

It gave about 40,000 families across eight states $30 or $60 a month via their electronic benefit transfer – or EBT – cards, which is how individuals receive and spend food stamp dollars. The summer food stamp pilot was an effort to do that. The thinking now: Why not help children where they already are during the summer months – at home. The target population is within 130 percent of the Federal Poverty Level and most of the parents work. Of those who did know about the program, most told Troutman they just didn’t have reliable transportation for their children to get to the lunch sites. He said schools typically program robocalls, send home flyers with students and enlist the media to get the word out. “A lot of time parents are getting so bombarded with information that it doesn’t register,” Troutman said. He said the top reason was parents just don’t know about them. Parke Troutman, public policy and advocacy director at the Hunger Coalition, recently surveyed parents about why they weren’t getting their kids to the meal sites, which the San Diego Unified School District calls Summer Fun Cafés.

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On average, 70 percent of San Diego County children who receive free meals during the school year aren’t showing up to claim summer lunches, according to the California Food Policy Advocates. But those meal sites have always struggled to draw a crowd. Department of Agriculture has paid for low-income children to eat lunches at libraries and recreation centers during the summer. That’s because the program that already exists to bridge the summer meal gap doesn’t work as well as it should. We’re here to help try to stem the tide of veterans committing suicide.Fighting Kids' Summer Meal Gap | Voice of San Diego Close In the words of Team Captain General (ret.) Jack Hammond “Today we are able to treat hundreds of thousands of people, but we still lose more than 20 veterans each day, and we’ve lost 100,000 veterans to suicide since 9/11. Since its inception, Home Base has provided care and support to more than 24,000 Veterans and Family Members and provided more than 79,000 training sessions for clinicians, educators, first responders and community members – all at no cost. As a National Center of Excellence, Home Base operates the first and largest private-sector clinic in the nation devoted to healing invisible wounds such as post-traumatic stress, traumatic brain injury, anxiety, depression, co-occurring substance use disorder, military sexual trauma, family relationship challenges and other issues associated with service. Home Base, a Red Sox Foundation and Massachusetts General Hospital Program, is dedicated to supporting Veterans, Service Members and their Families through world-class clinical care, wellness, education and research.

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They are the true heroes of the Marathon Team because they are running the biggest race of all: the race to a full recovery from cancer. Most importantly, the team is a partnership with our patients, who are fighting childhood cancer every day and hoping for a cure. They are Mass General doctors, nurses, hospital personnel, parents and relatives of our patients, cancer survivors, friends and anyone whose life has been impacted by cancer and wants to make a difference. Runners who support our pediatric cancer mission are a diverse and dedicated group of individuals. Funds raised are directed to cancer care and research initiatives that will lead to improvements in cure rates and enhance the quality of life for the hospital’s youngest cancer patients. One Step at a Time” and has raised over $18.5 million to support the MassGeneral Hospital for Children Pediatric Cancer program. Since 1998, with the partnership of John Hancock, the Mass General Marathon Team was founded with the purpose of “Fighting Kids’ Cancer…. Money raised by the Mass General Emergency Response Team allows Mass General to be ready… when second’s count. Time spent training is not covered by insurance and often takes place outside work hours. Preparing for that next disaster takes thoughtful training and lots of practice. Marathon funds support the training and resources needed to develop a carefully integrated response that spans multiple departments throughout the hospital and ensures that Mass General is ready for the next disaster – be it man-made or natural.Īt Mass General, we take emergency planning very seriously. The MGH runners supporting Emergency Medicine have raised more than $3 million in seven years, providing critical funding to the hospital’s emergency medicine and disaster preparedness efforts that benefit victims worldwide. In 2014, the Mass General Marathon Team received additional entries to raise money for MGH’s Emergency Response Department in recognition of the lifesaving response of hospital employees following the 2013 Boston Marathon bombings.
