EdLabor Journal

Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010

For millions of families, the meals their children receive at school or in child care are their only chance at a healthy meal all day. In 2008, more than 16 million children lived in homes without access to enough nutritious food. America's children should not have to go hungry -- they should have access to healthy foods year round that will help them thrive physically and academically.

The Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010 (S. 3307) will dramatically improve children?s access to nutritious meals, enhance the quality of meals children eat both in and out of school and in child care settings, implement new school food safety guidelines and, for the first time, establish nutrition standards for all foods sold in schools.  This legislation will answer President Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama's call to reduce childhood hunger and support school and community efforts to reduce childhood obesity.

The legislation:

Improves Access

  • Increases the number of children enrolled in the school meals programs by using Medicaid data to directly certify eligible children. This provision will connect approximately new 115,000 students to the school meals program.
  • Enhances universal meal access for eligible children in high poverty communities by using census data to determine school wide income eligibility. 
  • Provides more meals for at-risk children nationwide by allowing Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) providers to be reimbursed for meals provided to low-income children after school. This provision will provide an additional 21 million meals annually. 
  • Provides funding for innovative state and local projects to address childhood hunger and promote food security for low-income children.  

Increases Focus on Nutrition Quality and Children's Health

  • Improves the nutritional quality of school meals by increasing the federal reimbursement rate for school lunches for districts who comply with federal nutrition standards. This additional 6 cents per meal will be the first real reimbursement rate increase in over 30 years.
  • Removes junk food from schools by applying nutrition standards for all foods sold in schools.
  • Promotes nutrition and wellness in child care settings by establishing nutrition requirements for CACFP.
  • Connects more children to healthy produce from local farms by helping communities establish farm to school networks, create school gardens and use more local foods in cafeterias with $40 million in mandatory funding. 
  • Strengthens local school wellness policies by updating existing requirements, increasing transparency, providing opportunities for community involvement, and compliance measurements.
  • Supports breastfeeding for low-income women by supporting data collection in WIC and permanently authorizing performance bonuses for exemplary breastfeeding practices at WIC clinics and agencies.

Improves Program Management & Program Integrity

  • Supports schools' food service budgets by ensuring charges to school foodservice accounts are only for allowable expenses.
  • Supports a skilled workforce by establishing professional standards and training opportunities for school food service providers. 
  • Streamlines program administration by giving CACFP providers greater flexibility with their administrative funds and eliminating duplicative paperwork requirements and wasteful monitoring practices. 
  • Increases efficiency and modernizes the WIC program by transitioning to an electronic benefit program.
  • Improves food safety requirements for school meals by improving recall procedures and extending existing HACCP requirements to all places where school meals are prepared or served.

Fully Paid For -- At No Cost to Taxpayers

  • Saves $1 billion over 10 years by extending a provision that allows the Secretary of Agriculture to count commodities purchased for market stabilization toward the required level of federal support (in the form of commodity foods) for the National School Lunch Program.
  • Saves approximately $1.3 billion over 10 years by restructuring nutrition education in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) into a new grant program that distributes Federal funds by formula to the States. 
  • Saves approximately $2.2 billion over 10 years by eliminating a temporary SNAP benefit increase provided by The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA).     

State-Level Support for the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010

Alabama

  • Alabama PTA
  • Alabama School Nutrition Association
  • Alabama WIC Program
  • Bay Area Food Bank
  • Food Bank of North Alabama
  • Health Action Partnership
  • Jefferson County Department of Health
  • Jefferson County WIC Program
  • Jones Valley Urban Farm
  • Morris Health Center
  • St. Clair County WIC Program
  • Trussville WIC Program
Alaska

  • Alaska Dietetic Association
  • Alaska PTA
  • Alaska School Nurses Association
  • Alaska School Nutrition Association
  • Food Bank of Alaska
  • Maniilaq WIC Program
Arizona

  • Arizona Dietetic Association
  • Grand Canyon Synod - ELCA
  • Hualapai WIC Department
  • Inter Tribal Council of Arizona
  • Jewish Community Relations Council of the Jewish Federation of Southern Arizona
  • Navajo Nation WIC Program
  • Planned Parenthood Arizona
  • School Nurses Organization of Arizona
  • School Nutrition Association of Arizona
  • United Food Bank
  • White Mountain Apache WIC Program
Arkansas

