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Ohio groups discuss priorities to address food insecurity in the upcoming 2023 farm bill

Alejandro Figueroa
/
WYSO
U.S. Sen Sherrod Brown touring the Mid-Ohio Food Collective in Grove City, just outside Columbus.

Several Ohio food access advocacy groups got together in Columbus at the Mid-Ohio Food Collective on Thursday to discuss priorities on how to address food insecurity in the state in the upcoming 2023 Farm Bill.

is a massive bill package passed by Congress every five years. It shapes the country's entire food system. It funds agricultural programs and commodities, provides support for sustainable farming research and also funds crop insurance.

Three quarters of it funds food nutrition programs that serve food banks, low income families and seniors.

It鈥檚 also up for renewal next year and groups from across Ohio 鈥 including food banks, food access advocacy groups, farmers, manufactures and economists 鈥 want to see several more sustainable food systems investments that work for all Ohioans.

U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-OH) 鈥 who鈥檚 in the Senate Agriculture Committee 鈥 stopped by and met with groups to talk about what they want to prioritize on the farm bill.

Brown said he knows many Ohioans are still feeling the effects of the pandemic, and Congress can do more to support food access for families who need it.

鈥淭he farm bill, if done right, will focus on local foods without the transportation costs and moving around the country, getting local foods, fresher foods, more nutritious foods on people's tables,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t will increase the prosperity of rural Ohio, which is always struggling, and it will obviously help those families.鈥

Lisa Hamler-Fugitt, the executive director of the Ohio Association of Food Banks, said she wants to see legislators strengthen both local food systems and federal supplemental food programs in the state this round.

鈥淚f you want to be able to feed yourself and your family, to be able to have access to fresh, affordable sources of locally grown food, then the farm bill is where you need to be at,鈥 Hamler-Fugitt said. 鈥淗unger is not a partisan issue, nor should the farm bill be.鈥

Alejandro Figueroa
/
WYSO
Food Collective volunteers loading carts of food for a distribution at the food bank.

Specifically, advocates want to see more support for programs like the. Through that program, the USDA purchases a variety of foods like fresh vegetables, meat and fish and shelf stable foods and distributes it to different organizations across the country.

Groups want to see increased funding for 鈥 which funds projects that reduce waste at the food producer level and then pays for the cost of donating that food to food banks.

Advocates also said there needs to be more support to keep people from falling into a cycle of poverty and food insecurity. Lauren Tapple with the Dayton Foodbank Inc., said that means expanding eligibility for the Supplemental Food Nutrition Program (SNAP).

鈥淥nce you get a job, once you're making a certain level of income those benefits cease to exist because they are making a certain level of income and then those benefits go away and they can no longer afford groceries.鈥

Tappel is describing the benefit cliff. It means a positive change in someone鈥檚 personal finances could disqualify them from SNAP or other benefits when they鈥檙e still not financially stable to support the loss of those benefits.

In Ohio, over 1,500,000 people are enrolled in SNAP. Tappel said finding long term solutions for Ohioans enrolled in that program is something that still needs to be looked at.

鈥淲e talk about these different benefits and how to truly uplift people out of food insecurity, so what does that really look like? What does it look like if you are unemployed, if you are on disability. How do we really support those people?鈥 Tappel said.

Hamler-Fugitt said she believes advocacy groups across the state can move the needle toward a more food secure Ohio. She added she鈥檚 looking forward to working with elected officials to make sure Ohio is leading the national conversation around ways to promote food security.

鈥淣ow's the time to bring attention to this. A lot of people want to put the economic woes in the rearview mirror. The pandemic is not over,鈥 Hamler-Fugitt said. 鈥淪o this is really an opportunity to bring to the forefront and prepare Congress for this really important task of the next farm bill.鈥

Alejandro Figueroa is a corps member with , a national service program that places journalists into local newsrooms. Support for WYSO's reporting on food and food insecurity in the Miami Valley comes from the .
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Alejandro Figueroa