OHIO ASSOCIATION OF SECOND HARVEST FOODBANKS Introduction to The Ohio Benefit Bank October 2011 TM.
Government Resources to Fight Hunger! Nora Balduff, Ohio Association of Foodbanks.
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Transcript of Government Resources to Fight Hunger! Nora Balduff, Ohio Association of Foodbanks.
![Page 1: Government Resources to Fight Hunger! Nora Balduff, Ohio Association of Foodbanks.](https://reader030.fdocuments.net/reader030/viewer/2022032722/56649ce25503460f949ade40/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Government Resources to Fight Hunger!
Nora Balduff, Ohio Association of Foodbanks
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Ohio Association of Foodbanks
The Ohio Association of Foodbanks is Ohio’s largest charitable response to hunger
• Our mission is to assist Ohio’s 12 Feeding America
foodbanks in providing food and other resources to
people in need and to pursue areas of common interest
for the benefit of people in need
• Hungry children, adults, and seniors in Ohio make over
2.3 million visits to member food pantries alone, every
three months
• This represents an increase of 23.6 percent in the
number of visits for emergency food in Ohio since 2009
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Programs for Children
• Summer Food Service Program (SFSP), administered by the Ohio Dept. of Education
• Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), administered by the Ohio Dept. of Education
• National School Lunch and National School Breakfast Program, administered by the Ohio Dept. of Education
• Special supplemental nutrition program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC), administered by the Ohio Dept. of Health
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Programs for Seniors
• Commodity Supplemental Food Program (CSFP), administered by the Ohio Dept. of Job and Family Services
• Senior Farmers Market Nutrition Program, administered by the Ohio Dept. of Aging
• Title III programs (home delivered meals, congregate meals), administered by the Ohio Dept. of Aging
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Programs for Everyone
• The Ohio Food Program and Agricultural Clearance Program (OFPACP), administered by Ohio Association of Foodbanks
• Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly known as food stamps), administered by the Ohio Dept. of Job and Family Services
• The Emergency Food Assistance Program (TEFAP), administered by the Ohio Dept. of Job and Family Services
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Hunger is still a big problem
• Ohio is 6th in the nation for high food insecurity rates (16.4%) from USDA Food Security in US, 2010 released September 2011
– Still food insecure:• 52% of households that receive SNAP• 48% of households that receive free and reduced price
school meals• 46% of households that receive WIC
• Over one in four (26.5%) of Ohio children were estimated to be food insecure in 2010
• Nearly 20% of all Ohioans over the age of 50 with incomes below 200% FPL are food insecure.
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Summer Food Service Program (SFSP)
Food that’s in when school is out!
Established by Congress to ensure that children in low-income areas continue to receive nutritious meals when school is not in session
Eligible Participants:
• All children ages 1 to 18
• Individuals age 19 to 21 years of age who have a mental or physical disability and are enrolled during the school year in a public or private non-profit school program
Federally funded program that is administered
through state agencies
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SFSP: Help is Needed!
In Ohio in FY 2011:
199 sponsorsNearly 1,600 sites statewide
94% served lunch46% served breakfast10% served snacks 5% served supper
Almost 184,000 meals served daily
• 21 million children nationally are eligible for SFSP
• Only one in ten participate
• Low participation in rural areas
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SFSP: Help is Needed!
• 11 counties had no sites this summer– Clinton, Geauga, Harrison, Holmes, Mercer,
Morrow, Noble, Preble, Vinton, Williams, Wyandot
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SFSP: Help is Needed!
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How you can participate in SFSP
1. Become a Site (location where children are served)
2. Become a Sponsor (ODE encourages all eligible schools to consider becoming sponsors)
3. Become a food vendor for a sponsor
4. Become a volunteer at a site
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SFSP Operations
State:
Signs an agreement directly with sponsoring organizations
Provides training and technical assistance to all sponsoring organizations
Monitors operation of sponsoring organizations
Sponsoring Organizations:
Accept financial and administrative responsibility
Must be capable of managing a food service
Sponsors: Train and monitor sites Arrange for meals Oversee site operations Complete paperwork Submit claims for
reimbursement
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Where can SFSP sites be located?