  • 5 A Day Coalition
  • Arkansas Action For Healthy Kids
  • Arkansas Advocates for Children & Families
  • Arkansas Community Action Agencies Association, Inc.
  • Arkansas Food Policy Council
  • Arkansas Hunger Relief Alliance
  • Arkansas PTA
  • Arkansas School Nurses Association
  • Bull Shoals Food Pantry
  • Carroll County Community Foundation
  • Choctaw Food Bank
  • Community Services Office, Inc.
  • Economic Opportunity Agency of Washington County, Inc.
  • Franklin County Learning Center
  • Helping Hands of Winchester
  • Hope in Action
  • Hughes Christian Outreach Ministries
  • Kids for Health
  • Mountain Home Food Basket
  • No Kid Hungry Arkansas
  • Oak Forest United Methodist Church
  • Ozark Opportunities, Inc.
  • Seven Harvest, Inc.
  • Sustainable Alternatives
  • The Manna House
  • Wildflowers Christian Ministry
California

  • A Family Helping Agency Inc.
  • A World Fit For Kids!
  • Agriculture & Land-Based Training Association
  • Alameda County WIC Program
  • Alameda Point Collaborative
  • Alliance Medical Center WIC Program
  • Antelope Valley Hospital WIC Program
  • Apricot Producers of California
  • Baby Sips
  • Bay Area Lactation Associates (BALA)
  • Bay Area WIC Association
  • Breastfeeding Coalition of Solano County
  • Breastfeeding Task Force of Greater Los Angeles
  • Breastfeeding Task Force of Santa Clara Valley
  • California Association of Nutrition and Activity Programs (CAN-Act)
  • California Center for Public Health Advocacy
  • California Conference of Local Health Department Nutritionists (CCLHDN)
  • California Department of Education
  • California Dietetic Association
  • California District Council Health Professional Auxiliary
  • California Grape & Tree Fruit League
  • California Public Health Association-North
  • California School Health Centers Association
  • California State PTA
  • California State University, Fresno
  • California WIC Association
  • CANFIT
  • Center for Health Leadership
  • Center for Nutrition and Activity Promotion
  • Central California Regional Obesity Prevention Program
  • Central Valley Indian Health WIC Program
  • Chico Eat Learn Grow
  • City of Long Beach WIC Program
  • Collaboratively Creating Health Access, Opportunities, & Services (cChaos)
  • Community Action Partnership of Kern WIC Program
  • Community Alliance with Family Farmers
  • Community Bridges WIC Program
  • Community Medical Center WIC Program
  • Community Relations Council of the Jewish Federation of Silicon Valley
  • County of Napa WIC Program
  • County of Sonoma DHS WIC Program
  • Cover My Heart
  • CWA
  • Delta Health Care
  • East Los Angeles Doctors Hospital
  • E-Center
  • Family YMCA of the Desert
  • Farm to Table Food Services
  • Feeding America San Diego
  • First 5 Los Angeles
  • First 5 Santa Clara County
  • First 5 Solano Children and Families Commission
  • Food Bank of Contra Costa and Solano
  • Food for People, Inc.
  • FOOD Share
  • FoodLink for Tulare County, Inc.
  • Fresh Produce & Floral Council
  • Fresno County WIC Program
  • Fresno Metro Ministry
  • Gardner Family Care Corporation WIC Program
  • Glenn County Health Services
  • Greater Los Angeles Breastfeeding Task Force
  • Grower-Shipper Association of Central California
  • Help Choose Your Life
  • HER Consulting
  • Hill Country Health and Wellness Center
  • Humanist Association of Orange County
  • Indian Health Center of Santa Clara Valley WIC Program
  • Inland Congregations United for Change
  • Inland Empire Veterans Stand Down
  • Jewish Family Service of Los Angeles
  • Kalusugan Community Services
  • Kernville Union School District
  • Kings County Breastfeeding Coalition
  • Kings County Health Department WIC Program
  • La Leche League of Ukiah
  • La Luna Perinatal Services
  • Lactation Advocates of Northern California
  • Lake County Community Action Agency
