Manassas Park is working on the challenge with hunger in the community.
According to a Capital Area Food Bank blog (CAFB), the CAFB runs a family market at Manassas Park High School that offers healthy vegetables, fruits, and other groceries for free to parents that have students at the school.
12% of the population in the Washington, D.C. Metro Area is impacted by hunger, according to a Capital Area Food Bank blog, and the family market is one way that the CAFB is trying to work on that statistic.
More on the family market, from a Capital Area Food Bank blog:
When we approached the school district about a family market in Manassas Park, Dr. Bruce McDade, Superintendent of Manassas Park Schools, was quick to understand the need for an infusion of nutritious food into his school community. He has since been instrumental in encouraging City Council members, School Board office staff, and the Community Center to be part of the monthly Market. Volunteering together, these supporters receive the food from the CAFB’s truck, and get the Family Market set up and ready to go.
Manassas Park is a small school district, but they have strong community ties and the support for the CAFB’s Family Market goes beyond the school administration. At the market I attended, the police and fire department were there to do some heavy lifting, and one of the firemen even repaired our smoothie bike so students could keep pedaling their way to a healthy snack!
Two of the CAFB’s food assistance partners in Manassas–House of Mercy and SERVE–are also involved in the Market. House of Mercy donates books from their thrift store so that the children who attend the market can choose a book to take home while the family shops. SERVE, another partner, coordinates a taste testing of a CAFB recipe and gives the recipe to families to take home and try in their own kitchen. SERVE also talks to the more than 250 families in line at the distribution each month to offer SNAP application assistance, and to let them know about the other social services they offer.
Finally, thanks to a generous grant from the J.O.Y. Fund at The Community Foundation for Northern Virginia, this market is fully funded for the year. This financial support, when coupled with the on-the-ground work of volunteers, rounds out the community response. This Family Market has been extraordinarily successful, and the driving force has been the collaborative partnerships and individuals in the community who are working to solve hunger and its companion problems: chronic undernutrition, heart disease, and obesity.
Chrishna Hill, a Nutrition Outreach Coordinator at SERVE, has been working on “inspiring children to integrate healthy food into their family’s diets”, according to a release. In addition to creating recipes for taste tests at the Family Market, Bill recently visited the Heiser Boys & Girls Club to make healthy smoothies for the children to try.