“So we need changes on all levels of the food supply chain,” said Miguel Gómez with Cornell’s Dyson School of Applied Economics, adding that those changes won’t come quickly. But in the meantime, “I am convinced that this is a huge opportunity to develop local and regional food systems.”
Gomez also said the USDA’s investment could be a good step towards bolstering those systems.
“It’s a way to decentralize, or to localize our food systems so that we do not depend on only one or two origins for our food,” he said.
The program will give state and tribal governments funds to buy locally grown food for nutritional assistance programs, like school cafeterias and food banks.
Erin Pulling heads up Food Bank of the Rockies, which operates in Northern Colorado and across Wyoming. She said feeding those communities has become three times as expensive since the start of the pandemic.
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