  • LEAPS Action Center
  • Long Beach Grows
  • Los Angeles Best Babies Network
  • Los Angeles County Department of Public Health
  • Los Angeles County Office of Education
  • Los Angeles Unified School District
  • Lotus Tribe
  • Lutheran Office of Public Policy - California
  • Marin County WIC Program
  • Maternal and Child Health Access
  • Mendocino County Breastfeeding Coalition
  • Mendocino County WIC Program
  • Mono County WIC Program
  • Monterey County WIC Program
  • Native American Health Center
  • Native Breastfeeding Council
  • Network for a Healthy California-ABC USD
  • Newport Mesa Unified School District - Network for a Healthy California
  • North Coast Opportunities, Community Action
  • North County Health Services WIC Program
  • Northeast Valley Health Corporation
  • Northeastern Rural Health WIC Program
  • Oakland Based Urban Gardens
  • Oakland Leaf
  • Oakland Unified School District
  • Orange County Planned Parenthood WIC Program
  • Outrider Ministries
  • Palomar Pomerado Home Health
  • Pasture Pictures
  • People's Grocery
  • Placer Food Bank
  • Planting Justice
  • Plumas Rural Services WIC Program
  • Private Lactation Consulting, Contra Costa
  • Psi Chi, San Jose State University
  • Public Health Foundation WIC Program
  • Riverside County Community Health Agency Lactation Services
  • Sacramento ACHIEVE
  • San Benito Health Foundation
  • San Diego American Red Cross WIC Program
  • San Diego County Breastfeeding Coalition
  • San Diego State University Research Foundation WIC
  • San Francisco Breastfeeding promotion Coalition
  • San Francisco Department of Public Health
  • San Francisco WIC Program
  • San Mateo County WIC Program
  • San Ysidro Health Center WIC Program Imperial Beach Office
  • Santa Clara County Public Health Department WIC Program
  • Santa Clara County WIC Program
  • Santa Clara County WIC Program
  • Save Mart Supermarkets
  • Second Harvest Food Bank Santa Cruz County
  • Shasta County Health and Human Services Agency
  • Siskiyou County Public Health
  • Siskiyou County WIC Program
  • Slow Food Urban San Diego
  • Solano County WIC Program
  • South Los Angeles Health Projects
  • Southern California Public Health Association (SCPHA)
  • St. Joseph Health System
  • Sustainable Economic Enterprises of Los Angeles (SEE-LA)
  • Sutter Medical Center, Sacramento
  • The Childbirth Connection, LLC
  • The Peace and Justice Community of St. Cross Episcopal Church, Hermosa Beach
  • The Resource Connection - Amador
  • The Sisters of the Holy Family, Fremont
  • Tiburcio Vasquez Health Center, Inc. WIC Program
  • Tulare County WIC Program
  • Ubuntu Green
  • UCLA High Risk Infant Follow-up Program
  • United Way Silicon Valley
  • Urban and Environmental Policy Institute
  • Valley Presbyterian Hospital
  • Ventura County Public Health WIC Program
  • WalkSanDiego
  • Watts Healthcare Corporation WIC Program
  • Well-Being Center of Novato
  • Yolo County Health Department
Colorado

  • Care and Share Food Bank of Southern Colorado
  • Colorado Children's Campaign
  • Colorado PTA
  • Colorado School Nutrition Association
  • Food Bank for Larimer County
  • LiveWell Colorado
  • Lutheran Advocacy Ministry - Colorado
  • Mesa County WIC Agency
  • Moms for Kids
  • Pueblo City-County Health Department
  • Rocky Mountain Farmers Union
  • Summit Prevention Alliance
  • Weld Food Bank
  • Women of Reform Judaism – Colorado
Connecticut

  • Connecticut Association for Human Services
  • Connecticut Dietetic Association
  • Connecticut Food Association
  • Connecticut Food Bank
  • Connecticut Parent Teacher Student Association
  • Fairfield County WIC Program
  • Foodshare, Inc.
  • Justice and Peace Committee of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Chambery/West Hartford
  • The Collaborative Center for Justice, Hartford
  • Uncas Health District
Delaware

