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Federal cuts will hurt hunger relief programs in Tacoma
Federal cuts will hurt hunger relief programs in Tacoma

Yahoo

time24-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Federal cuts will hurt hunger relief programs in Tacoma

USDA budget cuts have shocked the hunger relief community in the past month. While previous cutbacks have had a 'somebody else, somewhere else' feel, the most recent cuts will be felt here at home, from Bellingham to Longview and right here in Tacoma. The first cut of $660 million defunded the Local Foods for Schools Agreement Program, which provided funds to schools to purchase locally sourced food for students. The Local Food Purchase Assistance Cooperative Agreement Program also lost $500 million of funding. This program provided funds for food banks and hunger relief groups to purchase locally produced food for those in their communities experiencing food insecurity. Locally, the cuts have canceled $1.9 million in funds Food Lifeline uses to supply nearly 300 food bank partners across western Washington. While Food Lifeline will look to alternate sources to replace these funds, the impact will be dramatic in the short term. The current cuts translate to 7 million pounds of food. This represents 10% of the food we distributed in 2024. A drop of 10% in sourcing means 10% less food for our food bank partners. This includes the Making a Difference Foundation's food bank, Eloise's Cooking Pot, one of the busiest in Tacoma. Each year, it serves 75,000 individuals, children, seniors, and families experiencing food insecurity. Last year, it served 229,699 households, distributing 1.7 million pounds of food monthly. 'We already distribute millions of pounds of food each year,' said president and CEO Ahndrea Blue. 'And with federal funding cuts impacting families and local farmers, securing fresh, nutritious food will become even more challenging. This could drive up costs, require additional fundraising efforts, and force us to expand our distribution capacity to keep up with the growing need. If we do not receive increased community and governmental support, the ability to serve everyone who needs help could become unsustainable.' Not far down the road is Nourish Pierce County. Every year, Nourish serves 70,000 individuals experiencing food insecurity, half of whom are children and seniors. 'The impact of these cuts will be felt far beyond the food bank doors,' says Nourish Pierce County CEO Sue Potter. 'Our 21 distribution sites are not just places to pick up food — they are community safety nets that prevent families from spiraling into crisis. When USDA food supplies shrink, demand shifts to already strained local donors and volunteers, making it harder to keep up with rising needs.' The rationale behind the USDA cuts (in the agency's own words) is 'to remove a pandemic relic' and 'return to long-term fiscally responsible initiatives.' But the post-pandemic landscape for food insecurity looks worse in many ways than before the crisis. At the height of the pandemic, Food Lifeline's food bank partners served 1.1 million people across western Washington. As the country began to reopen, those numbers were expected to drop back to roughly 800,000. But supply chain issues, food shortages and inflation have caused these numbers to rise even higher. Today, 1.7 million people in western Washington are food insecure and visiting food banks. Just last year, food bank visits increased a staggering 20%. While inflation may have slowed, high grocery prices remain. Families still face economic pressures that often end with searching for assistance, a painful tipping point that challenges our ability to grow and thrive as a community. 'The people we serve — working families, college students, military members and seniors on fixed incomes — are already making tough sacrifices,' says Potter. 'Federal food assistance exists to ensure that no one in America goes hungry, yet these cuts will leave our most vulnerable neighbors with even fewer options. Now is the time to strengthen, not weaken, the critical safety net for those who need it most.' We ask you to join us in supporting long-term solutions for food access that meet the needs of our neighbors in western Washington. Solutions that are community-informed and community-led. Please help us ensure everyone has the right to healthy, nutritious food. Mark Coleman is a former television journalist who joined the Food Lifeline team in 2015 as the director of marketing and communications. Today, he is the senior marketing and media relations officer, working to help advocate for hunger relief across western Washington.

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