Official Kids Mag

November 2019

Official Kids Mag is specifically written for kids ages 5 to 12. It contains activities and stories ranging from kid heroes, cooking, gardening, STEAM, education, fun facts and much more every month.

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By Karen Rice Official Kids Mag Many of us are lucky to live in a country where good, fresh food is available for sale at every store. And we all should be grateful for that. But, we also throw a lot of good food away in America, every single day. How much food is wasted every day? 30-40% of all edible food in the United States gets thrown away. That's like buying 10 bags of groceries and throwing three or four bags away on your way out of the store! • That's pound of food a person a day. • That's more than 30 million tons. • That's the weight of 100 Empire State Buildings. • That's enough to fill a college stadium. • That's enough to feed 190 million people. Meanwhile there are people who don't have enough to eat. One in 10 US households didn't have enough food last year. So, while 14 million families are hungry, more than 30 million tons of food go to the dump. And, wasting food is bad for our environment, too. Water is needed to grow our food. Farmers use about 25% of all of America's fresh water to produce food that nobody eats. Energy is needed to transport our food by truck and train, which means more greenhouse gases are released into the atmosphere. Landfills contain more discarded food than any other single item. And landfills account for one-third of all US methane gas emissions. If we stopped wasting food that could be eaten it would help the planet in the same way as taking one in every five cars off the road or saving 17 million tons of carbon dioxide. FOOD GRATITUDE So what do we do? It is our responsibility to help make this world a better place. We only have one Earth to live on and we must all work together and take care of it. Not wasting food is an important way of respecting our earth, our community, our fellow human beings, our home and each other. Unfortunately, we can't send our uneaten food to those who are hungry. But we CAN try not to waste food. Start by thinking about it. Take a minute to think about the food you throw away each day. Have a look in your trash can at home or in the cafeteria at school. • Do you usually eat all of your lunch? If not, what are the reasons why? • When you buy lunch at school, why do you think you have to take certain items? • Do you leave food on your plate at home that ends up being thrown away? Take action! • What are friends and family throwing away and how could you reduce waste? • Set a goal for your family or your classmates and monitor the results. • Pack your own lunch and take only the items you will eat. • Eat your whole lunch. Don't throw away your apple! • If there's something you don't want from the cafeteria, ask the lunch attendant not to put it on your tray. In general: • Don't take more than you can eat. • Don't let your eyes be bigger than your stomach. • At home, take less to begin with and if it's possible, go back for more. Once it's on your plate, it's harder to put back and often ends up being thrown away. • Spread the word about food waste to your friends. 6 • Off icialKidsMag.com • NOVEMBER 2019

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