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The COVID-19 Effect on Alabama & Georgia Nonprofits The research project “The COVID-19 Effect on Alabama and Georgia Nonprofits”, conducted by Auburn University’s Cary Center and the Philanthropy and Nonprofit Studies Program, wants to better understand the greatest needs of the nonprofit sector in Alabama and Georgia due to the COVID-19 pandemic. We hope you can participate in a short survey on how the pandemic has affected your nonprofit. The survey will take 5-7 minutes to complete and includes 15 questions, focusing on fundraising, the need for and ability to perform services, and your concerns for the coming weeks. The results will only be shared in aggregate and your identity will not be linked to your responses. We will use the results to provide real-time data to government officials, foundations, and other decision-makers about the current economic conditions facing nonprofits and the need for immediate and long-term support in order to ensure the ongoing provision of critical services in Alabama and Georgia. The results of this survey will educate decision-makers on how to best allocate resources to nonprofits in the coming months, e.g. the CARES Act. We thank the University of San Diego and The Nonprofit Institute for creating the survey and the Nonprofit Academic Centers Council (NACC) for sharing it with its membership. To access the survey, scan the QR code or click the blue button below. For any questions regarding this survey, please contact Brittany Branyon at branyba@auburn.edu. Complete Survey |
Free P-EBT Webinar

Register for the webinar here.
Healthy Kids COVID-19 Rapid Response Grant Opportunity
Voices for Healthy Kids, an initiative of the American Heart Association, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF), announces the launch of the newVoices for Healthy Kids COVID-19 Rapid Response Grant Opportunity. In response to the current environment, we are leveraging our strengths, proven infrastructure and resources to support COVID-19 response and relief efforts to meet the immediate needs as defined by the communities we serve. These grants are targeted at safety net issues most closely related to the Voices for Healthy Kids body of work. Preference will be given to community-based organizations with demonstrated experiences working to build power in communities most impacted by health inequities including Black/African American, Hispanic/Latino, American Indian and Alaskan Native, or children living in families with low-income. Organizations “of community” and with lived experience are strongly encouraged to apply.
These grants will support systems and policy change campaigns that focus on helping those most under-resourced better gain access to health care, healthy food, and income support and stability during this critical time. Voices for Healthy Kids is hopeful that the flexibility offered by these grants will allow states, tribes and communities to use the grant dollars and support to best maximize local opportunity and established relationships to quickly adjust policies and systems to address COVID-19-related needs. For example, an organization may want to address urgent Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP)-related needs in their community and can propose an approach that best addresses those needs during this pandemic time, such as enrollment; or an organization may request funding to alter systems and policies to help schools, food banks and other emergency feeding responses better coordinate and maximize effectiveness and efficiency.
These grants are meant to support policy and systemic changes at the state, tribe or local level. They are not programmatic in scope. (See preliminary menu of policy ideas below.)
Grants are due by Monday at 5 PM PST each week starting on May 4, 2020 through May 25, 2020, or until funding is depleted. Decisions will be made within four (4) weeks. All attempts will be made to speed the response time. Grant Overview
- Funding amount up to $50,000
- Up to 6 months in duration Support policy or systemic change
- Simplified application process
- No prior experience as a Voices for Healthy Kids grantee required
- Applicant must have non-profit status or a non-profit fiscal agent
- Focus on the needs of communities must impacted by health inequities
Eligible policy areas include supporting:
- Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP)
- Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infant, Children (WIC)
- School foods
- Food purchasing/procurement policy/systems to expand access to healthy foods or maximize purchasing power to reach the most vulnerable
- Medicaid, such as waivers, expansion, increasing/easing enrollment
- Early Childhood Education, Head Start and Early Head Start
- Other policy critical to income support, such as unemployment insurance
Types of policy/systems change could include:
- State, Tribal or local policies
- State or Tribal applications/requests to the federal government for waivers
- Implementation of new federal benefits
- Coordination of systems of service particularly to help with food access
- Mandating that COVID-19 relief extends through the duration of the recession rather than being tied to a specific date
Voices for Healthy Kids grant utilizes an online application process. All applications will need to be submitted through this online system.
The first step is to register to be able to view full details and the application.
Please follow these simple steps to register:
- Visit https://voicesforhealthykids.fluxx.io and in the lower right-hand side of the webpage, click the create account now button.
- Be sure to use Google Chrome as this site does not work with Internet Explorer.
- Complete the eligibility quiz.
- If your organization is eligible you will then complete a registration form.
- Once submitted, your registration will be reviewed and approved within 24 hours.
Voices for Healthy Kids staff are available for any questions at voicesforhealthykids@heart.org.
