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Karen Showalter's picture

 

Greetings! This week we're sharing a compelling new infographic that highlights how similar Big Tobacco and Big Food sound to each other. Scary! We've also got tips for extending the fresh berry bounty season, and more. Please read and share, and have a great week!  
 
1. HOT LINE
Big Food = Big Tobacco? 
Food for thought, from our friends at the Center for Science in the Public Interest. Be sure to check out the conversation on whether some major food and beverage companies act like Big Tobacco on the Good Food Force Facebook group
 
Join us for #MissionPossible
Your voice is powerful and needed now! Show and tell Congress that it’s not only possible, but necessary, to build a stronger economy for working families and our nation. Join us! Sign up here to deliver, in person, a local message to your members of Congress that family economic security policies like earned sick days, paid family (maternity/paternity) and medical leave, and an increased minimum wage make our economic stronger for women, families and the nation. 
 
Quick links
 
2. JOIN THE CONVERSATION 
Connect, learn and share this month
  • Fri June 5, 1pm ET: #FoodFri Tweetchat: Digital Marketing to Kids. Food and beverage companies are using powerful digital tactics to promote their product to kids and teens. Join us at 1pm ET on Twitter to learn more from the Center for Digital Democracy. Tweet: Join #FoodFri 6/5 @ 1pET to discuss ways to stop fast food cos frm targeting youth online @MomsRising @DigitalDemoc
  • Cafeteria Man Film Screening Toolkits Now Available! Check out some tips for hosting a great event, order your screening guide (complete with healthy snack and resources for guests!) and join us for a live conversation with Tony Geraci in late June (date TBD). Contact Karen@momsrising.org with questions.
 
3. YEARBOOK
Meet #GoodFoodForce Volunteer Rosemary!  
My name is Rosemary Moser, and I live in the small town of Middletown Springs, Vermont. I am a veteran Early Childhood Educator and the mother of one grown daughter. Several years ago I started a garden at our local elementary school with the children in the afterschool program. A few years later I took the UVM Master Gardener course, and got our garden approved as a Master Gardener project. I work with other MGs and community members in the garden with the children throughout the growing season. In the fall the kids return to school and we create yummy, healthy food from the season's harvest. You've never seen a group of kids get so excited about kale chips!
 
My daughter loved to cook with me when she was very young. As she got older she lost most of her interest in cooking, but never lost her taste for good, healthy food. When she went off to college I heard a lot about how bad the food was. Once she moved into an apartment, she realized that if she wanted the kind of healthy meals she grew up with, she was going to have to prepare them herself. Now I read on her FaceBook page about the great dishes she is fixing. As I mom, I get tremendous gratification out of having encouraged healthy eating habits in my child and seeing them become a priority for her as a young adult. I hope to help do the same for the children of my community through our afterschool program Garden Club.
 
4. SALAD BAR
Strawberries: Easy to grow, easier to EAT! 
It's the time of year when we're loving strawberries! Check out five easy ways to extend the season, as well as tips for growing your own, on the MomsRising.org blog
 

Be sure to sign up for the Good Food Force to get these updates delivered straight to your inbox! 

Good Food Force (GFF) Volunteers are real-life superheroes who take action in their schools and communities, and/or on their blogs and online networks, to get the word out about healthy school foods, junk food marketing to kids, and strategies that are working to reduce childhood obesity. Together with MomsRising.org staff, they help advocate for healthier kids and families. Help spread the word! Contact us: karen@momsrising.org

 


The views and opinions expressed in this post are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect those of MomsRising.org.

MomsRising.org strongly encourages our readers to post comments in response to blog posts. We value diversity of opinions and perspectives. Our goals for this space are to be educational, thought-provoking, and respectful. So we actively moderate comments and we reserve the right to edit or remove comments that undermine these goals. Thanks!