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National School Breakfast Week

Join FRAC in celebrating National School Breakfast Week, a weeklong celebration from March 2–6 of the federal School Breakfast Program. Together, we can make sure every child has the nutritious meal they need to start their school day ready to learn.

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Congress Must Act Quickly to Restore Harmful SNAP Cuts

Congress must take immediate action to repeal the devastating cuts and harmful impacts on the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) that were included in the budget reconciliation law, H.R. 1. Anti-hunger advocates are urging Members of Congress to cosponsor and support the Restoring Food Security for American Families and Farmers Act of 2025, which repeals the cuts to SNAP.

Email Your Members of Congress

Advocacy Needed to Reinstate USDA’s Food Security Report

Use the FRAC Action Network to urge your Members of Congress to reach out to the U.S. Department of Agriculture and demand it reinstate the Economic Research Service Household Food Security report, the gold standard for measuring hunger in America. Your message matters. Hunger will not end by ignoring it. Congress needs to act now.

Email Your Members of Congress

Urge Your House Representative to Cosponsor the MODERN WIC Act

Ask your Representative to join the growing list of cosponsors for the More Options to Develop and Enhance Remote Nutrition (MODERN) WIC Act (H.R. 1464).

Email Your Members of Congress

FRAC Chat

Feb 27, 2026
Erin Kennedy Hysom, Senior Child Nutrition Policy Analyst

Every great hero’s journey starts with a moment of preparation — a chance to gather strength, sharpen focus, and step boldly into the day ahead. For millions of students across the country, that moment is school breakfast.

Feb 25, 2026
Gina Plata-Nino, JD, Director, SNAP, Food Research & Action Center

Every five years, Congress reauthorizes the Farm Bill, an expansive legislative package that governs the nation’s food and agricultural systems. Though often described as an agriculture bill, it is equally a nutrition, rural development, conservation, and public health bill.

The Farm Bill reflects a longstanding bipartisan recognition that agricultural abundance and food security are inseparable. When families can afford food, farmers have stable markets. When farmers thrive, local economies grow. That compact is now under strain. 

Feb 23, 2026
Crystal FitzSimons, President, FRAC

As the president prepares to deliver the State of the Union on Tuesday, millions of families across our nation — one in seven households to be exact — are struggling to put food on the table. For the 47.9 million people, including 14.1 million children, who live in these households, food insecurity is not an abstract concept. It is a daily reality, and it has only gotten worse as the cost of food has continued to climb.

Recent Publications & Data

See More Resources
  • Fact Sheet

    Congress must take immediate action to ensure the Farm Bill — or any legislation — reverses the devastating cuts and harmful impacts on the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance
    Program (SNAP) that were included in the budget reconciliation law, H.R. 1. Protecting SNAP is protecting America’s health, economy, and future. 

    Read the fact sheet
  • Report

    The budget reconciliation law (H.R. 1) represents the most significant retrenchment of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) in decades. FRAC’s City Playbook is designed to help municipal leaders understand the scope of what’s coming, anticipate challenges, and prepare coordinated responses with state, federal, and community partners. 

    Read the playbook
  • Best Practice

    The federal Summer EBT Program helps to ensure that more children from households with low incomes have access to adequate nutrition during the summer months. Learn how schools and school nutrition staff can play a critical part in ensuring the success of the program, along with outreach best practices from schools across the country. 

    Read the fact sheet
  • Best Practice

    Download this practical checklist to help transition‑age youth with foster care experience and/or housing insecurity keep or apply for SNAP as new time limits from the budget reconciliation law (H.R. 1) take effect. It equips advocates and caseworkers with clear guidance to support young people who rely on SNAP to put food on the table while navigating the adult world of work, training, and housing.

    Download the checklist