Reports continue to roll out underscoring food insecurity facing many Texans, and newly released numbers paint a troubling picture of hunger issues affecting older adults across the state.
The North Texas Food Bank has said nearly 1.1 million older adults are experiencing food insecurity in the Lone Star State, second highest in the country.
In a post-pandemic world, said Trisha Cunningham, the food bank's president and CEO, those 50 and older keep having to make tradeoffs when it comes to securing basic necessities.
"Do I buy food or do I pay my rent? Or, do I buy my medicine - because all of the costs have gone up so significantly," she said, "including housing and rent costs and insurance."
Officials have said food-assistance programs are a critical lifeline. However, many eligible seniors don't participate due to a range of barriers and stigmas. The heightened awareness comes as Congress debates a reauthorization of the Farm Bill, which not only funds SNAP benefits, but also the Commodity Supplemental Food Program for seniors.
For that specific program, Cunningham said, there is a waiting list in the areas they serve.
Cunningham said pandemic aid was helping many people on fixed incomes stay afloat, but when that extra support dried up, these individuals had to adjust in an era of higher-consumer prices.
"So, now we're seeing those families and senior citizens, they're now also having to go to a local food pantry to get assistance as well," she said, "just because they don't have enough monthly income to be able to meet their needs."
This latest report also reinforces previous research showing that seniors and older adults of color experience food insecurity at disproportionately higher rates compared with whites. Meanwhile, Cunningham said boosting food access among seniors helps reduce chronic health conditions.
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California is home to more than 181,000 people who are unhoused, with 75,000 in Los Angeles alone, so the Los Angeles Food Policy Council will host a panel discussion today on options for getting healthy food to the unhoused population.
The event will feature firsthand accounts from people experiencing homelessness, plus experts from local agencies and nonprofits.
Alba Velasquez, executive director of the council, said the discussion is aimed at finding solutions.
"We want to center our conversation around what sorts of policies need to be in place in order to make systemic change that would allow more, healthier food options to be easily accessible to some of our most vulnerable communities," Velasquez explained.
She noted the panel will hear from community members with lived experience and will explore a more dignified approach to providing food, favoring healthier, more thoughtful choices, instead of defaulting to cheap, convenient options like instant noodles or pasta.
Velasquez suggested policymakers look for ways to increase acceptance of electronic benefits transfer at local restaurants for hot meals.
"How do we make hot meals easier to access for folks that don't have refrigeration units to store, or don't even have a secure place to stay, because they're constantly moving?" Velasquez asked.
The panel, which is open to the public, will take place at 10 a.m. today at the Huffington Center in Koreatown. Speakers include the host of a podcast called "We the unhoused," as well as representatives from the Los Angeles Community Action Network, the Los Angeles City Controller's office, the Los Angeles Homeless Service Authority and the Skid Row People's Market.
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In observance of Hunger Action Month, a new statewide collaborative has launched to address food insecurity in South Dakota.
Nearly 14% of U.S. households struggled getting food last year, according to new U.S. Department of Agriculture data.
That includes over 100,000 South Dakotans, said Timothy Meagher, who's on the steering committee for the South Dakota Healthy Nutrition Collaborative.
Its members are looking to tackle food insecurity by integrating a network of resources - from healthcare groups and universities, to community foundations and food producers.
Meagher said the group aims to "align resources to actions."
"Because we believe we can improve nutrition," said Meagher, "decrease the disease, and provide every South Dakota citizen with an opportunity to be the best version of themselves."
Along with the new national data, USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack said in a statement that the high rate of food insecurity is "a direct outcome of congressional actions" - including blocking the expansion of the Child Tax Credit, and restricting access to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP).
Meagher said the collaborative's one-year goals include assessing the landscape of organizations that deal with hunger and improving coordination among them, elevating voices of advocates, researchers and people experiencing food insecurity, and advancing policy to address the issue.
"Basically, we're putting on a whiteboard," said Meagher, "'Here's what we know collectively. What do we need to know, and how do we take action on it?'"
Nutritious diets can help prevent cancer and heart disease, which are the two leading causes of death in the state, according to the South Dakota Department of Health.
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By Kristi Eaton for The Daily Yonder.
Broadcast version by Deborah Van Fleet for Nebraska News Connection reporting for The Daily Yonder-Public News Service Collaboration
The links between climate change, farmers and nutrition in low-income countries is a matter of national security in the United States, said an official with the Farm Journal Foundation, a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization that released a new report.
"If you're hungry, you're going to do just about anything you need to do to feed yourself and your family, especially if you are a mom, and you will go hungry yourself to feed your child," Katie Lee, vice president of government affairs at Farm Journal Foundation, told the Daily Yonder.
"That leads to all sorts of challenging situations where that is more of an issue. We still have hungry people in the United States. But it is a far more dire issue in lower-income countries - just in terms of sheer percentage of populations of people who are dealing with either acute hunger where they're on the brink of starvation, or general hunger, where they're not having regular access to food, let alone nutritious food."
Lee was referring to a study that found weather events over the past several years have led to lower harvests, lost agricultural incomes and increasing food prices. All those factors contribute to increasing rates of malnutrition, according to the report by Ramya Ambikapathi and Daniel Mason-D'Croz, senior research associates at Cornell University's College of Agriculture and Life Sciences' Department of Global Development.
About 3 billion people around the world are unable to afford a well-balanced, healthy diet that includes whole grains, fruits, vegetables, and animal-sourced foods, the study found. People in low- and middle-income countries, where farming is often the main source of income, are feeling the brunt of the impact.
Women farmers were a centerpiece to the report.
Ambikapathi, one of the report authors, said women feel the impacts of climate change more severely than men due to higher exposure and sensitivity. She pointed out that a crop loss or a small pest infestation can have devastating effects because they cannot address it as easily because of lower access to information and financial services compared to men.
"I think one of the more classic (impacts is that when women are primarily responsible for getting water, and the more you see drought-like conditions, (they) have to go further and further," Ambikapathi said in a Zoom interview with the Daily Yonder. "There's also a lot of new reports that come out that gender-based violence increases with climate change."
Study co-author Mason-D'Croz echoed that sentiment. Vulnerable groups have less access to resources, he said.
"When you do have some sort of an external shock, whether climate, pests and disease, economic shock of some sort - these groups almost always are the ones who get hit the hardest, because they have the least capacity to absorb it," Mason-D'Croz said in a Zoom interview.
The report makes recommendations for what U.S. policymakers can do to support global nutrition security. The recommendations include supporting investments in agricultural research and development; investing in programs that benefit women's nutrition and womenwho work in agriculture and food systems; and increasing support for programs that improve farmers' access to finance, among other recommendations.
Lee said the study points to policy actions the U.S. could take. "We have lots of opportunities through appropriations and funding and the Farm Bill to support ag development and innovation, and address challenges like climate change, global hunger and malnutrition and things like high input costs that hurt farmers, bottom lines, and more," she said.
In addition to global nutrition being a U.S. national security issue, Lee said there are also concerns about pests and health risks, including animal diseases. Thirdly, there are economic and trade angles that suggest a focus on climate change and global nutrition should be a U.S. priority.
"If we're looking at where the trade opportunities are going forward, it's in places like Africa," Lee said. "And there are huge markets and a huge rapidly growing population, where, through working with smallholder farmers to try to build up incomes in those countries, there's a huge opportunity for U.S. agriculture."
Finally, she added, it's simply the right thing to do.
"We should be taking a view that anyone who is hungry in this world, any child or a mother, who is hungry, is not acceptable," she said.
Kristi Eaton wrote this article for The Daily Yonder.
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