MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — Alabama was one of 14 states that declined to participate in a federal program that gives summer food assistance to low-income families with school age children, prompting advocates on Wednesday to urge lawmakes to reverse course and join the program.
At a public hearing on the proposed education budget, several organizations urged legislators to set aside funding for Alabama to participate in 2025.
“Every child deserves the chance to grow learn and dream without the burden of hunger weighing them down,” Rhonda Mann, executive director of VOICES for Alabama’s Children told the Finance and Taxation-Education Committee.
The program called Summer EBT, or Summer Electronic Benefit Transfer Program, provides families $40 per month for each child receiving free and reduced-price school lunches. That would be about $120 to spend on groceries over the summer break. The program is intended to augment existing summer meal sites to help combat food insecurity in the summer months.
Mississippi city settles lawsuit filed by family of man who died after police pulled him from car
HKFP launches permanent digital archive of the History Museum's 'Hong Kong Story'
Brazil's Central Bank reduces basic interest rate to 10.75% per year
Health NZ chairperson resigns after less than a year in position
Brad Pitt and Ines de Ramon are struggling to 'move forward' while his EIGHT
VOX POPULI: Palestinian writer’s novel is a poignant echo of Gaza tragedy
China Philippines South China Sea: Chinese coast guard blasts neighbour's vessels with water cannons
China news: President Xi Jinping reveals vision to change world
UN calls for probe into mass graves at Shifa and Nasser hospitals in Gaza
110,000 people to evacuate as floods swamp Russia, Kazakhstan