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Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley introduces bill to reduce food waste

Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley introduces bill to reduce food waste

Yahoo06-03-2025

SIOUX CITY, Iowa (KCAU) — A new bipartisan bill co-sponsored by Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley and Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin aims to reduce food waste in the U.S.
In a press release sent out Wednesday, Grassley's office announced the Reduce Food Loss and Waste Act. The bill would create a 'Food Loss and Waste Reduction Certification' and direct the USDA to make a list of requirements businesses would have to meet to earn it, along with a verification process to ensure requirements are met and a label certified businesses could display.
Remarkable Women: Mary Jayne Mousel spreading joy in the community
According to Mark Nook, president of the University of Northern Iowa, 22% of all waste sent to Iowa landfills is food.
And on the national level, more than $440 billion is spent each year on producing and then disposing of food that is never consumed or sold, the press release from Grassley's office states. According to the EPA, disposing of that unused food also uses as much water as 50 million homes each year.
The Natural Resources Defense Council adds that if just one-third of food waste was saved from disposal, it could feed the 47 million Americans (including 14 million children) who are suffering from food insecurity.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Trump's military parade is a US outlier in peacetime but parades and reviews have a long history
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Trump's military parade is a US outlier in peacetime but parades and reviews have a long history

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George Dewey, who joined President William McKinley in a viewing stand. Many U.S. cities held World War I victory parades a few decades later. But neither Washington nor President Woodrow Wilson were the focal point. In Boston, a million civilians celebrated 20,000 troops in 1919. New York honored 25,000 troops marching in full uniform and combat gear. New York was the parade epicenter again for World War II On June 13, 1942, as U.S. involvement in World War II accelerated, about 30,000 people formed a mobilization parade in New York City. Participants included Army and Navy personnel, American Women's Voluntary Services members, Boy Scouts and military school cadets. Scores of floats rolled, too. One carried a massive bust of President Franklin Roosevelt, who did not attend. Less than four years later, the 82nd Airborne Division and Sherman tanks led a victory parade down Manhattan's Fifth Avenue. Gen. 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The commander in chief, George H.W. Bush, is the last U.S. president to have held an active-duty military post. He had been a World War II combat pilot who survived his plane being shot down over the Pacific Ocean. Veterans of the second Iraq and Afghanistan wars that followed the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks have not been honored in national parades. Inaugurations and a flight suit Inaugural parades include and sometimes feature military elements. Eisenhower's 1953 inaugural parade, at the outset of the Cold War, included 22,000 service members and an atomic cannon. Eight years later, President John F. Kennedy, a World War II Naval officer, watched armored tanks, Army and Navy personnel, dozens of missiles and Navy boats pass in front of his reviewing stand. More recent inaugurations have included honor guards, academy cadets, military bands and other personnel but not large combat assets. 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