U.S. Congressman Jim Mcgovern (Ma02) End Hunger Now Speech: House Hunger Caucus

Later this morning, I will join my colleague, Congresswoman Lynn Jenkins of Kansas, at DC Central Kitchen to officially re-launch the House Hunger Caucus. I couldn’t be happier that we are continuing this important bipartisan Caucus in the 114th Congress. I’m thrilled to have her partnership in this Caucus and I look forward to working with her. I encourage my House colleagues to join the House Hunger Caucus. As Members, we don’t have to agree on everything to agree on something. Ending hunger should be something that we can all agree on.

March 4, 2015

M. Speaker, later this morning, I will join my colleague, Congresswoman Lynn Jenkins of Kansas, at DC Central Kitchen to officially re-launch the House Hunger Caucus. I couldn’t be happier that we are continuing this important bipartisan Caucus in the 114th Congress. I’m thrilled to have her partnership in this Caucus and I look forward to working with her.

M. Speaker, several years ago, my good friend and former colleague, Republican Congresswoman Jo Ann Emerson, and I founded the House Hunger Caucus as a forum for Members to discuss, advance, engage and work on issues related to domestic and international hunger and food insecurity.

Over the years, the Hunger Caucus has hosted a number of briefings on topics ranging from introductions to the major domestic and international hunger programs to food deserts in rural and urban America to global agriculture and farmer-to-farmer initiatives to international school feeding and child nutrition programs, just to name a few.

And the Caucus doesn’t just look at existing programs. It also gets involved in emergency responses as they are unfolding. In 2011, during one of the worst droughts in recent memory, the Hunger Caucus held timely briefings on the U.S. response to the famine in the Horn of Africa. Members and staff were able to hear directly from those on the ground providing assistance to deal with this unprecedented crisis.

One of the most important objectives of the Hunger Caucus is to foster better communication among anti-hunger advocates by bringing together stakeholders from federal agencies, state and local governments, non-profits, faith-based organizations, academia and business to discuss long-term strategies for ending hunger. The Caucus also serves as a vehicle for anti-hunger organizations to communicate directly to Congress about hunger and food insecurity issues.

One of my top priorities for the Hunger Caucus this year is to make sure that we hear directly from those who have experienced hunger and poverty firsthand. We need to make sure their voices are heard in the discussions here in Washington.  

One of the greatest assets of the House Hunger Caucus is that it is bipartisan. Republican or Democrat, it is a way for Members to come together to work to end hunger.

M. Speaker, hunger touches every one of us here in this House. There is not a congressional district that is hunger free. According to the USDA, more than 17.5 million American households were food insecure in 2013, meaning that their access to adequate food was limited by a lack of money or other resources.  5.6 percent of households were considered to have very low food security. In other words, those households were hungry.

Hunger disproportionately affects the most vulnerable among us – children, seniors and the disabled. Last year, 16 million children, or 1 in 5, experienced hunger. And, increasingly veterans and military families are experiencing hunger.

On the international side, about 805 million people in the world, or one in nine, suffer from hunger, according to the most recent U.N. reports.  This is a decrease of 100 million over the past decade and 209 million since the early 1990s.  

The U.S. can be proud of its leadership in reducing global hunger and addressing the root causes of food insecurity. Through partnerships with other nations, international organizations, and our own farmers, NGOs and private sector communities, we are advancing agricultural development, increasing child nutrition, reducing malnutrition among infants and children, empowering small farmers around the globe, especially women, and providing nutritious meals in school settings.  While the journey is long, we now have a proven and coordinated set of programs that effectively address global hunger.

M. Speaker, as we re-establish the Hunger Caucus, I can’t think of a better location to do it at than DC Central Kitchen, a unique anti-hunger organization that prepares five thousand meals a day for more than 80 local non-profit partners helping those going through tough times. One of DC Central Kitchen’s greatest strengths is its Culinary Jobs Training program, where men and women who have faced the most difficult of situations - homelessness, addiction or incarceration - participate in a rigorous job training program to prepare for culinary careers.

As part of our kick-off this week, the Hunger Caucus will host a briefing for House staff entitled “Domestic Hunger 101” tomorrow at 1:00 PM. The briefing will be given by CRS experts and is intended to present a broad overview of the major domestic federal anti-hunger programs.

I look forward to continuing the important work of the House Hunger Caucus with Congresswoman Jenkins. I encourage my House colleagues to join the House Hunger Caucus. As Members, we don’t have to agree on everything to agree on something. Ending hunger should be something that we can all agree on.