Hundreds of libraries are now serving federally funded summer meals to children to ensure that they don’t go hungry. The change is part of an effort to stay relevant to patrons, and to pair nutrition and educational activities so low-income children get summertime learning, too.
Enid Costley, the children’s and youth services consultant for Library of Virginia, summed up the rationale for starting to serve free food: “For kids to be well-read, they need to be well-fed.”
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The Marysville Public Library serves free summer meals to children under this pavilion. Participating sites must be in an area where at least 50 percent of students get free or reduced-price meals at school. But any child can be fed. CreditMaddie McGarvey for The New York Times
If they are worried about getting their next meal, she said, “It makes it harder to learn. Giving kids books and nutrition is a win-win, all the way around.”
A couple times a week, Taryn Dowdell, 27, sits in a quiet corner of the Elmwood Place library and reads to her children, Tori, 5, and Tayrnce, 3, while they dig in to their free lunches. Tayrnce scooped a heap of pasta into his mouth and said softly, “It’s yummy.”
Ms. Dowdell said her daughter, who will be starting kindergarten this fall, is typically more picky so doesn’t always want to eat at the library. But today they had little choice. “I didn’t have food at home, so we had to come,” she said.
“Libraries see that kids in their communities are hungry,” said Natalie Cole, a library programs consultant for the California State Library. “We are not only providing meals. We are providing learning opportunities and keeping kids reading all summer long.”
After one lunch, Danielle McFarland, the children’s librarian at Elmwood Place, gave out tiny robots called Ozobots, which are designed for the youngsters to program. Another time, she brought in a 3-D printer so they could see how it worked.
Local sponsors like camps, operators of school feeding programs or churches procure food to be prepared, get it delivered to sites like libraries, and handle most of the administrative tasks and paperwork for reimbursement.
The meals are paid for through the United States Department of Agriculture’s summer food service program. In 2016, it funded roughly 50,000 sites nationwide as a way to feed kids who rely on free or reduced meals during the school year. That year, nearly four million children got roughly 179 million meals.
Since the 1970s, the U.S.D.A. has tried to fill the gap by providing meals at sites like camps, parks and Y.M.C.A.s. But transportation can be a barrier for accessing many of these programs, as are the limited number of summer camps and activities for low-income kids, according to a new report called “Hunger Doesn’t Take a Vacation” by the Food Research & Action Center. In July 2016, summer meals served only one child for every seven low-income children who participate in free and reduced-cost lunch during the school year, the group said.
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Jackson Melish, left, and Molly Melish eating lunch at the Marysville Public Library.CreditMaddie McGarvey for The New York Times
“Libraries are an exciting opportunity to increase access,” said Crystal FitzSimons, an author of the report. “There’s a lot of energy around recruiting libraries to provide meals that’s happening at local, state and national levels.”
In interviews, librarians and anti-hunger advocates in California, Ohio, Virginia and New York all reported sizable increases in participation after a concerted recruitment effort spread from state to state through webinars, librarian conferences and word of mouth. In 2014, the U.S.D.A. started recommending libraries as potential partners, and has an online tool to connect them to sponsors, said Jalil Isa, a spokesman.
In 2016, public libraries in California provided over 203,000 meals for children at 139 sites, up from just 17 in 2013, said Dr. Cole, who has a doctorate in librarianship.
Last year, Ohio had 133 library branches serving U.S.D.A.-funded food, up from 88 in 2014. “It’s been a significant mindshift,” said Janet Ingraham Dwyer, the youth services consultant at the State Library of Ohio. “A lot of our buildings not long ago had signs saying ‘No food allowed.’”
After the U.S.D.A. push to involve libraries, Hunger Solutions New York, a nonprofit in Albany, reached out to librarians in the state.
New York has more than 115 participating libraries this summer, compared to 36 in 2013, said Misha Marvel, a child nutrition programs specialist at Hunger Solutions New York.
“Libraries are a good fit,” she said. “They are a non-stigmatizing community-accepted resource.”
Put another way, going to a library is inconspicuous in a way that showing up at a food bank isn’t.
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Some of the free lunches served to children at the library in Elmwood Place, Ohio. CreditCatherine Saint Louis
To be eligible to serve food, a site must be located in an area where at least 50 percent of students get free or reduced-price meals at school. Census data can also be used to identify areas of eligibility. But any child can be fed, once a summer meals site is up and running.
Elizabeth Elswick, 35, a receptionist at a Y.M.C.A. and a frequent patron of the Marysville Public Library in Ohio, appreciates not having to prove her girls “are worthy of having assistance” before they eat lunch.
Sitting at picnic tables next to the library, Mrs. Elswick and her three daughters were just one of dozens of families who stood in line to get strawberries, carrots, oranges and Bosco Sticks (a lunchroom staple of mozzarella-stuffed breadsticks). “There’s a diversity that prevents free lunches from being stigmatized,” Mrs. Elswick said. “No one asks questions and our kids are fed.”
When Kate McCartney, the youth services manager in Marysville, heard there were no summer meal sites in her county, she wanted to get involved. The program has grown exponentially. In 2015, it served 4,082 meals; this season, with four weeks left, more than 4,000 lunches have been distributed.
One requirement of the summer program is that only kids 18 and under get a free meal, so adults must bring their own food. “Fortunately we haven’t had too many parents seem upset or seem to expect a meal,” Ms. McCartney said. “It’s one of the roles of being a parent. You put your kid ahead of your own needs.”
At a recent lunch, while she tallied meals in the pavilion next to the library, she wore a smile and a “Build a Better World” T-shirt. “It’s making a difference,” she said. “We are definitely getting the message out to more and more people every year.”
In some cases, summer meals are attracting new patrons. “Our summer lunch effort has pushed more people into our libraries,” said Andie Apple, the interim director of libraries for Kern County Libraries in California. “They don’t just come for the meals and leave. They come for meals and stay.”
At Beale Memorial Library in Bakersfield, Calif., in an addition to more than 3,000 meals served last summer, librarians also offered a Lego club, bilingual story time, make-it-yourself slime, and creative time to doodle on paper-covered tables.
Some illustrators left notes for the librarians. “You can’t believe some of the messages,” Ms. Apple said. “It’ll break your heart. They’ll write, ‘Thank you for this meal.’”
We’ll be doing a Facebook Live segment about summer meals from Roosevelt Library on Long Island at 12:05 p.m. on Monday, July 31; tune into the New York Times Well pageon Facebook to ask questions.
Those looking for a summer meals site can call 1-866-3-HUNGRY or 1-877-8-HAMBRE or text “food” or “comida” to 877-877, or go the U.S.D.A.’s summer meals site.
A version of this article appears in print on July 31, 2017, on Page A10 of the New York edition with the headline: Havens for Hungry Young Minds Now Satisfy Stomachs, Too.