Monthly benefits for Americans to buy food and promoting exercise and healthy eating included in ambitious White House project to requires MORE money from Congress
- The Biden administration is laying out its plan to meet an ambitious goal of ending hunger in the U.S. by 2030
- The plan includes expanding monthly benefits that help low-income Americans buy food
- The administration also seeks to increase healthy eating and physical activity so that fewer people are afflicted with diabetes, obesity and hypertension
- It said it would work to expand Medicaid and Medicare access to obesity counseling and nutrition
- Biden is hosting a conference on Wednesday on hunger, nutrition and health, the first by the White House since 1969
The Biden administration is laying out its plan to meet an ambitious goal of ending hunger in the U.S. by 2030, including expanding monthly benefits that help low-income Americans buy food.
The administration, in a plan released Tuesday, is also seeking to increase healthy eating and physical activity so that fewer people are afflicted with diabetes, obesity, hypertension and other diet-related diseases.
It said it would work to expand Medicaid and Medicare access to obesity counseling and nutrition.
‘The consequences of food insecurity and diet-related diseases are significant, far reaching, and disproportionately impact historically underserved communities,’ Biden wrote in a memo outlining the White House strategy. ‘Yet, food insecurity and diet-related diseases are largely preventable, if we prioritize the health of the nation.’
Biden is hosting a conference this week on hunger, nutrition and health, the first by the White House since 1969.
That conference, under President Richard Nixon, was a pivotal moment that influenced the U.S. food policy agenda for 50 years.
It led to a greatly expanded food stamps program and gave rise to the Women, Infants and Children program, which serves half the babies born in the U.S. by providing women with parenting advice, breastfeeding support and food assistance.
Over the years, cuts to federal programs coupled with stigmas over welfare and big changes to how food and farming systems are run have prompted declines in access to food.
Biden, a Democrat, is hoping this week’s conference is similarly transformative.
But the goal of Nixon, a Republican, also was ‘to put an end to hunger in America for all time.’
And yet 10% of U.S. households in 2021 suffered food insecurity, meaning they were uncertain they could get enough food to feed themselves or their families because they lacked money or resources for food, according to the Food and Drug Administration.
To succeed, Biden needs buy-in from the private sector and an increasingly partisan Congress.