• Schools• Parks• Recreation Centers• Community Centers• Pools• Playgrounds• Churches• Youth Organizations• Scout Programs
• Salvation Army• Housing Complexes• Trailer Parks• Camps• Universities
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Types of SFSP sites
• Open site – All children in an eligible area eat free without the need of additional paperwork
• Enrolled site – All children enrolled in an eligible program eat free, as demonstrated by household income applications
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Site Eligibility
• Area Eligibility50% or more of the children in a school
service area qualify for free or reduced-price school meals, based on school or census data
• Household Income ApplicationsEach child must return an application to
the sponsor50% must be eligible for free or
reduced-price meals
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Reimbursements
• Operating costs• Meals
• Food supplies
• Labor
• Administrative costs
• Paperwork costs
• Additional reimbursement for
• Sites in rural areas
• Sites that prepare their own meals
Self-prep/rural:• Breakfast: $1.880• Lunch/supper: $3.2925• Snack: $0.7750
Vended/urban:• Breakfast: $1.8450• Lunch/supper: $3.2375• Snack: $0.7575
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Recent Trends
• Sponsors are operating programs for more days of the summer
• Sponsors are incorporating more activities around the meal to draw children to attend
• Increase in faith-based organizations participating
• Changing demographics in areas of the state
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Important Dates!
• Training conducted March – April
• May 1 application deadline
• January 2013 Statewide SFSP Summit in Columbus, Ohio
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Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP)
CACFP Afterschool Meals
If you are operating an afterschool program that provides educational and enrichment activities and you are located in a low-income area, a new federal option can fund afterschool MEALS for the children and teens you serve!
• Federal funding to afterschool programs that serve a meal or snack to children in low-income areas– 1994: demonstration project only serving snacks in
targeted area– 2010: Healthy, Hunger Free Kids Act allows snack
and meal reimbursement in all states
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CACFP Afterschool Meals
To qualify to offer CACFP meals a program must:• Be located in a low-income area
– 50% or more of students qualify for free or reduced-price school meal
• Offer educational and enrichment activities– Tutoring, mentoring, arts & crafts, nutrition
education, community service
• Meet health and safety standards
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CACFP: Who and when does the program serve?
• In 2010 there were 1,172 Ohio CACFP sites
• 25,236 children received a supper through CACFP in
May 2012
• Who is served?
– Children through age 12 in child-care settings;
– Children ages 13 to 18 in educational enrichment programs in
eligible facilities (after school at-risk snack program); and
– Children age 18 and younger residing in emergency shelters.
• When are meals served?
– Afterschool, weekends, school holidays during regular school
year
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How you can participate in CACFP
• Sponsor the program at one or more afterschool centers
• Independently operate a center• Work with a new or established sponsor to
provide snacks and/or meals• Sponsors can include:
– Public and private non-profit schools– Local government agencies– Private non-profit organizations– Some for-profit entities
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CACFP: Meals served
• Breakfast: consists of a serving of fluid milk, fruit or vegetable, and a grain or bread
• Lunch and dinner: require fluid milk, grain or bread, meat or meat alternate, and two servings of fruits or vegetables
• Snacks: include two of the four components: fluid milk, fruit or vegetable, grain or bread, or meat or meat alternate
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CACFP: How does the program work?
