[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 118 (Thursday, August 5, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6849-S6850]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HEALTHY, HUNGER-FREE KIDS ACT OF 2010
Mr. BROWN of Ohio. Mr. President, I rise to express strong support
and to echo the comments of the previous speaker before Senator
Landrieu, Senator Casey, for the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010.
Chairwoman Lincoln has led the reauthorization efforts--chairing
hearings of the Agriculture Committee, on which I sit, and speaking
eloquently in this Chamber about what is at stake in the Healthy,
Hunger-Free Kids Act.
The health and well-being of our Nation's children, it goes without
saying, has a direct effect on the health and well-being of our Nation.
Our economic security depends on a strong and capable workforce. Our
national security depends on a highly skilled and physically fit
military. In fact, when President Truman signed the National School
Lunch Act--laying the foundation for President Johnson to sign the
Child Nutrition Act of 1966--he did so at the request of our military
leaders, who saw firsthand the malnutrition plaguing so many of our
soldiers--especially rural soldiers, White and Black alike--in World
War II.
When Congress passed the National School Lunch Act in 1946, it said:
It is hereby declared to be the policy of the Congress, as
a measure of national security, to safeguard the health and
well-being of the Nation's children.
Today, our military leaders once again support the Child Nutrition
Act and have joined with hunger and nutrition advocates to urge
Congress to pass this critical legislation.
So, too, are educators and business leaders and health care
providers, who are worried about the costs of poor nutrition to our
economy and our health care systems and the educational development of
our children.
As Senator Casey said so well, hungry children simply cannot learn.
And my guess is, there are few, if any, in this Chamber who went to
school so hungry as kids that they could not learn. But it certainly is
proven, and we know that from observing kids, from talking to children,
from watching their performance.
Study after study indicates that access to healthy, nutritious foods
is critical, obviously, to our children's health and their ability to
learn. Yet the stories behind these studies put a real face on the
issue of childhood hunger.
Twenty percent of Ohio children under 18 years of age--570,000
children--think of that, 1 out of 5 children in a State, in a generally
wealthy State, in a very wealthy country; 20 percent, 1 out of 5
children in my State under 18 years of age, more than 500,000
children--live in food-insecure homes. Those numbers are comparable in
the Presiding Officer's State, in cities such as Huntington and
Charleston and Morgantown and Beckley and all over his State.
Too many students nationwide--more than 1 million children--slip
through the cracks and do not receive free or reduced-priced lunches
for which they are eligible. In Ohio, about 700,000 children are
eligible for reduced-priced or free breakfast or lunch. Every day, that
number is significantly fewer as to those children who actually receive
lunch and breakfast.
Understand, too, on weekends in the summer months, those numbers
shrink dramatically. There are feeding programs in the summers, but
only about 1 out of 10 children who are eligible actually gets those
free breakfasts, free lunches, free snacks in those summer months. So
the effects of poor nutrition reach beyond the boundaries of hunger. It
also fuels childhood obesity, ironically. So it plagues communities
across the Nation.
That is why this reauthorization is so important. Every 5 years, we
have a chance to make the programs and resources available to our
children better and more effective. This year we did that, and the
Senate passed it today.
The bill will improve the quality of food in the National School
Lunch Program and make sure children who need the help most are
actually getting it. Each day, some 30 million schoolchildren across
the country participate in the National School Lunch Program, from
cities as large as Cleveland and Cincinnati and Columbus to rural towns
such as Gallipolis and Galion and Grafton.
Each school day, the number of schoolchildren receiving free or
reduced-price meals increases as more families struggle with high
unemployment and increased poverty. We know that during the extension
of unemployment benefits, the number of families who lost their jobs,
then lost their unemployment insurance, then lost their health care,
then lost their cars in some cases and in far too many cases then lost
their homes to foreclosure--that those families even more relied on the
school breakfast and lunch program.
The reauthorization includes provisions from the Hunger Free Schools
Act that Senator Casey from Pennsylvania and Senator Bennet from
Colorado and I introduced earlier this year.
This legislation would auto-enroll eligible children and eliminate
duplicative paperwork that costs schools and families valuable time
and, in too many kids' cases, access to healthy school meals. It would
allow eligible schools in high-poverty areas to serve universal free
school lunches and breakfasts. In Ohio, an estimated 432 schools
enrolling more than 150,000 students could opt into this program. So
making this part of the reauthorization absolutely matters to embrace
more children in these programs.
This bill is about reaching the very children--the neediest and most
vulnerable--we should have been reaching in the first place.
The reauthorization would also expand the Afterschool Meal Program
and the Summer Food Service Program, which play critical roles in
childhood development outside of the classroom. We know that for
particularly young children, if they are not eating right, their
development as sentient, strong, healthy, intelligent human beings is
significantly arrested.