We want to thank our Strategic Advisory Committee (SAC) for helping think through the best role that Voices for Healthy Kids could play and how we could add value and continue to impact health equity during this pandemic. We were able to quickly adapt our program of work because many of our policy priorities are directly related to the safety net. It was also clear that each community is facing different threats and opportunities and that the communities need to guide how these dollars are most needed on the ground.
USDA Increases Monthly Snap Benefits by 40%
Emergency Benefits Prompted by COVID-19 (Washington, D.C., April 22, 2020) –Today, the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue announced emergency benefit increases have reached $2.0 billion per month for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) households across all 50 states and 3 territories to increase food security during the coronavirus national emergency. These emergency benefits represent a 40% increase in overall monthly SNAP benefits, significantly increasing food purchasing power for American families.“These are unprecedented times for American families who are facing joblessness and hunger. USDA is providing a 40% increase in SNAP benefits to ensure that low-income individuals have enough food to feed themselves and their families during this national emergency,” said Secretary Perdue. “President Trump is taking care of America’s working-class families who have been hit hard with economic distress due to the coronavirus. Ensuring all households receive the maximum allowable SNAP benefit is an important part of President Trump’s whole of America response to the coronavirus.”Background:Currently, a household with two adults, 3 children, and no income can receive the maximum benefit of $768. However, due to reportable income and other factors, the average 5-person household receives significantly less, $528. These emergency benefits would provide the average 5-person household an additional $240 monthly in food purchasing power, bringing the average household up to the same benefit level as households already receiving the maximum.The Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA), signed into law by President Trump, provided for the issuance of emergency allotments in response to COVID-19. Across the United States, emergency allotments total nearly $2 billion per month, which is in addition to approximately $4.5 billion in benefits already provided to SNAP households each month.All SNAP households that are eligible to receive less than the maximum benefit will receive the emergency allotment supplement to bring them up to the maximum. By law, SNAP households are not permitted to receive more than the maximum allotment. SNAP emergency allotments allow states to raise benefits to the maximum amount for the household’s size for up to two months, and USDA is providing additional guidance today to states that want to further extend these emergency allotments month by month as prescribed by the law.Hawaii – approved last Friday – was the final state agency authorized to provide the emergency allotments, which are now authorized in all 50 states, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the District of Columbia. States could request to provide an emergency allotment for current SNAP households beginning in March. USDA is continuing to work closely with states so that supplements are provided in subsequent months as this public health emergency warrants, as outlined in FFCRA. Today’s announcement is the latest in a series of actions that USDA’s Food and Nutrition Service has taken to uphold the USDA’s commitment to “Do Right and Feed Everyone” during this national emergency. Other actions include:– Providing more than 227 million pounds of food – valued at $243 million through The Emergency Food Assistance Program (TEFAP), with another $850 million available from the FFCRA and Coronavirus Aid, Recovery, and Economic Stimulus (CARES) Act.– Launching Pandemic-EBT (P-EBT) to provide the value of school breakfast and lunch to families eligible for free and reduce-price lunch;– Issuing Disaster Household Distributions, food targeted to meet specific needs when traditional channels of food are unavailable, to 16 States and territories, and 29 tribes;– Providing more than one million meals a week to rural children through public-private partnership Meals to You;– Allowing states to serve free meals to children in all areas across more than 35,000 feeding sites nation-wide;– Maximizing flexibilities, such as parent-pickup and meal times requirements, for the free meals provided through schools and other providers;– Increasing access to online purchasing by expanding the online purchasing pilot to cover half of all SNAP households;– Debuting “Meals for Kids” interactive site finder – to help families find meals for children while schools are closed; and– Providing administrative flexibilities in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) to allow for social distancing and for State to more quickly process new applications.These actions and more are part of USDA’s focus on service during the COVID-19 outbreak. For additional information on the many actions FNS has taken to respond to COVID-19, visit www.fns.usda.gov/coronavirus or follow us @USDANutrition.FNS administers 15 nutrition assistance programs that leverage American’s agricultural abundance to ensure children and low-income individuals and families have nutritious food to eat. FNS also co-develops the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, which provide science-based nutrition recommendations and serve as the cornerstone of federal nutrition policy. |
USDA Approves Program to Feed Kids in Alabama
The Hunger Solutions Institute would like to extend our heartfelt gratitude to our End Child Hunger in Alabama partners at the Department of Human Resources and the Alabama Department of Education for working tirelessly to make Alabama one of the first states in the nation to implement Pandemic-EBT!
