Happy New Year from No Kid Hungry Michigan! As we start this new year energized in our fight to end childhood hunger, we’re reflecting on the last year and focusing on necessary changes to child nutrition policy that will move the needle forward to ensuring every kid has the nutritious food they need to thrive.

2022 was a historic year in our fight to end child hunger as child food insecurity rates reached a historic low thanks to programs like school meals, SNAP, pandemic-EBT, and the Child Tax Credit. Join us in celebrating our shared wins and looking ahead to how we will continue our fight to ensure no kid in Michigan goes hungry.

Reflecting on 2022

Looking back on 2022, there are many wins to celebrate.

  • For the first time in over 50 years, the White House held a conference on Hunger, Nutrition and Health. This conference brought together key partners to produce a national strategy to end child hunger by 2030 and identified several key commitments that will play a critical role in ensuring this ambitious goal is met. 
  • Child food insecurity hit a historic low. In September, the USDA released their annual report “Household Food Security in the United States in 2021” that highlighted the lowest number of food insecure kids since tracking began in 1998, 1 in 8 kids. In Michigan, it’s 1 in 7 kids, down from 1 in 6 kids in previous years. While these numbers are hopeful, it’s important to acknowledge that disparities still exist and many of the nationwide waivers and programs that helped lower these numbers will soon be or have been phased out during the course of 2022.

 

The Road Ahead

Despite these wins, we know that our work is not over. As we look ahead to 2023, we remain committed to ensuring that every kid has 3 meals a day, 365 days a year. For us at No Kid Hungry Michigan, that means… 

  • Continuing to advocate for actionable policy changes at the federal level to improve nutrition access by modernizing the summer meals program, supporting nationwide summer EBT, strengthening SNAP, expanding no-cost school meals and improving WIC.
  • Working with Michigan Department of Education and other state and local partners, to enact changes such as:
    • Increasing student eligibility and student participation in school breakfast and lunch programs through state level and local district and school level training, technical assistance and storytelling.
    • Prioritizing funding, capacity and opportunities for communities that have more than 70% students of color and eligibility higher than 50%. And to learn more about rural communities throughout Michigan.
    • Creating political will and engagement to elevate child hunger, create urgency and build to policy change and to protect programs.

As we take this time to both look back on the wins we celebrated in 2022, and look at what’s in store for 2023, we want to say thank you! To our partners, community organizations, and school nutrition staff, none of this work can be accomplished without our shared commitment ending childhood hunger.