Manila Bulletin

Grace pushes gov’t feeding program amid pandemic

- By VANNE ELAINE P. TERRAZOLA

Despite the COVID-19 pandemic, Sen. Grace Poe said children should continue to be given free nutritious meals under the government’s feeding programs.

“As we all await the COVID-19 vaccine, let’s continue to give our children doses of healthy food as their safety net against the virus and other illnesses,” Poe said in a statement.

“Access to quality food and nutrition for everyone, especially the poor, should be part of any overarchin­g plan to combat the pandemic,” she added.

Poe said that under the General Appropriat­ions Act of 2021, some P6 billion has been set aside for the School-Based Feeding Program (SBFP) of the Department of Education (DepEd) to give undernouri­shed children from Kindergart­en to Grade 6 at least one fortified meal in at least 120 days a year.

The Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t (DSWD) Supplement­ary Feeding Program (SFP) for children ages two to five was allotted with P3.8 billion budget this year.

The feeding programs are part of the Republic Act No. 11037 or Masustansy­ang Pagkain Para sa Batang Pilipino Act.

Poe, one of the authors of the law, said the food rations are usually distribute­d to the children beneficiar­ies in the schools and day care centers.

But due to the pandemic and the recent calamities, the food packs were delivered to evacuation centers or directly to the homes of the kids with the help of the local government units.

Aside from the SFP and SBFP, the third component of RA 11037 is the Milk Feeding Program, which provides fortified meals and cycle menu, including fresh milk and fresh milk-based food products. It is being implemente­d by the Department of Agricultur­e, Philippine Carabao Center, and the Cooperativ­e Developmen­t Agency.

Poe urged the implementi­ng agencies to ensure that the billions in budget for the feeding programs will be used to give nutritious food to stave off hunger among poor children and boost their fighting chance against diseases.

She said the department­s should also strengthen their tieup with local government units, aid agencies, civic groups and social arms of corporatio­ns to improve the implementa­tion of the programs.

“We know that undernutri­tion and malnutriti­on in their own right are killers, even prior to the pandemic. We hope we can help deal with the scourge of all forms of hunger and malnutriti­on through the feeding programs,” she said.

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