California farmers fight back after Trump administration’s cuts to USDA programs

13.05.2025    Times of San Diego    7 views
California farmers fight back after Trump administration’s cuts to USDA programs

This article was produced by Capital Main It is published here with permission Every year brings its own unique challenges for California farmers water shortages fires finding laborers to do the work bureaucrats in Sacramento adding new requirements and fees and more But the second term of President Donald Trump has made this year very different As part of deep cuts across much of the ruling body the administration of President Donald Trump chopped billion from the U S Department of Agriculture almost without warning This led to widespread financial pain that affected already struggling farmers and left hungry patrons of food banks in countless parts of the country desperate for other sources of healthy food On Feb California bureaucrats warned farmers who had grown food for schools and food banks that there was funding only for work done up to Jan despite the fact that farmers had submitted invoices for work and harvests past that date California farmers fleetly organized a phone call and email campaign over the span of seven days in early March to demand the attention of elected representatives and answers from federal officers By March their efforts were effective They would receive pay for the fall and for harvests for the rest of this year But their success was overshadowed by news that the undertaking would stop at the end of For Bryce Loewen a farmer who co-owns Blossom Bluff Orchards in Fresno County the first freeze in funding meant that the USDA failed to hand over more than it owed the business for growing food to help feed Californians who could not afford it There isn t really a good time to get stiffed for your work But during winter the slowest season on the farm there s downtime and California farmers like Loewen in recent times used that lull to fight to regain the money farmers were owed and help feed several of their the bulk vulnerable neighbors A farmer s instinct is to fix things Loewen reported And that s what we did Loewen s farm is in the small town of Parlier which has a declining population of less than On March Loewen picked up the phone to call federal agents to change their minds about the funding cut Farming is a business of slim margins and Loewen was trying to keep his farm from falling into debt he noted Loewen was just one of multiple farmers in California and around the country who called and emailed officers that day They requested why they hadn t been paid and they described the economic benefit of the USDA funds to small farms and masses healthcare services and to agencies that feed people in their own communities who are struggling Loewen left messages and wrote emails to Rep Jim Costa D-Fresno Brooke Rollins the Secretary of Agriculture and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer a Democrat from New York Other farmers also contacted Rollins their local representatives and congressional and Senate leadership on both sides of the political aisle California s vast Central Valley supplies a quarter of all food to the United States The USDA did not respond to calls and emails from Capital Main about why the cuts were made or why they were restored Neither the USDA nor Rollins have publicly acknowledged hearing from farmers about the cuts In securing payments for slightly more than nine additional months the farmers relative success might offer lessons for other groups targeted by executive cuts as they seek to claw back a few support for crucial programs California may be world famous for its beaches Hollywood and Big Tech but multiple people don t realize that the state s vast Central Valley supplies a quarter of all food to the United States In the Golden State agriculture is the backbone of various local economies from the state s southern frontier with Mexico all the way to its northern territory line with Oregon This is especially true in the state s agricultural heartland Yet multiple residents who live in what dust-bowl musician Woody Guthrie once referred to as the Pastures of Plenty cannot afford the fresh locally grown food that surrounds them in the region s villages and towns The Healthy Fresno County Region Dashboard which publishes local healthcare information published that of the county s million residents in were considered food insecure Those rates were higher for the county s Black and Hispanic residents in comparison to their white peers Since the USDA has used the term food insecurity to describe the status that leads to weakness illness and harm to families who lack stable access to food It disproportionately affects lower-income groups in the state Food insecurity includes the inability to afford a balanced diet fear that a home s food supply won t last or having to eat less because one can t afford to buy more food An insecure food supply causes physical pangs of hunger in adults as well as stress and depression particularly in mothers Limited food intake affects brain evolution in children prompting stress among preschoolers and affecting a aspirant s ability to learn basic subjects such as math and writing In California of adults with low incomes shared limited uncertain or inconsistent access to food in according to a California Wellness Interview Survey Loewen s farm helps feed specific struggling Californians with the help of money through a million federal activity called the Local Food Purchase Assistance Cooperative Agreement Campaign The California Department of Social Services distributes the funds across the state through a venture called Farms Together Farmers weren t the only ones to feel the pain of the USDA cuts between late February and March stated Paul Towers executive director of Society Alliance With Family Farmers His organization helps distribute food from small farms to food banks and school districts During a two-week period food banks did not receive any such food which left people who rely on that food aid to scramble for something to eat That s two weeks of lost income for farmers Towers disclosed And two weeks of no food Farmers learned from a Feb email from the California Department of Social Services that the USDA was late in paying for the fall s harvest The short message noted that the state was able to pay only for work done up to Jan which was the last day of Joe Biden s presidency The calling and email campaign began the next day Within six days California farmers discovered that the USDA wasn t exclusively late with the fall payment The federal agency also planned to end the local food campaign altogether before the start of In a March letter to the California Department of Social Services obtained by Capital Main USDA Agricultural Marketing Operation Deputy Administrator Jack Tuckwiller mentioned that termination of the award is appropriate The USDA ultimately honored invoices for the fall There was no explanation about how the decision was made But the farmers limited achievement was overshadowed by concerns about the large threats to population fitness and local economies when such programs end for good at the end of the year Nationwide million Americans were food insecure in according to the USDA Majority of those people live in rural counties such as Fresno County according to Feeding America a national structure of food banks and pantries By March news of the cuts was spreading The online agriculture and food approach news outlet Agri-Pulse warned in a headline Trump administration cancelling local food initiatives On March Fox News highlighted the cuts to farmers who voted disproportionately in favor of Trump during his presidential campaigns in a live interview with Rollins America s Newsroom anchor Bill Hemmer appealed Rollins to justify the billion cuts in food measure aid to schools and food banks Rollins offered conflicting responses The cuts were to pandemic-era food programs and were aimed at new and nonessential programs she commented Rollins mentioned the plan s cost had grown but didn t offer any evidence to back that up The initial iteration of the local food purchasing assistance the Farmers to Families Food Box Campaign was a multibillion dollar pandemic food aid project started during Trump s first term But Rollins didn t share that detail Speaking of other cuts made the day before the interview she added that bureaucrats had canceled more contracts on food justice for trans people in New York and San Francisco obviously that s different than the food programs in the schools but it is really major The local food purchase agreement didn t and still doesn t favor food aid or food justice to trans people It pays for farmers to grow food that goes to food banks and school districts Rollins didn t acknowledge that the cuts were overzealous or the harm that they might cause As we have invariably stated if we are making mistakes we will own those mistakes and we will reconfigure but right now from what we are viewing the local food purchase assistance activity was nonessential It was a new venture and it was an effort by the Left to continue spending taxpayer dollars that was not necessary Rollins recounted Fox News On March the Locality Alliance With Family Farmers posted on its blog The reinstatement of Farms Together is a domination worth celebrating Through collective action the voices of farmers and allies were heard but the fight isn t over Farms Together IS restored though only temporarily Our intent Towers explained was to make sure Secretary Rollins heard directly from farmers that they were harmed by the cuts to these programs Capital Main is an award-winning nonprofit publication that reports from California on the preponderance pressing economic environmental and social issues of our time including economic inequality context change medical care threats to democracy hate and extremism and immigration Copyright Capital Main

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