State:
• Signs an agreement
directly with sponsoring
organizations
• Provides training and
technical assistance to
all sponsoring
organizations
• Monitors operation of
sponsoring
organizations
Sponsoring Organizations:
• Accept financial and administrative responsibility
• Must be capable of managing a food service
• Sponsors: • Maintain program eligibility
• Serve meals that meet program requirements
• Keep daily records of participants and number of meals served
• Collect household-size and income information on Income Eligibility Forms
• Comply with all regulations and instructions
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Reimbursements
Sponsors receive federal reimbursement to cover the administrative and operating costs of preparing and serving meals to eligible children
Operating costs• Meals
• Food supplies
• Labor
• Administrative costs
• Depreciation of food service equipment
Free Rate:• Breakfast: $1.55• Lunch or Supper: $2.86• Snack: $0.78
Reduced-Price Rate:• Breakfast: $1.25• Lunch or Supper: $2.46• Snack: $0.39
Paid Rate:• Breakfast: $0.27• Lunch or Supper: $0.27• Snack: $0.07
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CACFP: Steps to Participating
1. Contact Ohio Department of Education
2. Attend training
3. Apply
4. Pre-Approval Site Visit
5. Health and Safety Licensing Requirement
6. Develop Menus
7. Obtain Food and Prepare or Work with Vendor
8. Train Staff
9. Complete monthly paperwork
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Contacts at State Agency Administering SFSP &
CACFPVisit www.ode.state.oh.us
Ohio Department of Education Customer Service: 1-800-808-6325
Mary ForsterSFSP Coordinator/Consultant
(614) [email protected]
Susan DawsonSFSP/CACFP Consultant
Mary KershawAssistant Director, CACFP/SFSP
(614) [email protected]
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Other non-food resources to fight hunger!
• The Ohio Benefit Bank™• National service programs
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The Problem: Ohio’s Unclaimed Funds
In Ohio, more than $2.24 billion in work support programs and tax credits, provided to help stabilize low- and moderate-income families, go unclaimed each year.
About 95 percent of those funds are federal dollars which, if unused, Ohio must return to the federal government.
$1,276,485,
620
$258,369,40
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$76,227,280
$65,146,199
$272,255,780
$289,983,39
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SNAP Benefits Not Accessed
EITC Funds Not Accessed
Federal Children's Medicaid Benefits Not Accessed
Federal CHIP Benefits Not Accessed
Medicare Part D Benefits Not Accessed
Value of Pell Grants Not Accessed
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An Answer: The Ohio Benefit Bank
The OBB helps individuals and families to access these unclaimed funds, providing revenue to local economies.
Here’s an example of how the OBB could help to increase household stability for a family of one adult and two children with an earned annual income of $15,600 (or $10/hour for 30 hours/week):
$5,028 from the Earned Income Tax Credit
$4,728 in Food Assistance
$150 in Home Energy Assistance
= $9,931 in potential income enhancements
These benefits and credits alone would provide an increase in annual income of more than 64 percent!
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Programs Supported by the OBB
• USDA Child Nutrition Programs• Food Assistance (SNAP)• Supplemental Security Income/Social Security Disability Insurance• Women, Infants, and Children (WIC)• Healthcare programs for families and children• Bureau for Children with Medical Handicaps (BCMH)• Child and Family Health Services• Medicare Savings Program• Extra Help for Medicare Part D• Ohio Senior Community Service Employment Program• Golden Buckeye Program• Home Energy Assistance Program (HEAP)• Ohio Cash Assistance (OWF)• Child Care Assistance• Vocational Rehabilitation Services• Big Brothers Big Sisters “Amachi”• Veterans Education Benefits• Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA)• Free tax filing (federal and state, including e-filing and back taxes)
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Current Results
Since its inception in 2006, the
OBB has returned more than
$684 million in potential work
support programs and tax
credits to over 339,000
Ohioans.
Those income enhancements
go directly to local economies
through medical expenditures,
food purchases, and many
other areas.
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Get Involved with The OBB!
• Visit www.ohiofoodbanks.org or www.ohiobenefits.org
• Contact your Regional Coordinator:– Russell Allen– 614-221-4336, ext. 241– 614-725-9368, cell– [email protected]
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National Service Programs
• The Ohio Association of Foodbanks operates Ohio’s largest national service program, including:– 60-member AmeriCorps VISTA initiative– 30-member AmeriCorps State initiative– 174 AmeriCorps Summer Associates
• AmeriCorps VISTA members have secured more than $1.34 million in cash and in-kind donations since 2006
• AmeriCorps State members have completed 13,327 OBB applications and served 91,374 other clients since 2009
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Interested in finding out more?
Visit www.ohiofoodbanks.org
Dustin Speakman
Director of Community Services
Ohio Association of Foodbanks
614-221-4336, ext. 231
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Thank you!! Questions?
www.ohiofoodbanks.org
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Nora Balduff, Director of Child & Senior Nutrition, [email protected], 614.221.4336, ext. 230