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Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Sponsors Needed for 2014 Conference!







Excited for Conference?  So are we!  Help make it happen by becoming a sponsor or recommending an organization you think we should talk to!  Please see our sponsorship options below and  
Contact: info@wafoodcoalition.org for more information.








Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Feinstein Challenge Raffle

Do you share our vision of a hunger-free Washington? Do you like free prizes? If the answer is yes to either question, consider a gift to the Washington Food Coalition today!

For the past 17 years, the Feinstein Foundation has given away $1 million a year to hunger-relief agencies throughout the country participating in its Million Dollar Challenge. For every donation we receive in April, the Feinstein Foundation will stretch the value of your gift. Attached is a letter from Alan Feinstein, which explains how this challenge works and why the fight against hunger matters.

Now through April 30, with every $10 donation, you increase your chances of winning a prize package consisting of 1 t-shirt, 1 water tumbler, and 2 boxes of your favorite KIND bars (valued over $60). Purchase your raffle tickets or call (206) 729-0501 today for more information about ways to support us in April!

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

This just in from Washington State Grange News


Pierce the Elk calls for Granges to donate to 
their local food banks


National Grange Herd member Willy the Sheep has challenged each state Grange to choose a fundraiser or charity recipient for all their Granges to give to this year. Washington State Grange herd member Pierce the Elk has taken the lead for his Granges and decided on a worthy recipient for our membership’s charity recipient.

Pierce’s challenge for the Washington State Grange and all community, Pomona and Junior Granges for 2014 is to give to their local food bank. Pierce encourages every Grange to consider giving in one or all of three ways to their local food bank:
     
     1. Contribute financially.
     2. Grow and/or glean and donate fresh produce.
     3. Volunteer time.

Keep track of the money your Grange donates, the pounds of fresh produce your Grange donates and the volunteer hours your Grange donates in 2014 to your local food bank. Keep track on a quarterly basis and send Pierce the Elk an email with your donation numbers to pierce@grange.org. We’ll post the quarterly totals in the Grange News.


Another idea would be to initiate a food drive for the food bank. Or challenge another Grange or another Pomona to see who can collect more food or volunteer more time. Pierce challenges every Grange to make it a goal to actively participate in this challenge in all four quarters of the year. Involve neighbors, co-workers and non-members. Have fun!

http://www.wa-grange.org

FRAC Statement: Ryan Budget Recycles Failed Proposals for SNAP


FRAC Statement: Ryan Budget Recycles Failed Proposals for SNAP

Statement attributable to FRAC President Jim Weill.


Washington, D.C. – April 1, 2014 – Sadly, it’s not an April Fool’s Joke. Today, April 1, for the fourth time in as many years, House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-WI) has released a budget that slashes deeply the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and other low-income programs. He recycles the failed idea of converting SNAP into a block grant, adds the failed attempt to remove low-income seniors and working families from SNAP by ending the state option known as categorical eligibility, and pledges to end the program that links SNAP with energy payments to low-income people.

Ryan has opted to perpetuate myths rather than look at SNAP and how it’s helped millions of people navigate challenging economic times by providing essential food assistance. Here are the facts:

  • First, SNAP reaches the neediest and most vulnerable people in our country, including seniors, children, people with disabilities, unemployed and low-income workers, veterans, and low-paid enlisted active duty military families.
  • About 72 percent of SNAP recipients live in households with children. More than one-quarter live in households with seniors or people with disabilities. 
  • 82 percent of all benefits go to households with a child, senior, or person with disabilities.
  • More than $98 million in SNAP benefits were redeemed at military commissaries during Fiscal Year 2012.
  • Half of all new SNAP participants receive benefits for 10 months or less and 74 percent of participants leave the program entirely within two years.
  • The share of SNAP households that work has risen steadily. Over the last decade, the number of households that were working, albeit at typically low wages, while receiving SNAP more than tripled.
  • More than half of SNAP households with at least one working-age, non-disabled adult work while receiving SNAP. This rate is even higher for families with children — more than 60 percent work while receiving SNAP.  
  • Nationally, SNAP lifted 4.9 million people out of poverty in 2012.
It’s time for Rep. Ryan and others concerned with the budget to stop asking how much to cut from SNAP, and start asking what is going to help struggling families across this nation and thereby reduce long-term health and other costs. Making benefits more adequate is a start – people can afford healthier food when they have more resources. The SNAP benefit now averages only $1.40 per person per meal and on average, households have less than a quarter of their benefits remaining by the middle of the month. That was true even before across-the-board SNAP benefit cuts affecting more than 47 million people were made in November 2013, as well as additional cuts made by the recently passed Farm Bill. Spending time on old and failed ideas does nothing to advance the fight to end hunger and poverty in this country, and Congress should – as it has in the past – reject this callous budget.

Contact: Jennifer Adach, jadach@frac.org202.640.1118

Fight Hunger with Washington Food Coalition this April

Alan Shawn Feinstein, founder of the Feinstein Foundation
For the past 17 years, the Feinstein Foundation has given away $1 million a year to hunger-relief agencies throughout the country participating in its Million Dollar Challenge. This year, will you consider a special gift to the Washington Food Coalition to forward our vision of a hunger-free Washington?

For every donation we receive in April, the Feinstein Foundation will stretch the value of your gift. Attached is a letter from Alan Feinstein, which explains how this challenge works and why the fight against hunger matters.


Last month, we were excited to announce a major victory for all of us - the legislator passing the Supplemental Operating Budget, which included an additional $800,000 for the Emergency Food Assistance Program (EFAP). In recent years, limited state funding for food banks has failed to keep up with the rising number of clients turning to them to make ends meet. During the 2014 Legislative Session, our coalition championed the legislative request for additional funding for the EFAP program to better serve hungry Washingtonians, and we got it!

We are so proud of the work our coalition every day, but this remarkable occasion reiterated for us the importance of a unified voice for a strong emergency food system. We are 300+ food banks, emergency meal providers, distribution centers, social services agencies and growers, striving to find practical solutions to common challenges in our everyday work. Consider a gift to Washington Food Coalition today to equip, educate and empower everyone working to end hunger in our state. In the fight against hunger, we still need help.

Warm Regards,

Sariga Santhosh,
Development Assistant