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Bay Area food banks brace for impact of USDA cuts
Bay Area food banks brace for impact of USDA cuts

Yahoo

time25-03-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Bay Area food banks brace for impact of USDA cuts

The Brief Bay Area food banks are bracing for the impact of the Trump administration's $500 million cut in food deliveries. Second Harvest of Silicon Valley said clients are already asking about changes to pantry boxes. Local food banks are hopeful that private donations can offset some of the cuts. SAN JOSE, Calif. - Local food banks are scrambling after the Trump administration announced it would cut about $500 million in funding and food deliveries. Despite the cuts, local food banks said they will do their best to work around the reductions and continue serving their communities. At Second Harvest of Silicon Valley, volunteers were busy as usual on Monday, packing food into boxes to be sent to dozens of partner organizations. Second Harvest receives some funding from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, but it also gets direct food deliveries. Tracy Weatherby of Second Harvest said historically, the organization has received about 10% of its food through a federal program called the Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC). "We have seen in real-time that a lot of our emergency food assistance programs' deliveries have been canceled," Weatherby said. What they're saying In a statement, the USDA confirmed the program cuts, saying: "Unlike the Biden administration, which funneled billions in CCC funds into short-term programs with no plan for longevity, USDA is prioritizing stable, proven solutions that deliver lasting impact. The COVID era is over—USDA's approach to nutrition programs will reflect that reality moving forward." Local perspective "We don't know what that means. We don't know if those are going to be re-provided at some point or if that is going to be food that is lost to our community," Weatherby said. Second Harvest provides food to organizations like Catholic Charities of Santa Clara County, one of about 400 distribution partner organizations. These organizations provide food at distribution points throughout Santa Clara and San Mateo counties. Tabitha Cisneros, who works on the front lines, said clients are already asking about changes to the contents of the food boxes, which include proteins like chicken and fish. "Sometimes they are asking me, 'Hey, is there any more chicken? Is there any more of this? Is there any more meats, any more eggs coming any time soon?'" she said. "And unfortunately, I cannot provide them a date when they are going to come back." The San Francisco-Marin Food Bank said in a statement it has seen a reduction of about 680,000 pounds of USDA food deliveries in the past few weeks, which would cost an estimated $300,000 to replace some of the canceled USDA items through June. The SF-Marin Food Bank, like Second Harvest, said it is too early to determine all of the changes that may be coming from the USDA and what the long-term impact might be. Local food providers say they are hoping additional private donations can help offset some of these cuts. The Source Second Harvest of Silicon Valley, San Francisco Marin Food Bank, the Catholic Charities of Silicon Valley

UK minister said NHS could use Dyson ventilators so they could be ‘sold abroad'
UK minister said NHS could use Dyson ventilators so they could be ‘sold abroad'

The Guardian

time03-03-2025

  • Business
  • The Guardian

UK minister said NHS could use Dyson ventilators so they could be ‘sold abroad'

A minister warned a senior official that ventilators may need to be bought from Sir James Dyson 'so that he can then market [them] internationally' as 'being used in UK hospitals' after the businessman spoke to Boris Johnson, the Covid inquiry has heard. The message from Lord Agnew, a Tory Treasury minister, to the government's chief commercial officer, Gareth Reese Williams, emerged as the public inquiry into the pandemic started a four-week examination of procurement. The inquiry has faced criticism ahead of its latest hearings for failing to call suppliers of equipment so that they may be questioned about their conduct after evidence emerged of some companies and individuals profiting from the global crisis. In his opening submission on procurement, Pete Weatherby KC, representing the Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice UK, lamented the lack of opportunity to question suppliers about the role of political patronage in securing contracts. Weatherby said that among those whose evidence would not be heard would be David Meller of Meller Designs, a donor to Michael Gove's 2016 leadership bid, whose fashion house was referred to a VIP lane of PPE suppliers by the cabinet minister. The barrister then raised the case of Dyson, whose company was not referred to the VIP lane nor provided PPE. Dyson received a provisional order for 10,000 of for his prototype ventilator, called CoVent, in early 2020, after he responded to a call from Johnson for industry to step in amid a shortage. It has previously emerged via leaked text messages that Dyson, who was backer of Brexit, personally lobbied Johnson to ensure the firm and 'senior individuals' would not have to pay extra tax if they came to the UK to make ventilators during the pandemic. The government did not buy Dyson's ventilators but Weatherby informed the inquiry of the existence of a communication between Agnew and Reese Williams. 'With respect to Mr Dyson, he was apparently championed by both Mr Gove and the then prime minister, Mr Johnson,' Weatherby said. 'Mr Dyson is the well-known vacuum manufacturer. He took part in the ventilator challenge. 'By April, it was clear that his model would not be pursued due to clinical viability and functionality. Nevertheless, Lord Agnew, a minister, warned the government chief commercial officer, Gareth Reese Williams, in the following terms: 'We're going to have to handle Dyson carefully. I suspect we'll have to buy a few machines, get them into hospitals so that he can then market internationally, being able to say that they are being used in UK hospitals. We both need to accept that it will be a bigger decision than we can both make. Remember, he got a personal call from the PM. This can't be ignored'.' Weatherby told the inquiry that the procurement expert Prof Albert Sanchez Graells had described the manner on which Dyson was treated as an 'affront to the procurement rules'. A Dyson spokesperson said: 'Sir James Dyson responded to a personal call from the prime minister of the United Kingdom, to develop and make a medical-grade ventilator in 30 days during the national emergency. 'Dyson had no intention of manufacturing ventilators for profit. Far from receiving any commercial benefit, there was significant commercial cost to Dyson, which diverted 450 engineers away from commercial projects. 'Mercifully, treatments changed, and mass use of ventilators was no longer seen as an effective remedy, the UK Government cancelled the order it had placed, and none were ever sold overseas. 'Uniquely among the many businesses involved, James Dyson did not seek payment for any of the £20m the company spent on the project – rather this was its contribution to the national effort to save lives. In addition, Dyson did not claim any furlough money, subsidy, or government loans related to the Covid-19 pandemic anywhere in the world.' Earlier in the day, the inquiry chair, Heather Hallett, a former court of appeal judge, said she would hold a special closed session about PPE Medpro, the firm linked to Michelle Mone and her husband, Doug Barrowman, to avoid prejudicing a criminal inquiry by the National Crime Agency. It also emerged that the company, along with Mone and Barrowman, had applied for 'core participant' status at the inquiry alongside groups such as bereaved families and the British Medical Association, giving them special rights including disclosure of documents and ability to make statements. Lady Hallett said she had rejected the application, which came 468 days after the deadline. 'I do not accept that applicants have a direct or significant role in the matters to be investigated by the inquiry,' she said. Mone and Barrowman both deny wrongdoing.

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