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Category: National News

Washington, DC - On the 40th anniversary of USDA's summer meal programs, the Obama Administration has set a goal of serving 200 million meals to children and teens this summer - an increase of 13 million meals from last year. With school letting out for the summer, the Administration is making unprecedented investments in new tools and local capacity to better serve high-need rural families and communities.

Only 3.8 million of the 21.7 million low-income children who received free or reduced-price lunch during the school year participate in the USDA summer meal programs, including both the Summer Food Service Program and the National School Lunch Seamless Summer Option. The challenge is particularly great in rural areas and Indian Country, where 15 percent of households are food insecure but where children and teens often live longer distances from meal sites and lack access to public transportation. Rural poverty is both pervasive and persistent: A recent White House report found that 1.5 million children in rural areas live in poverty, and that over 85 percent of persistent poverty counties nationwide are located in rural America.

Since 2009, the Food and Nutrition Service (FNS) has conducted targeted outreach, forged partnerships, and invested in staff capacity to increase the number of meals served in rural and tribal areas. To continue this effort and achieve the goal of serving 200 million meals this summer, today the Administration is making the following announcements:

BUILDING ON PROGRESS

The Obama Administration has made tremendous progress increasing summer meals access and participation. In 2014, FNS delivered 23 million more summer meals than in 2009. In 2014, in the peak operating month of July, over 45,000 summer meal sites were available across the U.S., a 29 percent increase from 2009. Today's actions build on a series of steps the Administration is taking to enhance children's access to meals during the summer months in rural America, including:

The Administration has leveraged Federally-funded properties to expand the number of feeding sites—the greatest impediment to summer meals access in remote areas.

The Administration has partnered with nonprofits and the private sector to raise awareness, target outreach, and deliver meals in rural and urban areas. These partnerships include:

FNS recently announced $16 million to continue and expand the Summer Electronic Benefit Transfer for Children (SEBTC) program, which provides additional SNAP or WIC benefits to low-income families with children during the summer months when school meals are not available. This summer, FNS will focus SEBTC expansion primarily in rural areas. The President's Budget proposes to increase the overall investment in SEBTC to $67 million in 2016.

In March, the USDA provided $27 million in grants to states and tribal nations to test innovative strategies for tackling child hunger, including in rural areas. The grants target areas and populations with elevated levels of food insecurity or gaps in nutrition assistance program coverage. An $8.8 million grant in Virginia will test the impact of providing more resources for low-income households to purchase food during the summer months.

In March, the White House Rural Council launched " Rural Impact," a coordinated effort across the federal government to improve quality of life and upward mobility for kids and families in rural and tribal communities. Rural Impact seeks to raise public awareness of rural poverty, modify existing programs to better serve rural families, and explore innovative models of service delivery to respond to specific challenges facing rural families and communities.