Here is the text of a message that New Mexico First sent out for the special session. The requests are based on priorities identified by the Food, Hunger, Water, and Agricultural Policy Workgroup and New Mexico Food and Agriculture Policy Council.
Our volunteer legislators and committed public servants at the
Legislative Finance Committee have been presented with tough decisions
during very trying times. We sincerely appreciate and respect their
service on behalf of New Mexico. Before the session, a coalition of
coalitions and multi-stakeholder groups worked together to identify
policy and funding priorities in light of the pandemic.
The Food,
Hunger, Water, and Agricultural Policy Workgroup and New Mexico Food and
Agriculture Policy Council and members of our coalition/council have
affirmed the need to support the following priorities. Please act now and contact your legislators
and encourage policymakers to consider alternatives to the Legislative
Finance Committee's recommendation to cut these critical programs.
Investing in Healthy Food Systems
We
are also concerned about recommended cuts in funding to some of the
critical infrastructure that bolsters agriculture in New Mexico through
programs like the NM Cooperative Extension Services and Agricultural Experimentation Stations.
At a time when national supply chain issues have impacted access to
food, investing in healthy local food systems is critical and while a 4%
cut is less than some other proposed cut, short-sighted at a time when
agriculture needs more support than ever as a critical part of our
economy and as a social determinant of public health. Similarly, the
proposed cuts to the NM Department of Agriculture can affect support for farmers' markets and promotion programs, Soil and Water Conservation Districts, and the healthy soil program.
Cuts to these programs can impact the ability to leverage federal and
philanthropic investments, risking significant progress that has been
achieved to build local markets and sustain our natural resources to
support food production.
School Meals
LFC's recommendation to step back from the Elimination of Co-pays for School Breakfast and Lunch with
a less significant investment than the $650K appropriated during the
regular session is profoundly concerning. With childhood hunger
increasing, this recommendation is counter to our shared commitments to
address child hunger.
NM Grown Fruits and Vegetables for School Meals: Legislature Appropriations:
$400K: LFC recommended a decrease to $204K (bottom of p. 19), which is a
big cut. We know that the NM Public Education Department has
commitments to 58 School Food Authorities for the $400K (if it can be
maintained) to start purchasing NM grown fruits and vegetables for
school meals over the coming months. NM PED received more than $750K in
requests. As we know, this is an economic driver for farmers who have
already planted their fields in preparation to sell to schools and
senior centers. School districts are shifting the ways they prepare and
provide school meals, yet they are still planning to buy local produce
to incorporate into meal programs.
Meals for Seniors
We are very excited about the Kiki Saavedra Senior Dignity Fund that
the Legislature appropriated $7.3M. We see that the LFC has recommended
a $1M decrease. We hope this program will be maintained even if there
is a cut. As a state with one of the fastest-growing senior populations,
and we are seeing so many more needs for seniors through the lens of
COVID-19, we look forward to the Kiki Saavedra Program being of benefit
to many. We believe this is the right type of funding to help build the NM Grown Fruits and Vegetables for Senior Meal Programs.
We just finalized a three-county (Sandoval, Socorro, and San Juan)
pilot project with the Aging and Long Term Services Department, senior
centers, and farmers. Even amid COVID-19, 15 senior centers served 6,160
meals weekly (curbside and home-delivered), incorporating $50,000 of
New Mexico grown produce in the meals. A small request of the Kiki Fund
could really benefit the growth of this program across the state!
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