The evaluation examined the impact of a $30 per child per month benefit on child, adult and household food security relative to a $60 monthly benefit. It found that the $30 benefit was as effective in reducing the most severe category of food insecurity among children during the summer as the $60 benefit.
This brochure provides ideas to use healthy choices for fundraising that sell only nonfood items or foods that meet the Smart Snacks nutrition standards.
Use these fun stickers as part of your taste-testing events.
Use these colorful 2-inch stickers as part of your school breakfast promotion events.
The annual report, Expenditures on Children and Families, also known as the Cost of Raising a Child, shows that a middle-income family with a child born in 2013 can expect to spend about $245,340 ($304,480 adjusted for projected inflation) for food, housing, childcare and education, and other child-rearing expenses up to age 18. Costs associated with pregnancy or expenses occurred after age 18, such as higher education, are not included.
This manual was developed to provide an overview of the recall process for USDA Foods with a focus on school meals programs.
The nutrient content of the U.S. food supply is a historical data series, beginning in 1909, on the amounts of nutrients per capita per day in food available for consumption and percentage contributions of nutrients by major food groups.
This Congressional report summarizes the implementation and evaluation of two approaches tested in the summers of 2011 through 2013.