  • Delaware Dietetic Association
  • Delaware PTA
  • Delaware School Nurse Association
  • Delaware School Nutrition Association
District of Columbia

  • D.C. Farm to School Network
  • D.C. WIC State Agency
  • United Way National Capital Area
Florida

  • All Faiths Food Bank
  • Bay Area Food Bank
  • Better School Food Sarasota
  • Charity Express Inc.
  • Christ Fellowship Church
  • City of North Miami ACHIEVE
  • CROS Ministries
  • Damayan Garden Project
  • Evangelical Christian Bible Ministries International, Inc.
  • Feeding South Florida
  • First Baptist Church of Lantana
  • Florida Association of Food Banks
  • Florida Association of School Nurses
  • Florida Dietetic Association
  • Florida PTA
  • Florida Public Health Foundation
  • Florida Tomato Exchange
  • Harry Chapin Food Bank
  • Miami Dietetic Association
  • OSAY Child Development Center
  • Palm Beach County Community Food Alliance
  • Palm Beach Harvest Inc.
  • Second Harvest Food Bank of Central Florida
  • Second Harvest North Florida
  • The Peace & Justice Committee of the Florida Benedictine Sisters
  • Treasure Coast Food Bank
Georgia

  • America Second Harvest of Coastal Georgia
  • Cobb & Douglas Public Health
  • Cotillion of the South
  • Feeding the Valley, Inc.
  • Georgia Dietetic Association
  • Georgia Fruit and Vegetable Growers Association
  • Georgia Organics
  • Georgia PTA
  • Georgia Public Health Association
  • Georgia School Nutrition Association
  • Health Matters
  • Jewish Community Relations Council of Atlanta
  • Lithonia WIC Program
  • Piedmont Park Conservancy
  • Queen of Hearts Foundation
  • Second Harvest of South Georgia, Inc.
  • Southside Medical Center WIC/Nutrition Department
  • The Holistic Chamber of Commerce Atlanta
  • The Youth Becoming Healthy Project, Inc.
  • Voices for Georgia's Children
Guam

  • Department of Public Health & Social Services, Bureau of Nutrition Services, WIC Program
Hawaii

  • Bay Clinic Inc.
  • Bay Clinic WIC Program
  • Blueprint for Change
  • Good Beginnings Alliance
  • Hawaii Dietetic Association
  • Hawaii Farmers Union
  • Hawaii Island Rural Health Association
  • Kau Rural Health Community Association Inc.
  • Lanai Community Health Center
  • Malama I Ke Ola Health Center WIC Program
  • Rural Maui
  • Wahiawa WIC Program
  • Waimanalo Health Center
  • Waimanalo Market

House Expected to Vote on Child Nutrition Bill This Week

This week, the House is expected to vote on S. 3307, the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act, the child nutrition reauthorization legislation that has already passed unanimously in the Senate. The legislation would dramatically improve the quality of meals children eat in school and in child care, increase the number of healthy meals available to needy children and provide the first real increase in the Federal reimbursement rate for school lunches in over 30 years. The legislation would also eliminate junk food from schools by requiring schools, for the first time, to apply nutritional standards to food served outside the cafeteria.

Listen to Chairman Miller, Speaker Pelosi and other legislators discuss the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act on a November 29 press conference call.   

Republicans Attack Unemployment Insurance: News of the Day

Earlier this month, Republicans turned their backs on hard-working Americans and their families when they voted to block a modest three-month extension of emergency unemployment benefits. As a result, up to two million unemployed workers will lose this lifeline beginning this week.

While nothing can take the place of a good-paying job, ensuring that families have food on the table and a roof over their heads during the holiday season is the decent and right thing to do. 

Appearing on Morning Joe today, Republican Congressman John Shadegg of Arizona disagreed emphatically that unemployment insurance benefits do not provide an immediate benefit to the economy. 

Mike Barnicle: What about the fact that unemployment benefits pumped into the economy are an immediate benefit to the economy. Immediate. 

John Shadegg: No, they're not.


Mike Barnicle: Let's go back to what you said about unemployment checks. Unemployment checks, people don't spend that money?

