We’re kicking off the CauseLab with a special briefing on the issue of hunger in America. Here are the slides that will be shared by Dan Michel, Feeding America, and Josh Wachs, Share Our Strength:
Feeding America:
Share Our Strength:
19,769 of us have promised to do
something about it. How will you help?
We’re kicking off the CauseLab with a special briefing on the issue of hunger in America. Here are the slides that will be shared by Dan Michel, Feeding America, and Josh Wachs, Share Our Strength:
Feeding America:
Share Our Strength:
Creating Hunger Free Communities
Situation: Today 49 million – or 1 in 8 Americans — is food insecure – that is – they don’t know where their next meal is going to come from. This staggering figure represents a 46% increase since 2006.
Challenge: Instead of trying to end hunger at the national level, can we tackle the problem at the local level by creating hunger free communities, community by community, until we create a patchwork of hunger free communities across America? What is needed? How do we build a community where its members know someone is in need of food and can help them? A community where someone who is food insecure can receive support.
Goal: Three-five powerful, impactful ideas that can be implemented this year to create a hunger free community.
Discussion Questions:
Humanizing Hunger Through Data
Situation: There is no shortage of data about the issue of hunger. Data is collected everyday about how many people are food insecure, what they look like, and the impact that food insecurity has on local communities and our country. There is historical, geographic and forecasting data. Aside from some key statistics, most of the detailed information is only shared and used by the governments and organizations assisting the food insecure.
Challenge: What would happen if that data was shared and made accessible to a broader audience, to tell the story of hunger in America, to drive action, find solutions and end hunger in America once and for all? How should it be presented and what information can be gleaned from it?
Goal: Three-five powerful, impactful ideas that can be implemented this year to humanize the issue of hunger, drive activism, and foster ideation?
Discussion Questions:
Accelerating Local Advocacy
Situation: Every community is different and hunger is intensely localized in its impact. But all communities trying to address the issue of hunger need help: with organization (staff, volunteers, donors, etc.), advocacy (research, policy) and resources (funding, tools, etc.)
Challenge: How can we help local communities accelerate local advocacy and action, better identify people/families in need, and collaborate, share learnings, expertise and resources with other communities? Develop strategies and tools to meet local needs. Recommend ways to share learnings, needs, expertise across communities.
Goal: Three-five powerful, impactful ideas that can be implemented this year to jumpstart local advocacy.
Discussion:
Tomorrow, we will hold two sessions (9:30-12noon and 3:30-6pm) of the inaugural CauseLab. Here’s what you need to know:
CauseLab, an action tank to develop powerful, effective and impactful ideas to end hunger in America, is just one component of a year long initiative to spark innovation and broader engagement in the movement to end hunger in America.
Our goal is to make hunger a top priority in our country and reverse its current trajectory. That means we need local, national focus to make both short-term gains and long term goals. And, most importantly, we need to shift the focus beyond awareness in order to drive meaningful, measurable change.
We have invited you – experts, innovators, disruptors — to help us by creating solutions for three areas that can help further our goal of ending hunger in America. Specifically, we want solutions that help Feeding America, Share Our Strength and Capital Area Food Bank of Texas:
To help you lead your session, we have briefly outlined the challenge, what is currently being done and provided suggested questions to frame the brainstorm. The goal of the session, unlike traditional brainstorming, is to focus on generating a handful of good, innovative ideas that can be implemented this year.
Key Points to Remember:
Ending Hunger In America: The Challenge
By Vicki Escarra, President and CEO of Feeding America, and Bill Shore, CEO of Share Our Strength
Hunger in America is a serious problem.
The latest data from the United States Department of Agriculture shows that more than 49 million Americans experience “food insecurity” each year – that is, they’re not sure where they’ll find their next meal. That means one in six Americans is hungry.
That staggering number includes nearly 17 million children, who fall behind physically, cognitively, academically, emotionally and socially as a result of being hungry. It also includes seniors who are forced to choose between buying food and paying for medication. One-third of those in need report that they have been forced to skip meals, cut portions significantly, or go without food altogether in order just to meet their basic financial obligations.
The scope of hunger can seem overwhelming. But know this: Together, we can end hunger in America. There is not just one cause of hunger, and there is not just one solution. One thing is clear, though: Continue Reading