Maple Leaf Foods and the Centre Support Expansion of Healthy School Meals with $250,000 Donation

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Child's lunch bag with sandwich and fruits/vegetables
Photo Credit: iStockphoto.com/portfolio/Mukhina1

MISSISSAUGA — Maple Leaf Foods Inc. and the Maple Leaf Centre for Food Security is contributing $250,000 to the Healthy Students Brighter Ontario campaign to support the expansion of the Student Nutrition Program and the First Nations Student Nutrition Program in Ontario.

In addition to private sector donations raised through the campaign, the province is contributing $5 million in additional funding, bringing total provincial funding in 2023 to $38 million. This will enable the program to deliver almost 90 million nutritious meals and snacks to more than 600,000 students.

“Food insecurity in Canada has reached crisis levels, with one in four children now living in a home that struggles to access food,” says Sarah Stern, executive director of the Maple Leaf Centre for Food Security. “While school food programs will not solve this growing issue, they do provide immediate support without stigma for students who go to school without adequate nutrition. We commend the province of Ontario for this further investment to help all children learn and thrive.”

“Proper nutrition is an important foundation for academic success, and students should have access to healthy and nutritious food to support their growing minds and bodies,” says Michael Parsa, minister of Children, Community and Social Services. “We’re grateful for the generosity of our partners, local community members and volunteers who contribute their time and money to help the next generation succeed. I commend their work and encourage Ontarians to get involved to support the success of Ontario students.”

“What is urgently required is a joint federal-provincial approach to structurally reduce food insecurity. We urge governments to align behind a goal to reduce food insecurity by 50 per cent by 2030. The tools to reach this goal are within our reach. They include implementation of an adequate Canada Disability Benefit, more supports for populations who are disproportionately impacted, scaling up programs such as food prescriptions and tax benefit and social service navigation,” says Stern.

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