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Ontario adds $5M in funding to Student Nutrition Program

TORONTO — Ontario is adding $5 million in funding to the Student Nutrition Program, which provides free snacks and meals to kids in schools.
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Ontario Minister of Education Stephen Lecce delivers remarks at Lakeshore Collegiate Institute in Toronto, on Thursday, Aug. 31, 2023.Ontario is adding $5 million in funding to the Student Nutrition Program, which provides free snacks and meals to kids in schools. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Spencer Colby

TORONTO — Ontario is adding $5 million in funding to the Student Nutrition Program, which provides free snacks and meals to kids in schools.

Children, Community and Social Services Minister Michael Parsa says proper nutrition is an important foundation for academic success and the new funding brings the program total to $38 million.

The government is also launching a fundraising campaign with organizations such as the Breakfast Club of Canada and the Grocery Foundation to raise an additional $5 million for the Student Nutrition Program.

The program funds 14 agencies across the province that work with other community groups to run breakfast, snack and lunch programs in about 4,500 schools.

The transition binder prepared for Parsa when he took over as minister in March said that the organizations were finding it "increasingly difficult" to fundraise to support program costs, exacerbated by the pandemic, supply chain challenges and the rising cost of food.

Catherine Parsonage, the co-chair of Student Nutrition Ontario, says that it has also been difficult to secure donations and volunteers at the local level, and the $5 million from the government comes at a good time.

Education Minister Stephen Lecce says inflation in food prices makes the investment an especially important one.

"We appreciate costs are rising, which is why we are stepping up to increase funding to ensure every student in need can access healthy food in their community," he said in a statement.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 5, 2023.

The Canadian Press

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