 public school teachers.
It was commissioned by meal kit provider HelloFresh in partnership with No Kid Hungry, a campaign focused on ending childhood hunger.
"Teachers are sounding the alarm that the state of hunger in this country and in their classrooms is really unacceptable," Steely said.
Zoom in: 67.5% of public school students were eligible for free and reduced-price lunch as of Oct. 1, 2024, according to Georgia Department of Education data.
That's up from 63.7% reported on Oct. 1, 2023 and 59.3% documented a year before that.
Flashback: A federal program that provided free school lunches to all students, no matter their household income, came to a halt in 2022 when Congress didn't continue the pandemic-era waiver.
Georgia opted out of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Summer EBT Program, which would have provided free summer lunch to students in low-income households.
House Bill 60, which would have provided free meals to Georgia students, failed to gain traction during this year's legislative session.
The Georgia Department of Education does have a Seamless Summer Option, under which districts can opt in to provide free meals to students.
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