Community Corner

Stonington Summer Famine: Hunger Doesn’t Take a Vacation

A recent study by the Connecticut Food Bank has revealed the :food insecurity" rates of each community in the state.

Summer is a time for digging in the sand, splashing in the cool water and enjoying carefree days— but for some local families, it's anything but fun.

The Connecticut Food Bank says that one in six Connecticut children struggles with hunger and during the summer months these kids are at risk because they can't partake in the free breakfast and lunch programs they'd normally receive at school, due to summer break. You'd never think something like that would happen in an affluent state like Connecticut, but, according to statistics, 13.9 percent of Connecticut residents are "food insecure."

See a town-by-town interactive map here.

Find out what's happening in Stonington-Mysticfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Connecticut is 47th in the nation for the number of schools with a school breakfast program with 80 percent of schools participating, according to End Hunger Connecticut (EDH), a statewide anti-hunger organization that focuses on advocacy, outreach, education and research. Connecticut would receive an additional $9.6 million federal dollars if the participation rate of school breakfast reached 70 percent, the EDH website states.

In Stonington, there are 4.8 percent of residents living at or below poverty level. The rate of students participating in free or reduced price meals is 19.6 percent. The town does not offer free summer meal programs.

Find out what's happening in Stonington-Mysticfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Click here to see which towns offer free summer meals.

"End Hunger Connecticut has partnered with local organizations to offer the Connecticut Summer Meals Program and now has 714 locations across the state serving children free meals," said Education Commissioner Dianna Wentzell. "Schools and community partners have set up meal programs for children during the summer at parks, churches, libraries, playgrounds, camps, food pantries, community recreation centers, and many other locations throughout the state."

If you or someone you know is suffering and needs help, call 2-1-1.

By Wendy Ann Mitchell

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.