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The Afterschool Snack program has been established by Section 102(d) of Public Law 105-336 to provide nutritious snacks for children involved in after-school programs. Snacks can be provided by Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) or schools through the National School Lunch Programs (NSLP). Reimbursement for snacks served in after-school care programs became effective October 1, 1998.
USDA Afterschool Care Snack Program Handbook for School Programs (1.94 MB 2006-06-06 15:25:42)
Programs that provide care after the school day ends may be eligible
for USDA reimbursement for snacks served to children through age 18. To
be eligible for reimbursement, after-school care programs must meet the
criteria listed under each program. The criteria is slightly different
for participation under CACFP and NSLP, so review both options
carefully to determine which is best for your situation.
CACFP Afterschool Snack Overview
How do I apply for CACFP afterschool snacks?
Contact your CACFP State agency today to participate in this Program!
In Iowa and in most states, the CACFP State agency will be your State
Department of Education. If you are located in Iowa you may call the
Iowa Department of Education, Bureau of Nutrition Programs and School
Transportation for more information at (515)-281-5356 or contact:
Rod.Bakken@iowa.gov
Is my afterschool care program in an eligible area?
In order for a site to participate, your program must be "area
eligible". An after-school care program site is "area eligible" if it
is located in the attendance area of a school where at least 50 percent
of the enrolled children are eligible for free or reduced price meals.
Afterschool care programs can use free and reduced price meal data from
elementary, middle, or high schools to document a site as "area
eligible". You must also provide children with regularly scheduled
educational or enrichment activities in a supervised environment.
How do we get reimbursed?
Programs may claim reimbursement for one snack per child, per day. All
snacks which meet the CACFP meal pattern are reimbursed at the free
rate. Sites may not charge for snacks served to eligible participants.
What type of snacks must be served in my program?
In order to be reimbursed, the snacks must contain at least two
different components of the following four: a serving of fluid milk; a
serving of meat or meat alternate; a serving of vegetable(s) or
fruits(s) or juice; a serving of whole grain or enriched bread and/or
cereal.
What times of the day/year may snacks be claimed?
Snacks may be reimbursed under CACFP after the school day has ended and
at any time of day on weekends, holidays, and vacation periods during
the school year.
What records must be maintained?
Your State agency will provide you with specific information on the
reporting and record keeping requirements. You will need to maintain a
roster or sign-in sheet for participating children. Additionally, you
must record and report the total number of snacks you serve each day,
and document compliance with the meal pattern for CACFP. Your State
agency will be able to provide you with a copy of the CACFP meal
pattern.
Which Type Should I Choose? Outside School Hour Child Care (OSHCC) or "At-Risk" Afterschool Snack Program (AASP)?
The Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) has two special types of
serving sites (OSHCC and AASP) that are well suited for part-day
childcare operations (usually before school hours, or after school
hours or both before and after school hours). Your part-day childcare
site(s) operation may be located separately from your full-day
childcare center or located within your full-day childcare center but
serving a group of older children distinctly separate from the full-day
children.
If you have a part-day childcare, use the following information to
determine if you are eligible, whether the OSHCC or the AASP best
suites your part-day childcare needs, and whether or not you wish to
submit an OSHCC or AASP Site Application.
You must first contact the State Agency before submitting a new Site Application.
You are qualified for an OSHCC when you:
- Serve a separate group of children up to age 13 years
before/after normal school hours, usually during the school year,
school vacations and during the summer.
- Serve Breakfast or PM Snack or both.
- Located anywhere in a licensed/license-exempted facility.
- You collect Free and Reduced-price Income Eligibility Forms if you claim reimbursement at free or reduced-price rates.
You are qualified for an AASP when you:
- Serve a separate group of children up to age 19 years after
normal school hours during the school year, including weekends and
during school vacations.
- Serve a PM Snack
- Located
in a licensed/license-exempted facility located within an eligible
low-income area (50% or more based on school data or based on 2000 US
Census data). All snacks are automatically reimbursed at the free rate.
For an additional afterschool snack option, review the Child and Adult Care Food Program afterschool snack basic information.
CACFP Afterschool Snack Resources
CACFP Snack Meal Pattern (27.24 KB 2006-06-06 10:08:13)
CACFP Sample Cycle Menu (79.47 KB 2006-06-06 09:47:48)
CAFP Daily Snack Count Form (26.4 KB 2006-06-06 09:48:50)
CACFP Daily Snack Attendance Form (117.85 KB 2006-06-06 10:02:04)
CACFP Sample Snack Menu Form (22.96 KB 2006-06-06 09:50:56)
NSLP Afterschool Snack Overview
How do I apply for afterschool snacks?
Contact the school food service director in your school district if you
are located outside of Iowa. If you are located in Iowa you may call
the Iowa Department of Education, Bureau of Food and Nutrition for more
information at 515-281-5356 or contact: Patti.Harding@iowa.gov
Is my afterschool care program eligible?
In order for a site to participate, your school district must operate
the NSLP. Additionally the afterschool care program must provide
children with regularly scheduled educational or enrichment activities
in a supervised environment. Sites are either area eligible in which
case all snacks are served free or snacks are served and counted based
on the free and reduced or paid eligibility of the student. Contact the
Bureau of Food and Nutrition, Iowa Department of Education at
(515)-281-5356 for further information regarding program eligibility in
Iowa.
How do we get reimbursed?
Schools may claim reimbursement for one snack per child, per day. If
the site is located in an area served by a school in which at least 50%
of the enrolled children are eligible for free or reduced-price meals,
all children are eligible to receive reimbursement for snacks at the
free rate. Sites located in other areas must count meals and claim
reimbursement by eligibility type of the child (free, reduced-price and
paid) and have documentation of eligibility. No more than $.15 may be
charged for a reduced-price snack.
What type of snacks must be served in my program?
In order to be reimbursed, the snacks must contain at least two
different components of the following four: a serving of fluid milk; a
serving of meat or meat alternate; a serving of vegetable(s) or
fruits(s) or juice; a serving of whole grain or enriched bread and/or
cereal.
What times of the day/year may snacks be claimed?
Meals may only be claimed when served after the school day has ended.
Meals served on weekends, holidays, or vacation periods may not be
reimbursed under the NSLP.
What records must be maintained?
The following records are required to receive reimbursement:
For sites that are not area eligible, free and reduced price
applications for all children for whom free and reduced price snacks
are claimed;
Meal counts (totals for sites qualifying for free reimbursement for all children;
meal counts by type for all other sites);
Documentation for each child's attendance;
Documentation of compliance with meal pattern requirements (menus) and food production records.
Documentation of two monitoring reviews done by the school food
authority each year must also be maintained. The first review must be
done within the first four weeks of Program operations. Forms for each
type of record may be found under NSLP Afterschool Snack Resources,
"USDA Afterschool Care Snack Program Handbook for School Programs."
For additional afterschool snack options, review the National School Lunch Program afterschool snack basic information: www.fns.usda.gov/cnd/Afterschool/default.htm
NSLP Afterschool Snack Resources
USDA Afterschool Care Snack Program Handbook for School Programs (1.94 MB 2006-06-06 15:25:42)
Iowa Afterschool Snack Program Daily Attendance Record (10.86 KB 2006-06-06 15:01:24)
Snack Participation Data Worksheet(Roster) (5.07 KB 2006-06-06 15:50:25)
Self Monitoring Form for On-Site Reviews of Afterschool Care Snack Program (11.46 KB 2006-06-06 15:03:56)
Iowa Afterschool Snack Program Food Production Record Worksheet (9.87 KB 2006-06-06 15:02:33)
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