New Mexico Outlaws School ‘Lunch Shaming’

The law’s passage is a victory for anti-hunger activists, who have long been critical of lunch-shaming practices that single out children with insufficient funds on their electronic swipe cards or who lack the necessary cash. These practices can include making the child wear a wrist band or requiring the child to perform chores in exchange for a meal.

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New Mexico Appleseed Executive Director, Jennifer Ramo chosen as a #MomOnAMission

It’s no secret that moms are superheroes, capable of running a global company or inspiring nonprofit while also feeding their kids healthy meals, helping with homework and cheering the loudest at the soccer game. The 50 moms we’ve chosen to spotlight here are raising families and also focusing their exceptional energy, talents, and skills on making the world a healthier and better place for us all.

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Program to shelter families benefits kids — but stability may be temporary

“Keeping Families Together,” is a pilot project that addresses the intersecting problems of homelessness and child abuse and neglect. It is the first time New Mexico has turned to housing as a tool to reduce the state’s longstanding epidemic of child abuse. The idea comes by way of New Mexico Appleseed, an Albuquerque think tank that estimates 16,000 homeless children reside in New Mexico, placing the state among the 10 worst in the nation.

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Feeding Children In New Mexico

New Mexico students will no longer be singled out if they have debt in the school cafeteria. Our state became the first in the nation recently to outlaw what's known as "lunch shaming," which can include serving students a cold sandwich instead of a hot meal, requiring that they help clean up after the meal or stamping their arm with a message to parents that they owe money in the cafeteria.

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Rebecca Anderson