Less than 10 percent of Ohio's eligible schoolchildren receive summer
nutrition assistance. As I said, in rural Appalachia, across the river
from the Presiding Officer's State, the numbers are bleaker as meal
locations are fewer and farther between. The numbers are not good
enough in Cleveland. They are not good enough in Youngstown. They are
even worse in Malta and McConnelsville, in Pomeroy, in Piketon, and
especially in the even more rural areas such as Colton in Jackson
County, Coolville in Athens County, and those small remote areas where
meal locations are even harder to reach. By strengthening these summer
programs, we ensure more children have a nutritious breakfast, lunch,
or snack during the summer months. It is a key ingredient in keeping
children healthy, educated, and active.
Steve Garland of the E.L. Hardy Center--a summer feeding site outside
of Columbus--tells a story of a single father with three sons who
relies on the center for meals and mentoring. The father says that
without the center, his young sons are at risk of falling behind in
school and getting in trouble in the community.
It is not just keeping children fed. It also matters for their school
work. It
[[Page S6850]]
matters for keeping them out of trouble. It matters for their
intellectual development.
Fifty children per day in past summers would show up for a healthy
meal and recreational activities at the Hardy Center. This summer,
because of enthusiastic and dedicated VISTA volunteers, attendance at
the Hardy Center has ballooned to 300 children per day.
Now, get this: Typically, only about 1 out of 10 eligible children
across the country--Ohio is actually slightly above the national
average--only about 1 out of 10 children across the country who are
eligible for free breakfast and free lunch is getting it during the
school year. Only 1 out of 10 gets these breakfasts, lunches, or snacks
in the summer--1 out of 10.
That is why what we did when Senator Dorgan and Senator Kaufman and
all of us worked together in expanding national service--VISTA; Peace
Corps; City Year, which two of my daughters have been part of as
volunteers; AmeriCorps; all of those programs--more of those kids, more
of those volunteers are now helping these summer feeding programs.
So instead of feeding 50 people at the Hardy Center, thanks to the
VISTA volunteers, 300 children--all those 300 were eligible last
summer; they just were not there because they did not know about it,
they could not get there, whatever--now, because of these VISTA
volunteers, 300 children are getting fed almost every day this summer.
That is the good news. The bad news is that Steve Garland of the Hardy
Center says there are still some 5,000 children in the surrounding
communities who do not have a site in their area.
I said 5,000, and that is just Columbus. That is not the whole State.
That is not the whole country. That is 5,000 children in Columbus who
aren't getting fed who are eligible, who won't do as well in this life
probably because they are not getting adequate nutrition as children.
When the President signs this bill into law, we will help countless
other community leaders such as Steve provide more meals and activities
to keep our children healthy.
The reauthorization dramatically reshapes and updates nutrition
standards to help us reduce childhood obesity rates ands put healthier
food in school cafeterias.
Steve Grundy, director of Nutrition Services for Dayton Public
Schools, faces the choice between doing what is right--feeding our
children healthy foods--and what is cost-effective--serving cheaper,
less healthy foods.
Craig Hokenberry of Cincinnati Public Schools sees children with
stunted growth because they have too little to eat. Without access to
healthier fresh foods, families and schools look to the local food bank
for afterschool or weekend meals. Because they are just getting these
programs during the week, they are getting breakfast and lunch.
Weekends, not so good; summers, not so good.
As Nora Nees of Ohio's Association of Second Harvest Foodbanks can
attest to, these programs are in demand now more than ever.
Ginny Black in Columbus teaches children about healthy eating habits.
Ms. Black has been a school nurse in Columbus for more than 20 years.
She has seen firsthand how good nutrition contributes to higher
academic achievement and better classroom behavior. According to her,
reauthorizing the Child Nutrition Act means no more vending machines
with junk food, no more having to rely on outside vendors for pizzas
and burgers.
I was recently in Mansfield, my home town, about 50,000 people,
visiting with community health workers at CHAP--women who travel across
the country to provide prenatal care for underserved communities. CHAP
is a facet of the social service safety net that is working to improve
outcomes and reduce costs, but it is stretched thin.
By authorizing the Child Nutrition Act, we can help these workers and
educators and parents do much more for our Nation's children. The more
children who are healthy, the more we can lower rates of childhood
obesity and diabetes. The more children who are not going hungry during
school, the greater their chance to learn and succeed.
It is important we took this step today. This legislation means not
just a lot for hungry children today; it means a lot for the future of
this country, because children who in the past have not been so well
served will have the opportunity to eat better, will have the
opportunity to grow better, will have the opportunity to intellectually
develop better, and will have the opportunity to be healthier. We owe
that to our children. We took an important step.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Delaware.
Mr. KAUFMAN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to speak as in
morning business.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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