It’s no secret…. We CAN create positive change for Washington’s children! Join together and learn how to power up and speak out at the Children’s Alliance’s 11th annual Advocacy Camp, October 26th to 28th.
Nearly 300,000 children in Washington live in families that struggle to put nutritious food on the table every day. The issues these children face can be complex; the solution to their hunger is not: Feed children three nutritious meals each and every day.
This is the simple foundation of our strategic plan to end childhood hunger in Washington. Even in a state with abundant resources, childhood hunger is a problem. It’s a problem that is often hard to see, but its short-term and long-term effects on children’s health and well-being are clear. Programs that address childhood hunger currently aren’t meeting the needs of all families equally. Rural children and children of color are at greater risk of going hungry than other kids.
We can end childhood hunger in Washington if we surround all children with nutritious food where they live, learn and play.
Champions for Children are state lawmakers recognized by the Children’s Alliance for their outstanding service on behalf of children. Each Champion for Children provided significant leadership during the 2009 state legislative session in preserving, protecting, or advancing state policies or investments that will improve the well‐being of vulnerable children in Washington.
In crafting the state’s 2009-11 budget legislators made an effort to protect children from the worst of the budget cuts. But children live in families and communities that are facing harsh cuts in health care and other services.
The existence of hunger in a country where people are increasingly likely to be obese is confusing and adds to the challenge facing anti-hunger advocates. How do you explain that, in the U.S., hunger and obesity are two sides of the same coin? A new report from the Washington Budget and Policy Center helpfully illuminates this paradox. The report notes that the parts of this state where food is grown are some of its hungriest areas, with the least access to affordable fresh food.
In this video moms, in their own words and through their own videos, talk about how difficult it is to know they can’t always feed their hungry children, no matter hard they try.
They talk about having to feed their kids ramen because they can’t afford nutritious produce and whole grains. They talk about the pain of not being able to feed their children at all when the money runs out and they have no one to turn to.

The number of students receiving free or reduced-price school lunches nationwide has hit an all-time high, USA Today is reporting, and Washington is among the states with the highest percentage rise in kids receiving free school meals. This probably isn’t just a result of the recession, but rather because of some good policies the state is following.
The House and Senate budget proposals contain a reduction in state funds for the WIC Program of $1.01 million. This level of reduction will jeopardize WIC client services AND result in a significant reduction in the WIC Farmers Market Nutrition Program.
More than 40 organizations have signed on to a letter to legislators urging protection of the WIC funding. Read the letter and see the list of organizational supporters.
Proposed Budget information:
To see budget details visit the Washington State Office of Finanical Management.
Read more about the preservation of health coverage for kids in the proposed budget.