HOT ISSUES!
USDA Wants Your Ideas for
Improving CACFP.
Send Your Comment Letter by October 15, 2008
It is time for you to respond
to USDA’s request for recommendations to improve the Child and Adult Care
Food Program.
USDA will consider all the
comment letters in deciding the program improvements they will recommend to
Congress for the upcoming reauthorization of the programs.
Don’t miss this important
opportunity.
You can submit a letter to USDA
by clicking
here to send the model letter.
Based on process of gathering
together recommendations from many of you, we have prepared the model
letter which is endorsed by the Forum, CCFP Roundtable and TSA.
·
The letter is designed for
you to be able to modify to fit your priorities and to add more detailed
recommendations if that suits your priorities.
·
Where applicable, please
offer examples that illustrate your points.
Reaching Out To Providers:
We know that many sponsors want
to give their providers the opportunity to respond to USDA’s request for
ideas to improve CACFP. For this reason, we have also prepared a model
provider alert and letter for you to send to your providers. Through the
action alert providers can link directly to a web page set up to send the
model CACFP provider letter directly to USDA. In order to avoid confusion
we are going to send the provider letter and alert separately later today.
CACFP Sponsors Model Comment
Letter click here:
USDA STUDY PROPOSED
The Improper Payments Information Act of 2002 requires the Department
of Agriculture to identify and reduce significant improper over- and under-
payments in various programs, including the Child and Adult Care Food
Program (CACFP). Therefore, the Food and Nutrition Service is conducting
a feasibility evaluation of four possible data collection methods for validating
the number and type of meals claimed for reimbursement by family day care
homes in the CACFP. The feasibility evaluation is scheduled to collect data
from August 2007 until September 2007. Localized data collection is to be
conducted in up to four States to evaluate whether the data collection methodologies under evaluation can:
- Validate the meal reimbursement claims submitted by FDCHs for the
number of children who are CACFP eligible and present in the FDCHs
during the time period(s) for which the meals/snacks were claimed.
- Generate the data required for developing an estimate of improper
payments, based on the meals claimed for reimbursement by FDCHs, that
meet the requirements of the IPIA.
- Be implemented nationwide in an efficient and cost effective method.
See the Forum's written response HERE.
|
PAPERWORK REDUCTION ACT
The USDA's Paperwork Reduction Work Group has issued its Final Report.
Click here to read the report.
|
BLOCK CLAIMING
The Sponsor Survey results are now available.
Click here to view what sponsors around the country had to say.
The results will be shared with policy makers. USDA can make improvements to the block claiming and other requirements when the regulations are made final.
This is the first in a series of surveys designed to find out the impact of the new block claiming requirements and other aspects of the interim regulations.
If you have further question on the survey you may contact Geri Henchy at ghenchy@frac.org.
|
|
| IT'S NEVER TOO LATE It's never too late to become a CACFP advocate. Make a pledge now to become more active in shaping the future of CACFP. Child Nutrition Reauthorization is underway, and your elected official needs to hear from you. You are the CACFP expert and have every right to speak about your program. Make contact with your Senator or Representative and share these key points:
- CACFP is a good program
- CACFP helps children grow healthy and strong
- CACFP helps working families work.
- CACFP is an indicator of quality child care.
- Nutrition habits start early. CACFP is key to training and supporting the caregivers who feed our children.
- CACFP can play an important role in obesity prevention by educating caregivers about child nutrition.
- Stop The Drop! CACFP participation has dropped 14% since tiering was implemented.
- Five years after tiering--a quarter of a billion fewer meals and snacks were served than projected.
Child care plays a central role in shaping the nutrition habits of your children. Many children are in care over eight hours each day and eat the majority of their meals in child care. By the age of 30 to 36 months, the foundation of eating behaviors has been formed. CACFP can make sure that these nutrition habits are good ones. | | | | |
KID STAKE
ADVOCACY INITIATIVE
Plants come with stakes to identify them and with
instructions for nurturing to ensure they will flourish. We all know kids are
individual and need proper nourishing too. Building on this theme, The Forum’s
Capitol Hill advocacy initiative for F2208
will include presenting our elected officials with “kid stakes. The front of
each stake will look like the one on this page. The back will be plain, the
idea being that the name, age, city and state for each child can be written on
the back.
The Forum has arranged to have printed several thousand “kid stakes” the size of
a regular plant stake. We need your help and are asking sponsors to get the
message and the stakes out to providers so that we will have thousands of stakes
to present to senators and representatives in March. An alternate is to have
children make their own plant stakes by cutting heavy paper into the stake shape
and personalizing both sides rather than ordering the pre-printed plant stake.
We are also interested in your ideas for clever ways of presenting the thousands
of kid stakes. A couple ideas are to “plant” many stakes in one flowerpot and
present to the appropriate Congressman; or staple them around a paper plate to
make them look like blossoms. So the task of advocates is to let providers know
of the initiative, distribute and collect stakes, so that as many stakes as
possible are collected.
Our past initiatives have been impressive on Capitol Hill. With your help, the
kid stake will be too! When you return your membership applications, the Forum
will send kid stakes to members as long as our supply lasts. For large
quantities (we know some sponsors have tens of thousands of children enrolled)
please contact the supplier directly {Sue Lytle Ph-800-748-0517 ext 2509 [Sue.Lytle@MultiPkg.com]}
and let them know you want the CACFP Kid Stakes. Prices are $38.27 per 1,000 if
ordered in multiples of 5,000, and $47.82 when ordered in multiples of 1,000.
After collecting your stakes from children, bring them to the Washington, D.C.
conference with you. For those unable to participate in this conference, please
send your stakes no later than February 15 to The Forum, c/o Geri Henchy at FRAC,
1875 Connecticut Ave NW, Suite 450, Washington, D.C. 20009.
Click for example -
| |
MEMBERSHIP Are You A Sponser/Participant In The CACFP That Wants To
Make A Difference?
You can....by joining the National CACFP Forum!
The Forum is recognized in Washington, DC as the leading CACFP public policy
organization of its kind. With members across the country, the Forum's main
focuses are:
- Improving the nutrition of all children in child care
- Accessing quality child care for low-income families
- Sharing information to improve program delivery
- Maintaining program accountiblity
To find out more and/or join CLICK HERE!
| |
|