Pandemic EBT to Feed Children during COVID-19 National Emergency (Washington, D.C., April 22, 2020) – U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue today announced Alabama has been approved to operate Pandemic Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT), a new program authorized by the Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA), signed by President Trump, which provides assistance to families of children eligible for free or reduced-price meals dealing with school closures. Background:Alabama will be able to operate Pandemic EBT, a supplemental food purchasing benefit to current SNAP participants and as a new EBT benefit to other eligible households to offset the cost of meals that would have otherwise been consumed at school. For the 2019-2020 school year, Alabama had approximately 445,000 children eligible for free-and reduced-priced lunch, or about 62% of children in participating schools. Previous announcements of approvals for Pandemic EBT include: Michigan, Rhode Island, North Carolina, Massachusetts, Arizona, and Illinois. Under FFCRA, states have the option to submit a plan to the Secretary of Agriculture for providing these benefits to SNAP and non-SNAP households with children who have temporarily lost access to free or reduced-price school meals due to pandemic-related school closures. State agencies may operate Pandemic EBT when a school is closed for at least five consecutive days during a public health emergency designation during which the school would otherwise be in session. The implementation of Pandemic EBT is in line with USDA’s commitment to keep Americans safe, secure, and healthy during this national emergency and to keep kids fed when schools are closed. USDA is working with states and local authorities to ensure schools and other program operators can continue to feed children. This latest action complements previously-announced flexibilities for the child nutrition programs that:Allow parents and guardians to pick up meals to bring home to their kids;Temporarily waive meal times requirements to make it easier to pick up multiple-days’ worth of meals at once;Allow meals be served in non-congregate settings to support social distancing;Waive the requirement that afterschool meals and snacks served through certain programs be accompanied by educational activities to minimize exposure to the novel coronavirus; andAllow states, on an individual state-by-state basis, to serve free meals to children in all areas, rather than only those in areas where at least half of students receive free or reduced-price meals.Today’s announcement is the latest in a series of actions that USDA’s Food and Nutrition Service has taken to uphold the USDA’s commitment to “Do Right and Feed Everyone” during this national emergency. Other actions include:Launching a new coronavirus webpage to proactively inform the public about USDA’s efforts to keep children and families fed;Providing more than one million meals a week through public-private partnership Meals to You;Increasing access to online purchasing by expanding the online purchasing pilot to more than half of all SNAP households;Debuting “Meals for Kids” interactive site finder – to help families find meals for children while schools are closed across more than 35,000 locations;Allowing states to issue emergency supplemental SNAP benefits totaling more than $2 billion per month to increase recipients’ purchasing power;Collecting solutions to feeding children impacted through feedingkids@usda.gov; andProviding more than 1,500 administrative flexibilities in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) to allow for social distancing.These actions and more are part of USDA’s focus on service during the COVID-19 outbreak. To learn more about FNS’s response to COVID-19, visit www.fns.usda.gov/coronavirus.USDA’s Food and Nutrition Service (FNS) administers 15 nutrition assistance programs that leverage American’s agricultural abundance to ensure children and low-income individuals and families have nutritious food to eat. FNS also co-develops the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, which provide science-based nutrition recommendations and serve as the cornerstone of federal nutrition policy. |
Alabama Food Bank Association Receives a $100,000 Grant from Truist for COVID-19 Relief Efforts
ALABAMA, April 21, 2020 – Alabama Food Bank Association today announced it received a $100,000 grant from Truist Financial Corporation to help provide hunger relief to Alabama families during the COVID-19 pandemic. The funds will be used to support the four Feeding America food banks in Alabama as they respond to this unprecedented crisis. Children have lost the school meals they depend on, families are struggling with lost wages, and seniors are more at risk for hunger than ever before.
The grant is part of the financial services company’s Truist Cares initiative, a $25 million philanthropic pledge announced in March to support basic needs, medical supplies and financial hardship relief due to COVID-19.
Alabama Food Bank Association is grateful to Truist for their tremendous support of Alabama communities. “Because of the generous support from Truist, our food banks are able to serve families in economic crisis during this pandemic,” said Laura Lester, executive director of the Alabama Food Bank Association. “Our hunger-relief programs help deliver millions of pounds of nutritious food to the communities we serve across Alabama.”
Truist Alabama Regional President Burton McDonald states, “These are tough times, and community support is now more critical than ever. We are honored to partner with the great work of the Alabama Food Bank Association in providing relief to Alabama families.”
About Alabama Food Bank Association
The Alabama Food Bank Association works to end hunger by assisting the food bank network in obtaining more food and funds, fostering public awareness of the food banks’ mission, and creating partnerships to help alleviate hunger in Alabama. Every day, the eight food banks in Alabama partner with a statewide network of food donors, emergency food pantries, and soup kitchens to provide food to hungry people. Fighting hunger requires significant funding for every step of the process—from acquiring food, to storing the food, to transporting the food to people in need. Learn more atalfba.org.
