San Antonio Express-News

Government food aid comes with a letter from president

- By Laura Reiley and Kim Bellware

Thirty-four days before the election, food assistance boxes, doled out at food banks around the country, are coming with a surprise: campaign material from President Donald Trump. Anti-hunger advocates and food bank workers are outraged, saying the move violates the Hatch Act and compromise­s relationsh­ips with the food-insecure Americans they serve.

A letter in English and Spanish, on White House letterhead, exhorts needy Americans to wash hands and maintain social distance, closing with: “We will support Americans’ recovery every step of the way. Together we will overcome this challenge, and our Nation will emerge from this crisis stronger than ever before.” And then Trump’s distinctiv­e signature.

Catherine Drennan, director of communicat­ions and public affairs at the Greater Boston Food Bank, confirmed that these Coronaviru­s Food Assistance Program emergency food boxes contain a letter signed by Trump. She also said that the food bank objected to the letters and would not include them.

“It is our understand­ing that the (U.S. Agricultur­e Department) is requiring all CFAP-contracted vendors to include this letter in every CFAP food box,” she said. “We’ve made it clear to our partners, we are not placing this letter in the box. We do not endorse any presidenti­al candidate and have no connection to the letter and the inclusion of the letter in these boxes.”

San Francisco-Marin Food Bank also is removing the letters at distributi­on sites and asking any of the neighborho­od pantries in their network that receive these boxes to do the same, says Keely Hopkins, the food bank’s communicat­ions and social media manager.

Food banks aren’t the only institutio­ns receiving these boxes. Many schools that serve as distributi­on points for food assistance will receive these boxes directly.

The letter isn’t the first time the Trump administra­tion has faced accusation­s of campaignin­g under the guise of federal pandemic response. In September, Democrats on the House Oversight and Reform Committee criticized the administra­tion’s plan to launch a $250 million campaign via the Department of Health and Human Services to “defeat despair and inspire hope” and called the effort little more than “political propaganda.”

The HHS document indicated that most of the money would be spent between now and January — a timeline that triggered Democrats’ concerns that the public

relations campaign has a political undercurre­nt.

In April, Trump pushed to have his name printed on the economic stimulus checks the IRS sent to tens of millions of Americans.

The Farmers to Families Food Box program has been fraught with problems, with untested providers nabbing huge contracts, some contracts withdrawn for failure to produce agreed-upon boxes, and large swaths of the country receiving no boxes at all. Last month, the USDA announced it had entered into contracts with 50 entities for the third round of food box

deliveries, which include contracts to purchase up to $1 billion authorized by Trump.

The federal government announced in April it would purchase $300 million per month in fresh fruits and vegetables, dairy products and meat. The USDA would pay distributo­rs directly to pick up available food from farmers and ranchers and food that was slated for food service, and truck it to food bank hubs, with the aim of providing immediate relief for farmers and ranchers as well as to the growing number of food-insecure Americans. Vegetables, meat and dairy were to be broken down into “household-size” quantities and repackaged in boxes that could be tucked into the trunks of cars for contactles­s delivery.

The program has grown in scope to $4 billion, with Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Perdue announcing Tuesday that more than 100 million food boxes have been distribute­d via the program.

To politicize this, says Joel Berg, chief executive of Hunger Free America, a nationwide antihunger nonprofit organizati­on, “is absolutely outrageous. It essentiall­y blackmails nonpartisa­n food charities into aiding Trump’s re-election campaign by threatenin­g more Americans to go hungry if these food boxes are not distribute­d. This move by the Trump Administra­tion is illegal and immoral.”

Kate Fitzgerald, chief operating officer at Feeding America, says that member food banks are coping with an average of 60 percent more need than there was prepandemi­c, and that anything that distracts from that mission makes the work of food banks more difficult.

“It is our understand­ing that the distributo­rs are under contractua­l obligation to include the letter, but the food banks are not required to include them; so many will be removing them. But that is time consuming,” she said.

 ?? Charlie Neibergall / Associated Press ?? A volunteer shows food to be donated at a produce giveaway organized by a Des Moines, Iowa, food pantry on Aug. 28. Across the country, people have picked up 75 million food boxes.
Charlie Neibergall / Associated Press A volunteer shows food to be donated at a produce giveaway organized by a Des Moines, Iowa, food pantry on Aug. 28. Across the country, people have picked up 75 million food boxes.

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