Tag Archives: Food Banks

Major USDA cuts cripple food banks, school food programs in North Carolina

Durham, North Carolina — At Riverside High School in Durham, North Carolina, the food is as fresh as can be because most of it comes from local growers. 

“We receive local shredded carrots, cucumbers, lettuce, because we feel that we need to support people in our own communities,” Jim Keaten, who runs the nutrition program for Durham Public Schools, told CBS News. 

Keaten said the school district’s produce comes from local growers under a U.S. Department of Agriculture program that was cut by the Trump administration.

“Immediately, my thoughts were, what are we going to do?” Keaten said of his first response when he learned the program funding had been cut. “Because these are the funds we use to provide local foods to kids.”  

In March, the White House cut two federal programs that provide just over $1 billion in annual funding to school districts and food banks nationwide. It slashed $660 million in funding to the Local Food for Schools program, and another $420 million to the Local Food Purchase Assistance Cooperative Agreement, which goes to food banks and other local groups. 

The impact is being felt in every state, including North Carolina, where CBS News followed the trail of food and funds to assess the impact of the cuts. One of the growers providing food to schools is Pine Knot Farms in Hurdle Mills, about one hour’s drive from Riverside High School.  

Linda Leach-Hughes, co-owner of the farm, said last year it sold $150,000 in produce to local schools. She calls the sudden loss of revenue “devastating.”  

“If we do not have this extra income coming in to help local folks in the community, then we will have to lay folks off, we can no longer employ folks,” Leach-Hughes told CBS News.

Pine Knot Farms also provides produce to the Food Bank of Central and Eastern North Carolina. Amy Beros, the food bank’s president and CEO, said its share of lost aid from the cuts is now at about $2 million.

“I don’t understand,” Beros said. “We’re facing one of the worst hunger crises in decades, and now we’re going to increase the need even more. The access to this food makes them not have to choose between the life-saving medicine they need and food for that month.”

The concern over who gets fed is especially felt by those who grow it.

“How are you going to make America great again if you’re taking food out of the mouths of babies, senior citizens, nursing homes, rehab centers, hospitals, all of these agencies that are dependent on federal dollars?” Leah-Hughes asked. “How are you going to make America great again?”

contributed to this report.

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Florida food banks feel the sting of DOGE cuts

Miami — Before sunrise on a recent May day, workers at the Miami-area food bank Feeding South Florida move, load and stack pallets of food and household goods onto trucks.

With the help of volunteers, this flurry of activity has allowed the organization to distribute food to 1.2 million people throughout four Florida counties. 

The food goes to people like Rosalyn Budgett, who lives on a fixed income and comes to Feeding South Florida every two months.
 
“I’m able to get a balanced meal on a daily basis,” Budgett told CBS News. 

She says that without the food bank, “I’d probably starve.”
 
But the aid she relies on has been reduced. In March, the White House’s Department of Government Efficiency cut funding for about $1 billion worth of U.S. Department of Agriculture programs. The two federal programs that were cut allowed schools and food banks to purchase food directly from local farmers and producers.

“We’ve been seeing empty racks since February,” Paco Velez, CEO of Feeding South Florida, told CBS News. “These cuts have really made an impact, not just on our ability to serve, but on the families’ ability to thrive in South Florida and across the country.” 

For Feeding South Florida, the cuts amount to 40% of its $37 million annual budget.

“It’s an unfortunate situation, because we see that our families are desperate,” Velez said. “They’re coming in more frequently than they ever have. And we’re trying to maintain as much food as we can. But there is a little desperation.”

The line of cars for weekly food distribution at Ebenezer Church in South Miami has only gotten longer over the years.

Pastor Roberto Blanco, who gets part of the supply from Feeding South Florida’s warehouse, is working with less. 

The situation is affecting farmers too. East Coast Farm and Vegetables near Parkland, Florida, partnered with Feeding South Florida to use federal dollars to pick and pack surplus produce destined for families in need.

“This program…is a great use of our tax dollars,” said Katelyn Garcia, vice president of East Coast Farm and Vegetables. “We are not only helping our farmers…here in the States, but you’re also feeding families.”

Without the funds to process the produce, farmers are hoping crops won’t go to waste.
 
Says Garcia: “We know that the end goal is to feed people and we need to work towards that goal.”

contributed to this report.

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