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More and more people are finding themselves living paycheck to paycheck in the greater Tampa Bay region. In some places, rent has doubled. The cost of everyday goods — like gas and groceries — keeps creeping up. All the while, wages lag behind and the affordable housing crisis looms. Amid cost-of-living increases, WUSF is focused on documenting how people are making ends meet.

Florida boosts funding for a farm-to-food bank partnership in response to federal cuts

Florida's commissioner of agriculture stands to speak at a lecturn. There's three people beside him and a backdrop that reads "Feeding Florida."
Gabriella Paul
/
WUSF
Florida Agriculture Commissioner Wilton Simpson speaks at Feeding Tampa Bay on Thursday, Aug. 14, to kick off the new statewide Farmers Feeding Florida initiative.

The state allocated $38 million to the Farmers Feeding Florida program. The new statewide initiative helps food banks distribute surplus and discounted farm products to families in need.

Florida is investing in a program that will help local farmers and hungry families.

Earlier this year, lawmakers allocated $38 million toward Farmers Feeding Florida, a new statewide initiative to expand an existing food purchase program between local growers and food banks.

The state-run program is modeled after two federal food-purchasing programs, under the U.S. Department of Agriculture, that were canceled by the Trump Administration earlier this year.

ALSO READ: DOGE cuts could stop some families from getting fresh produce from local farmers

The $1 billion in USDA cuts would have meant a $34 million shortfall in available funds for growers and food banks in Florida, according to Robin Safley, the executive director at Feeding Florida.

Now, that’s no longer the case.

Florida’s historic investment in Farmers Feeding Florida, at $38 million compared to $6.5 million last fiscal year, will be used to expand food purchases beyond locally grown produce.

“We’ve been practicing this model for about 15 years with a focus on produce,” Safley said. “We started experimenting with proteins, dairy, beef, aquaculture — and so this funding will allow us to expand that.”

I think of farming as the sacred livelihood of all of us, and then when you think about people that are food insecure, that go to bed hungry every night, if you can put those two together, I think that we've created something very special.
Florida Agriculture Commissioner Wilton Simpson

The program also helps minimize food waste by prioritizing the purchase of excess or less marketable products for distribution at food banks.

Safley said there’s currently around 70 farmers and ranchers partnering with Feeding Florida, and she expects that number to keep growing.

Speaking at Feeding Tampa Bay on Thursday to kick off the new initiative, Florida Senate President Ben Albritton, R-Wauchula, touted the new program that began July 1.

“The work going on here is the Lord’s work, and it’s something we can all be proud of,” he said.

Albritton, who made supporting rural Florida a top priority this session, called the program’s benefits for food-insecure families “a hand-up, not a handout.”

ALSO READ: Florida gets USDA approval to ban SNAP purchases of junk food

Florida Agriculture Commissioner Wilton Simpson, who has a background in egg farming, said the program creates a win-win for Florida farmers and hungry families.

“I think of farming as the sacred livelihood of all of us, and then when you think about people that are food insecure, that go to bed hungry every night, if you can put those two together, I think that we've created something very special."

Other concerns for families facing food insecurity in Florida remain.

Earlier this year, the Trump administration approved sweeping changes to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP. That could impact eligibility and average monthly benefits for the nearly 3 million Floridians who rely on food stamps.

Last week, Florida also got approval from the USDA to narrow the list of eligible foods SNAP beneficiaries can buy.

Gabriella Paul covers the stories of people living paycheck to paycheck in the greater Tampa Bay region for WUSF. Here’s how you can share your story with her.

I tell stories about living paycheck to paycheck for public radio at WUSF News. I’m also a corps member of Report For America, a national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms.
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