The people who supply food in America are facing hunger

Climate change and rising costs are forcing many farmworkers in the U.S. to struggle with food insecurity.

Ayurella Horn-Muller reports for Grist.


In short:

  • Farmworkers like Rosa Morales face extreme heat, low wages, and lack of protection while working.
  • Rising food prices and decreased crop yields due to climate change worsen their financial strain.
  • Many farmworkers are ineligible for federal aid, leading to reliance on community gardens and food pantries.

Key quote:

“When we talk about supply chains and food prices going up, we are not thinking about the people who are producing that food, or getting it off the fields and onto our plates.”

— Nezahualcoyotl Xiuhtecutli, National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition

Why this matters:

Farmworkers, who are already among the lowest-paid laborers in the country, are bearing the brunt of climate-driven disasters and inflation. Extreme weather events like droughts, floods, and heatwaves are reducing crop yields and disrupting work schedules. This not only diminishes their earnings but also exacerbates the physical strain of their jobs. The rising costs of living, driven by inflation, are stretching their already thin budgets to the breaking point.

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