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East Texas Food Bank responds to Trump administration funding cut

East Texas Food Bank responds to Trump administration funding cut

Yahoo15-03-2025
TYLER, Texas (KETK) – The East Texas Food Bank has responded to recent cuts President Donald Trump's administration has made to U.S. Department of Agriculture food bank and school food funding programs.
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The Associated Press reported that the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) had cut more than a $1 billion dollars in funding to two programs which help provide locally grown food to schools and foodbanks.
In a statement obtained by KETK on Friday, East Texas Food Bank CEO David Emerson responded to the USDA's funding cuts.
'This program was critical to local farmers, growers and ranchers in our region,' East Texas Food Bank CEO David Emerson said. 'Though potential funding and our ability to purchase food could be impacted by this decision, the East Texas Food Bank remains committed to sourcing fresh produce so we can provide healthy food for the communities we serve.'
The East Texas Food Bank reported serving 31,000,000 meals to over 200,000 local households in the fiscal last year as a part of their vision for a hunger-free East Texas.
The Hill identified the two programs receiving the cuts as the USDA's Local Food Purchase Assistance Cooperative Agreement Program and the Local Food for Schools Cooperative Agreement Program.
Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller put own his own statement calling the cuts 'a fair and consistent approach' on Wednesday.
'I support a fair and consistent approach, which is precisely what the Trump Administration is implementing. This is not a final decision—it's a reassessment. There's always room for refinement, and we may see a revised version of the policy down the road that is even better for agriculture producers. I want to thank our farmers and ranchers, local food banks, school nutrition departments and Farm Fresh Network members for their dedication to providing fresh, nutritious meals to Texas students and families. Your hard work is building a healthier, more sustainable future for our state.'
Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller
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Miller said the cuts are intended to eliminate 'fraud, abuse and waste' and that the Texas Department of Agriculture doesn't depend on this funding because they operate their own Farm to School and Farm to Food Bank programs.
Before the USDA's programs were implemented, Miller said that Texas schools spent more than $257.8 million on local food.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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His unpolished, direct style, he says, may resonate more than a polished political résumé. In the video launching his campaign, Ager shows flooding on the farm and is seen on the porch of his home, feeding chickens, driving a tractor and spending time with his wife and three sons. 'I'm not flashy, but I'm honest,' he says in the video. Ager doesn't call himself a Democrat in the roughly two-minute video and rarely used the word during a three-hour interview. Still, his ties to the party run deep: His brother serves in the state House, following in the footsteps of their father. His grandfather served six years in the U.S. House. Asked whether that might be a liability in the district, Ager simply shrugged: 'Then don't vote for me.' Trump's big bill could reshape a conservative district in Michigan In western Michigan, state Rep. Sean McCann is a different kind of candidate from Ager. He's buttoned-up and soft-spoken, with a long resume in elected office and deep roots in Kalamazoo, having served for a decade on the city commission before winning a seat in the state House in 2010. In a district anchored by conservative and religious values, Democrats see McCann as the kind of steady, experienced figure who can make inroads — especially as backlash builds to Trump's tax bill, which includes deep spending cuts. At a recent meeting at Kalamazoo's Family Health Center, where nearly 65% of patients rely on Medicaid, the center's president warned the proposed Medicaid cuts would be devastating. 'It's about being home in the community and listening to our community's values — and carrying those to Washington,' McCann said. The district is represented by Republican Rep. Bill Huizenga, who won reelection by nearly 12 percentage points in 2022. But Huizenga has not said whether he'll seek another term, and Trump carried the district by only 5.5 percentage points in 2024. Democrats hope strong ties help elsewhere Across the country, Democrats are watching similar races in places like Iowa and Kentucky, where local candidates with strong community ties are running. In Iowa's 2nd District, state Rep. Lindsay James — a fourth-term lawmaker and Presbyterian pastor — is weighing a run in the northeast part of the state. In Kentucky's 6th, which includes Lexington and Richmond, former federal prosecutor Zach Dembo is running his first campaign, describing himself as a political outsider. It's a mix of profiles: Ager, the farmer-turned-candidate feeding neighbors after a hurricane. McCann, the public servant meeting with health workers in his hometown. And others like them trying to reconnect a skeptical electorate. 'Yes, the Democratic Party has some taint to it,' Ager said. 'But when I go talk to Republicans who are friends that I've known forever, there's genuine admiration and mutual respect for each other. 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