In Mississippi, We’re Feeding Kids the State Has Left Behind—and Building the Future Our Leaders Refuse to Imagine

Mississippi parents and community groups are building a model of dignity, trust and food security from the ground up.

Mississippi state senators at the Mississippi Capitol on Feb. 8, 2023. (Joshua Lott / The Washington Post via Getty Images)

On a chilly February morning in Jackson, dozens of parents, community members and advocates filled the marble halls of the Mississippi Capitol for Springboard to Opportunities’ annual Capitol Day. We were there, once again, to deliver a simple message: Every child deserves access to enough food to eat, especially in the coming summer months when school meals disappear.

For three years now, the state of Mississippi has chosen to opt out of Summer EBT, now called SUN Bucks, which is a federally funded program that would provide an additional $120 in grocery benefits per child to families who qualify for free and reduced lunches. The decision means that this summer, 324,000 Mississippi children will go without these benefits—joining more than 9 million kids nationwide who are left hungry because of political choices, not policy gaps.