Showing posts with label Guest Bloggers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guest Bloggers. Show all posts

Monday, November 24, 2014

28th Annual Holiday Celebration: The Great Figgy Pudding Caroling Competition


A Benefit for the Pike Market Senior Center 

& Food Bank

 When: Friday, December 5th from 6-8:30 pm

Where: Westlake Center & Downtown Seattle 


The biggest single musical holiday event of the season and a critical fundraiser for the Pike Market Senior Center & Food Bank, The Great Figgy Pudding Caroling Competition kicks off the month of December with a wonderful evening of entertainment enjoyed by more than 9,000 spectators every year.

1,000 carolers and dozens of caroling teams sing their hearts out on downtown Seattle street corners and in and around Westlake Center beginning at 6 pm. The top caroling teams compete for crowd favor as well as prizes for the most donations raised, best choral performance, most creative team, and people’s choice. Those nominated compete in a sing-off on the Figgy Main Stage.

A Seattle holiday tradition, the Great Figgy Pudding is a zany, family-friendly and delightful holiday event for everyone. Caroling teams range the gamut from dancing lawyers, to costumed co-workers of Seattle landmark businesses to Von Trapp-like families.

Figgy Pudding is the primary fundraising event for the Pike Market Senior Center & Food Bank every year. Our organization has a focus on food access in Seattle’s downtown core, providing 650 families with groceries each week, and over 4,500 meals to seniors each month. Additionally, our senior center offers programs aimed at holistic senior health and wellness. There’s no better way to simultaneously give back and have fun this holiday season. Come and help us get Figgy with it!

Monday, July 23, 2012

Why the food fight over the Farm Bill matters to you

Anna Goren, AmeriCorps VISTA at SFC Member Jewish Family Service Food Bank, reflects on the Farm Bill. 

The Farm Bill is a classic democratic-process-headache: a 1,000 page piece of legislation that takes on all things food and agriculture related.
It covers everything from food stamps to farmland conservation to nutrition programs to farm subsidies.
Past versions have mostly benefited big farmers of soy, corn, and other commodity crops, along with large corporations who control most of the food industry (see infographic at right for more).
With the interests of nutrition experts, anti-hunger groups, small and large farmers, agri-business, and politicians vying for their once-in-every-five-year shot at staking claims in the Farm Bill, it comes as no surprise that it stirred up a bipartisan food fight in the House of Representatives last week.
Democrats and Republicans are still battling between saving food stamps and nutrition programs and cutting the federal budget, so passage of the bill may be delayed until after the Presidential election in November.

Monday, April 5, 2010

Show Kids the Money!

Our first ever guest blogger, Northwest Harvest Public Policy Manager Josh Fogt, tells us a bit about the Child Nutrition Act, why it's a necessary tool for raising healthy kids and building a healthy country, and what YOU can do to make sure it receives the level of investment it needs:


Child Nutrition Reauthorization is here! Now is the time to ask Senators Murray and Cantwell and Congressman McDermott to invest in the future health of our population, our economy and our national security by strengthening the Child Nutrition Act to the tune of an additional $10 billion over ten years. Strengthening these programs will ensure our kids are receiving the proper nutrition where they live, work and play, AND go a long way to fighting childhood obesity.

The Child Nutrition Act is a large piece of legislation that comes up every five years or so and funds critical nutrition programs for our low-income infants and children, including WIC, national school lunch and breakfasts, afterschool snacks and summer feeding programs, and feeding programs in child care and adult care settings. Senator Lincoln has introduced the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010 to begin the reauthorization process in the Senate, but the bill falls short of the full $10 billion necessary.

Study after study show that hungry kids simply cannot learn in the classroom. Chronic hunger has profound impacts on kids’ ability to focus, retain and thrive in our schools. Providing our children with proper nutrition for the school day is critical to the future success of our country.
The childhood obesity epidemic in this country threatens the future health of our population, our economy and our national security. For many low-income kids obesity and malnutrition are closely linked as families are forced to make short-term bargains, buying fast food or other high-calorie, low-cost foods to feed the family at the expense of long-term health consequences. Obesity puts kids at risk of heart disease and diabetes later on in life and can shorten one’s lifespan up to a decade. Last year in the U.S. we spent almost $150 billion on obesity-related medical costs.

The childhood obesity epidemic also threatens our national security, where three out of four 18- to 24-year olds today are unfit for military service, due in large part to either obesity or lacking a high school diploma. Strengthening the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010 to the level of $10 billion over 10 years will complement other national efforts to tackle child obesity like First Lady Obama’s recently announced Let’s Move initiative.

We have a responsibility to ensure all our kids are getting the nutrition they need to be healthy and reach their full potential in the classroom and beyond. Ending childhood hunger is a matter of public and political will, we have the food, we have the infrastructure, and we have the know-how. What we need now is the political will to show our kids the money! Call or write Senators Murray and Cantwell and Congressman McDermott today and ask them to invest in our children, invest in our future, and strengthen our investment in the Child Nutrition Act.