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Iowa food bank warns of strain as SNAP cuts loom

In Feeding America’s most recent survey of food banks, 85% of responding food banks reported seeing demand for food assistance increase or stay the same in April compared to March 2024.
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In Feeding America’s most recent survey of food banks, 85% of responding food banks reported seeing demand for food assistance increase or stay the same in April compared to March 2024.

Chrystal Blair - Public News Service

Iowa families could soon face tougher times putting food on the table.

The budget reconciliation bill passed by Congress this summer is set to hit the state with higher costs for food assistance and leaders said charities are not able to fill the gap. In 2023, nearly one in eight Iowans, close to 400,000 people, struggled with food insecurity, including more than 120,000 children.

Annette Hacker, chief communications and strategy officer for Food Bank of Iowa, warned of a ripple effect. She said the generous donors her organization depends on are also feeling the pinch.

"They too, as generous as they are, have to look at their cost of living and what they pay for groceries, and all the commitments that they have," Hacker observed. "It's all happening simultaneously."

Cuts to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's emergency food program have caused food banks to lose more than one-point-four million meals in some regions, forcing them to scramble for alternatives.

Hacker pointed out the new budget bill represents the largest cut to food assistance in history, stripping away the equivalent of 6 billion meals a year. However, she added Food Bank of Iowa remains committed to helping those in need, currently supplying clients by purchasing 57% of their own inventory

"The last few years, USDA has made up 25% to 30% of our inventory," Hacker explained. "But when USDA is diminished – as it is right now – bottom line, in order to keep food coming in the door to stock the shelves, we've got to fundraise more."

Hacker emphasized it is only the first wave. In two years, Iowa could face between $26 million and $79 million in additional SNAP costs, depending on the state’s error rate.