John Shadegg: No. they will spend as little as they can because they'll hold on to it as long as they can. In reality, they don't create jobs.

In this case, Morning Joe’s Mike Barnicle is backed up by private economists of every stripe and the Congressional Budget Office.

    • “Households receiving unemployment benefits tend to spend the additional benefits quickly, making this option both timely and cost-effective in spurring economic activity and employment.” -- CBO Director Douglas W. Elmendorf, statement for the Joint Economic Committee, February 23, 2010. 
    • “No form of the fiscal stimulus has proved more effective during the past two years than emergency UI benefits, providing a bang for the buck of 1.61—that is, for every $1 in UI benefits, GDP one year later is increased by an estimated $1.61.” -- Chief Economist of Moody’s Analytics Mark Zandi, testimony before the Senate Finance Committee, April 14, 2010.

Meanwhile, in a Sept. 2010 National Federal of Independent Business survey, small business owners said their “single biggest problem” is lack of sales. In other words, jobs can’t be created without consumer spending – and consumer spending increases when out-of-work Americans receive unemployment insurance benefits.  


 

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

The Los Angeles Times reported this week on the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's new agenda attacking federal labor, energy, health care and financial services regulations.

"Unions, liberal advocacy groups and many congressional Democrats are expected to defend the new healthcare law and the new financial oversight system, created in the wake of the worst recession in more than half a century. They also are expected to defend efforts to expand worker safety rules.

"'The chamber's new campaign is disappointing and may threaten the health and safety of hardworking Americans if successful,' said Rep. George Miller (D-Martinez), chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee."
(emphasis added)
WASHINGTON, D.C. – On Wednesday, November 17, the Workforce Protections Subcommittee of the House Education and Labor Committee will examine state workers’ compensations systems. Workers’ compensation traditionally provides financial assistance and job training to workers injured on the job and aid to the surviving family of a worker killed on the job.

These systems have undergone numerous changes in the past decade as many states have begun strictly limiting workers’ compensation benefits – changes that may be stressing the Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) program. Additionally, the American Medical Association’s (AMA) guide to assessing injured workers has undergone significant changes in its latest edition, which has made consequential changes to injured workers’ evaluation procedure.

WHAT:         
Hearing on “Developments in State Workers’ Compensation Systems”

WHO:            
Emily Spieler, dean, Northeastern University School of Law, Boston, Mass.
John Burton, professor emeritus, School of Management and Labor Relations, Rutgers University; professor emeritus, School of Industrial and Labor Relations, Cornell University, Princeton, N.J.
Christopher Godfrey, Iowa Workers Compensation Commissioner, Des Moines, Iowa
Dr. John Nimlos, occupational medicine consultant, Shoreline, Wash.
Additional Witnesses TBA

WHEN (UPDATED, 11/16):        
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
8:45 a.m. ET
Please check the Committee schedule for potential updates »

WHERE:      
House Education and Labor Committee Hearing Room
2175 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, D.C.

Note: This hearing will be webcast live from the Education and Labor Committee website.

Chairman Miller: Democrats Tried to Create American Jobs, While Republicans Obstructed

Chairman Miller appeared on MSNBC's The Daily Rundown today to speak about Democrats' efforts to help save jobs, his support for Speaker Pelosi's bid for Minority Leader, the GOP agenda, and the upcoming 112th Congress.

“We passed dozens of jobs bills, dozens of tax credits for small business. The Republicans chose not to vote for any of them. They didn’t want us to succeed on jobs. It’s now on their watch. We sent over 400 bills to the Senate that went into the jaws of the filibuster that was controlled by Mitch McConnell. So they made a decision; they’d rather sacrifice the job creating potential of that legislation, for small businesses all across this country-- wildly successful programs that had run out of money, tax breaks that had worked in the past that they didn’t want to do. So they made a decision to sacrifice that in the name of pulling down this President of the United States. They wanted him to fail and that’s their mission today.”

...

"You have deficit hawks coming to town and they're about to come in and suggest that they're going to give away $4 trillion that they probably won't pay for.  That'll be the first challenge. That'll be the first challenge.

We can take care of the middle class. That money can go into Main Street. That can help create customers for small businesses. Or we can create a huge amount of deficit [to benefit] the wealthiest 2% of people in the country..."

