Biden to cancel Trump's pandemic food aid after high costs, delivery
problems
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[April 14, 2021]
By Christopher Walljasper
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Yogurt was everywhere
as volunteers opened boxes of fruit, frozen meat and dairy products that
had shifted and spilled in transit to a food bank in Walworth County,
Wisconsin.
They rushed to clean and transfer the packages of frozen meatballs,
apples, milk and yogurt into cars for needy families to take home before
they spoiled.
The food came from The Farmers to Families Food Box program that the
Trump administration launched to feed out-of-work Americans with food
rescued from farmers who would otherwise throw it away as the
coronavirus pandemic upended food supply chains.
The government hired hundreds of private companies last spring to buy
food no longer needed by restaurants, schools and cruise ships and haul
it to overwhelmed food banks. But the program faced spilled and spoiled
food, high costs and uneven distribution nationwide, according to
interviews with food banks and distributors, and an analysis of U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) invoice data obtained through Freedom
of Information requests.
Some of the companies charged the government more than double the
program average while delivery to food banks was sometimes late. When
the government contracted new vendors, some food banks relying on the
program stopped receiving food at all. At the same time, the contractors
delivered to churches or daycare centers that lacked adequate
refrigeration.
"Food was abandoned to spoil," said Susan Hughes, managing director of
the Walworth County Food and Diaper Pantry.
The USDA spent $4 billion on the food box program in 2020 – six times
its normal emergency food budget. After reviewing the program, President
Joe Biden's administration has decided not to continue it after May,
USDA Communications Director Matt Herrick told Reuters.
Under newly appointed Secretary Tom Vilsack, the USDA is focused on
different hunger initiatives, including expanding food stamp benefits
and increasing food purchases through existing government food
distribution programs, Herrick said.
"We're not going to replace the program," he said.
While food bank operators are thankful for the large volumes of fresh
food from the food box program - and they stress that aid is still
needed - many say far more families could have been fed by sticking to
existing programs with proven quality and oversight.
Greg Ibach, USDA's former undersecretary for marketing and regulatory
programs under the Trump administration, helped design the food box
program in about a month. He said it worked as well as other USDA
programs that took years to develop.
"We were in a hurry. People were hungry; there wasn't food in grocery
stores - if there was, they couldn't afford it," Ibach said. "We got a
lot of food out the door and in peoples' hands."
HIGH COSTS, INCONSISTENT BOXES
When the food box program was rolled out in May 2020, the Trump
administration touted it as a way of getting food to hungry Americans
quickly. But by late June, the program fell short of delivery targets,
Reuters reported. The government provided little guidance to food
pantries and sometimes inexperienced distributors, who were often left
to connect with one another on their own. [L1N2E91DJ]
After some states, including Montana and Nevada, received very little
food early on, the Trump administration in June contracted with Gold
Star Foods, a California-based school food distributor, to reach
underserved areas, Gold Star's CEO Sean Leer said in an interview.
Gold Star billed the government between $87 and $102 in October and
November for food boxes containing fruit, meat and dairy products.
That's more than double the average of similar boxes from other
companies at the time, according to USDA invoice data. Leer said the
cost reflected the increase in food and freight prices during the
pandemic supply chain disruption.
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Food boxes are packed at the nonprofit New Life Centers' food pantry
in Chicago, Illinois, U.S. March 16, 2021. Picture taken March 16,
2021. REUTERS/Daniel Acker/File Photo
Leer said the company has at times delivered the food boxes at a
loss. He noted that during the February cold snap in Texas, Gold
Star sent food to the state from California because the weather
caused supply problems in Texas.
Food delivered by Gold Star accounted for less than 2% of federal
money spent on the food box program in 2020, though that will
increase to just under 9% through April 2021, according to Reuters'
review of USDA invoice data.
Companies delivered food in varying quantities at first, making cost
comparisons between different vendors difficult. But in September
USDA standardized the food boxes at no more than 24 pounds after
feedback from food banks.
From October through December, invoice data shows seven out of 105
companies, including Gold Star Foods, charged the government double
the program's median price per pound of food. Three of those
companies were awarded contracts by the Trump administration for
nearly $32 million in January 2021.
The Biden administration says some companies may have overcharged
the USDA.
"There was an unequal cost associated with the distribution and
filling of these boxes. Some people made a significant percentage
from filling the boxes," Vilsack said on a March 3 call with
reporters.
The USDA specified food boxes delivered in 2021 to the continental
U.S. cost between $27 and $48 per box. But cheaper boxes presented
new challenges and put additional burdens on food banks, said Emily
Broad Leib, director of Harvard Law School's Food Law and Policy
Clinic. The lower-cost boxes contained lower quality food, and food
companies at times refused to deliver them to smaller pantries,
leaving local organizations scrambling to find extra money for
delivery, she said.
RURAL AREAS LEFT OUT
Though some regional food banks have taken on the labor of
delivering to multiple counties, most smaller food banks serve only
one county. Deliveries to additional counties are at the expense of
food banks, said Brian Greene, CEO of the Houston Food Bank.
Reuters' analysis of USDA data showed the program struggled in
particular to reach rural counties. While cities and well-populated
counties received millions of boxes of food, 896 counties - or
nearly a third - received none, according to USDA data.
USDA's Herrick said the Biden administration's assessment of the
program exposed problems in how the food aid was delivered.
"A lot of rural communities went unserved entirely," he said.
Counties that did receive food worked with as many as a dozen food
companies over seven months in 2020. Every six to twelve weeks, the
USDA introduced a new phase of the program, changing food suppliers
and forcing food banks to scramble to connect with new vendors or
lose food supplies.
"USDA didn't give (distributors) any guidance as to who to serve or
keep serving,” said Harvard's Broad Leib. "You can't rely on
something if one day it's there, then the next day it's not."
Despite the program's flaws, food banks say the nearly 133 million
boxes of food delivered in 2020 averted an even greater crisis.
There are hungry Americans in nearly every city and county
nationwide, said Kate Leone, senior VP of government relations at
Feeding America, a national network of food banks. The organization
estimates that about half of the children in some counties are
food-insecure - worried about where their next meal might come from.
(Reporting by Christopher Walljasper; Editing by Caroline Stauffer
and Brian Thevenot)
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