About Truist
Truist Financial Corporation is a purpose-driven financial services company committed to inspire and build better lives and communities. With 275 years of combined BB&T and SunTrust history, Truist serves approximately 12 million households with leading market share in many high-growth markets in the country. The company offers a wide range of services including retail, small business and commercial banking; asset management; capital markets; commercial real estate; corporate and institutional banking; insurance; mortgage; payments; specialized lending and wealth management. Headquartered in Charlotte, North Carolina, Truist is the sixth-largest commercial bank in the U.S. with total assets of $506 billion as of March 31, 2020. Truist Bank, Member FDIC. Learn more at Truist.com.
No Kid Hungry Launches New Meal Sites Website
No Kid Hungry has launched a new website to make sure families have quick and easy access to information about meal locations nearby:
No Kid Hungry Meal Finder Website
Information on this website is also accessible by texting “Food” or “Comida” to 877-877.
Meal sites can add their location to the list by going to www.freemealsforkids.com! This will put the organization on the map and include the site as part of No Kid Hungry’s texting data bank.
Meal Service Resources
Check out these resources for organizations providing meal services:

Lunch Assist‘s COVID-19 Resource Page provides information about nationwide waivers, worker safety toolkits, leadership tools, and social media resources to support your endeavors getting meals to Alabama children!
School Food Handler has included a COVID-19 Resource Page with useful information, such as Standards of Practice for maintaining the health and safety of staff and participating families. They also provide meal safety inserts to include with pick-up or delivered food items.
No Kid Hungry: Tips for Meal Service during COVID-19
No Kid Hungry hosted a free webinar today to provide organizations offering meal services for children with wisdom from the proverbial “trenches.” Three providers shared their experience providing non-congregate meal services during the novel coronavirus pandemic:
Beth Morris – Lynchburg City Schools (VA)
Format: Meal Pick-Up and Delivery Options
- 4 Sites were selected for their capacity to serve large numbers and accessibility to families.
- Meal service is provided Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.
- Meal pick up provides 2 breakfasts and 2 lunches (6 days of breakfast and lunch per week total). All breakfasts are cold items and shelf-stable, and one of the lunches is a hot ready-to-eat lunch, which allowed the school district to utilize hot meal items they current had.
- Partnered with LCS Transportation – 29 buses deliver meals on elementary school bus routes. Bus routes and delivery times are posted on the district website.
- Developed a partnership with Parks and Recreation: 3 vans deliver to housing communities with high population of students, and 6 neighborhood community centers provide curb-side pick up locations
- Documentation: parents sign-out food items and write down the names of children for whom they are picking up meals.
- Safety: Social distancing is practiced during prep (moved into the school dining hall for more room between employees). All staff wear gloves and masks, wash hands at least once every 45 minutes
Beth Krause – Ithaca City School District
Format: Meal Delivery
- Each week, parents complete a Google Form on the school website requesting meals (they can also call 211 and someone will assist them in completing the form).
- Information is sent out to parents via email or text message with instructions for food safety/preparation.
- Information about meal delivery was posted to the district website and was publicized on the local news.
- Meals are prepared the day before from shelf-stable items.
- Coolers are lined up, sanitized, and filled with items before 6am.
- Coolers and milk is packed on buses. A runner is put on the bus to drop off the meals on the door step at each location.
- Census information forms are provided with meals.
- This school district has also used this program to deliver books, diapers and formula, etc.
- Safety: All work surfaces are sanitized hourly. No one except kitchen staff are allowed in the building.
Heidi Davis – Second Harvest Food Bank (Northeast TN)
Format: Community Choice Model (Rural Community)
- All meals are shelf stable or thaw-and-serve.
- Families may opt to pick up or receive delivery – families expressed need by calling into a community center.
- Utilized an app for documentation and each child receiving meals had a unique pin number that was entered when the meal was received. (May need a back up recording method for pin numbers in areas that are rural and have unreliable cell phone service/internet connectivity).
- Recommendation: Talk to members of the community to get feedback about needs and potential partnerships.

See a recording of the webinar here.
Every Child Counts: Census 2020

With all of the chaos of the novel coronavirus pandemic, it may be easy to overlook the 2020 Census. But making sure every Alabama child is counted means more funding for the state to ensure their future needs are met!
Please join VOICES for Alabama’s Children in their push to remind Alabama families to take the census.
Click the link above for media tool kits, printable posters, and palm cards. These simple graphics can be added to your organization’s emails as a concise reminder to families that completion of the 2020 Census is crucial to making sure Alabama receives the funding and programs it needs!
According to my2020census.gov, the following Alabama counties currently have a response rate of less than 41%: Coosa, Perry, Sumter, Wilcox, Macon, Pike, Greene, Marengo, Washington, Monroe, Conecuh, and Lowndes. (Counties in bold currently have less than 31% response rate.) Please help us target these counties and increase the response rate so every child is counted!