Watch the interview:

Chairman George Miller on Rep. Boehner's Pledge to Repeal Health Insurance Reform

Chairman George Miller this morning spoke to KGO Radio about incoming Speaker Boehner's pledge to repeal health insurance reform.  Rep. Boehner said today that "we have to do everything we can to try to repeal this bill."  Rep. Miller said:

"[The GOP has] to understand that when they repeal health care, that senior citizens will pay more for prescription drugs, young people will lose their health care coverage, and once again, we'll have pre-existing conditions that keep women and children and others from getting access to health care when they need it.  And they're also going to have the problem that this health care bill, signed by President Obama, saves $100 billion in the first ten years and a trillion dollars in the second ten years.  So they're going to have to pay for those changes when they go back to their so-called common sense ideas.  The fact of the matter is this health care bill works."
Watch Rep. Miller's interview:

Chairman Miller discussed public education and college affordability at Contra Costa Community College in San Pablo, Calif. on Tuesday.

The committee has held seven hearings on the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (currently known as No Child Left Behind) during the 111th Congress. Chairman Miller has consistently stated his belief that the key to long-term economic recovery is a strong public education system. Richmond Confidential reported:

“‘In the middle of this economic chaos,’ [Miller] said, ‘this president knows we can’t compete in a world economy unless we modernize some of our basic systems.’”



“Creating a new standard educational model should incorporate the way that young people share information, he said.

“‘All of you create a huge amount of content every day, you teach your peers how to use that new phone, that new program,’ he said. ‘How do we call on people to participate in the educational process who are your peers?’”

Miller also spoke about the rising cost of college and how many students struggle to attain a college degree -- he wrote the Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act to make college more affordable by increasing federal financial aid and making federal student loans easier to repay. Richmond Confidential recorded his comments:

“‘About half the people that show up for community college, they don’t show up for the second year,’ Miller said. ‘They don’t get the certificate they’re after, they don’t get the career opportunity, they don’t get the academic degree they were after and they may end up in debt.’

“Miller spoke in detail about recent reforms to the student loan industry. Subsidies worth $60 billion will be diverted over ten years from banks, which manage loans, to students in the form of grants and federal loans.

“The new law, he explained, also rewards those pursuing public service jobs. ‘If you get in the public health and education sectors, after ten years your loans go away,’ he said, ‘because you’re giving something back.’”

Pell Grants Available to More Students: News of the Day

More students are taking advantage of the Pell Grant scholarship nationwide; the scholarship has become critical for students and families during these tough economic times.

The maximum Pell Grant was raised to a record $5,550 in 2010 due to the Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act (SAFRA), authored by Chairman Miller and signed by President Obama in March. Not only has Miller worked to increase federal financial aid, he has made college loans more affordable – the College Cost Reduction and Access Act of 2007 has lowered interest rates on need-based student loans from 6.8 percent to the current 4.5 percent.  The rates will drop again to 3.4 percent in July 2011.

Springfield, Ohio’s Springfield News-Sun wrote that the number of undergraduates relying on Pell Grants has increased:

“An increasing number of students locally and nationally have been receiving financial aid through the Federal Pell Grant Program.

“In Clark County, the recipients of the need-based grant increased more than 5,500 students between academic year 2008-2009 and 2009-2010, according to statistics from the U.S. Department of Education. In the same time period, the grant disbursement increased by $26.9 million.”

The Herald Sun of Durham, North Carolina had similar news to report:

“According to recent figures issued by the U.S. House Committee on Education and Labor, the number of Pell Grant recipients in North Carolina's 4th Congressional District rose 35 percent last year. The district, which includes all of Durham and Orange counties and parts of Wake and Chatham, had 27,471 students who qualified for the aid during the 2009-10 academic year, an increase of 7,145 over the year before.”



“Adding to the increase is that under a new student-loan bill signed by President Barack Obama in March, the Pell's Grant's eligibility criteria have changed, and that's made it a little easier to qualify than in the past, Ort and Rome both said.

“Equally important is that the Pell Grant is now authorized for summer school, for the first time.”

Tips for Applying for Federal Student Aid

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