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Senate Education Committee Chairman Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, said his committee will take a closer look at the summer program in considering the legislation. "Ensuring that our kids have enough to eat during summer months is critically important, especially during these tough economic times," Harkin said in an e-mail. "Unfortunately, despite repeated efforts, the number of children participating in federally reimbursed summer nutrition programs in 2008 was the same as it was 15 years ago." One proposal supported by the School Nutrition Association would lower the low-income threshold for a community to operate a meal site, said Eric Peterson, spokesman for the group. Currently, at least 50 percent of the children in a neighborhood must qualify. The association and other advocates want it lowered to 40 percent. The need is palpable. In South Carolina, the number of meals claimed in June increased by 20,000 compared with the previous year, and feeding sites increased to 756 from 665. Mississippi's feeding sites grew to 321 this summer, up from 214. The most current government data shows the surge didn't just begin. Figures show Texas, Oregon, Georgia, California and Florida were among the states with a significant increase in meals between 2007 and 2008. Kentucky was one of the few states showing a dramatic decrease during that span. Paul McElwain, director of Nutrition and Health Services for the Kentucky Department of Education, said many parts of Kentucky are without a public transit system and don't have parks or community centers for feeding sites to set up. "The budget situation is such that we no longer have school districts that have some sort of extended summer school programs. They can't afford it," McElwain said. "That was always a big place for kids to go and get meals for the summer."
[Associated
Press;
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