Farms.com Home   News

USW Joins Letter To Congress Opposing Proposed Significant Cuts To Food For Peace Program

U.S Wheat Associates (USW) and the National Association of Wheat Growers (NAWG) joined 90 agriculture, humanitarian, shipping, and labor organizations in signing a letter opposing a proposed reduction of $619 million to the Food for Peace Program.

The letter was addressed to the U.S. House Committee on Appropriations, which released an initial funding bill for Fiscal Year 2025. That bill included the significant cut to Food for Peace.

Ag Groups Concerned

The proposed reduction caused alarms to go off within agricultural groups that participate in food assistance programs. Food for Peace is the largest food assistance program in which USW participates. Wheat typically makes up about 60% of commodities donated under the program.

“Such a drastic cut would really be a blow, not just wheat farmers, but people involved in growing all commodities used in the program,” said Peter Laudeman, USW’s Director of Trade Policy. “This is tremendously important to a variety of American stakeholders. A crucial question about foreign aid programs is, ‘how does the U.S. best implement foreign aid policy? We think starting with American constituencies is important. And that is exactly what the Food for Peace program does – it starts with U.S. farmers growing food. That is why we were proud to sign on to that letter and push back against this substantial cut.”

House Vote Pending

The letter to the House Appropriations Committee begins by asking committee members to vote “no” on the Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2025.

“Under the current text, our nation’s flagship international food aid program Food for Peace would be funded at only $1 billion, an enormous $619 million reduction from FY24 levels, already a large cut from FY23, and dramatically below the authorized level of $2.5 billion,” the letter then explains. “Catastrophically, this further cut comes at a time of unprecedented global hunger. Now is not the time to slow the provision of much-needed aid.”

Along with USW and NAWG, other groups signing the letter included the North American Millers’ Association, the Kansas Association of Wheat Growers, and the Washington Association of Wheat Growers.

Laudeman is hopeful that the U.S. Senate’s version of the bill may not have that same drastic cut to Food for Peace. It is possible the final piece of legislation may include funding levels at or close to existing funding levels.

Click here to see more...

Trending Video

Inside the World’s Largest Hemp Processing Line – How Fiber & Hempcrete Are Made

Video: Inside the World’s Largest Hemp Processing Line – How Fiber & Hempcrete Are Made

Inside the World’s Largest Hemp Processing Line – How Fiber & Hempcrete Are Made – Let's Dive In!

as we dive into an extraordinary journey inside some of the world’s most advanced hemp processing facilities — where millions of tons of raw hemp are transformed into high-value fiber, hurd, and sustainable hempcrete. This documentary uncovers the full production line, from harvesting freshly grown hemp to refining it into materials ready for construction, textiles, and next-generation green technology.

Engage with Us: Curious about hemp processing or the future of bio-materials? Share your questions in the comments, hit the like button, and subscribe to Agriculture Insight for more in-depth documentaries on global agricultural production!

Watch now to experience the massive scale and cutting-edge engineering behind modern hemp processing. Agriculture Insight takes you deep inside the operations of large-scale hemp facilities, highlighting the innovations shaping the future of sustainable industry.