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A Career Dedicated to Building More Inclusive Food Systems

December 16, 2022 USDA Research, Education, and Economics Communications Team

33.8 million – that’s the number of people in the U.S. who lived in food-insecure households in 2021, according to USDA’s Economic Research Service. Fortunately, USDA and leaders like Tambra Raye Stevenson are working to tackle nutrition insecurity – especially in underserved communities.

Equity Research and Science

Alternative Uses for Fladry

December 15, 2022 Gail Keirn, Wildlife Services Communication Program Specialist, APHIS

Wildlife Services (WS) experts are exploring how fladry, a nonlethal tool used to protect cattle, sheep, and other livestock from wolves, can prevent other wildlife damage.

Animals

ARS Project Supports Indigenous Seed Sovereignty

November 29, 2022 Scott Elliott, ARS Office of Communications

USDA’s Agricultural Research Service (ARS) is helping ensure that native plants with cultural, historical, medicinal, and edible significance remain available for future generations.

Equity Research and Science

Becoming a Tree Climber: Training in the Trees

November 28, 2022 Merilyn Navarro Sanchez, Communications Intern, USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service

For the first time ever, expert tree climbers with the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service’s (APHIS) Asian Longhorned Beetle (ALB) Eradication Program trained fellow APHIS employees from another program on how to climb trees with a purpose.

Animals

USDA Helps Promote the Power of Powwow Dancing and Career Possibilities

November 18, 2022 Stephanie Ho, Acting Communications Lead, USDA Office of Partnerships and Public Engagement

Roland Begaye, 28, believes in family, friends, colleagues, and the power of powwow dancing. As a member of the Navajo Nation, in Arizona, he has had many opportunities to watch and participate as a skilled powwow dancer himself.

Equity Initiatives

Tribal Food Sovereignty a Focus of NAFDPIR Conference

November 14, 2022 Keri Bradford-Gomez (Choctaw), Senior Technical Advisor, Food and Nutrition Service

When you recognize the food on your plate, you recall memories of sharing meals with loved ones.

Equity Food and Nutrition Initiatives Nutrition Security

Omaha Tribe of Nebraska WIC Garden Partners with Community for Nutrition Education

November 08, 2022 Cheryl Kennedy, Mountain Plains Regional Administrator, USDA Food and Nutrition Service

It was a sunny fall day in mid-October when I had the honor of visiting the Omaha Nation WIC program. Upon meeting WIC Director Jessika Free-Bass, I visited the Tribe's WIC garden, which they use to grow produce for client nutrition education. For the Omaha Tribe, nutrition education is a community...

Equity Nutrition Security

Tracking Citrus Health in the Texas Rio Grande Valley

November 07, 2022 Nohelia Lopez-Izaguirre, APHIS Public Affairs Intern

Growing up in the Texas Rio Grande Valley - in the richness of Mexican-Texan culture, tradition, and food - citrus is a staple in our everyday life. But I never knew that diseases threatened citrus production. That changed this summer. As a communications intern, I had the opportunity to job shadow...

Animals Plants

Cultural Relevance in SNAP-Ed: Let’s Get “Real”

November 01, 2022 Kimberly Burgess, Public Affairs Director, Southwest Region Food and Nutrition Service, Teresa Jackson, Tribal Partnership and Outcomes Partner and Stephany Parker, Program Planning and Evaluation Partner, Oklahoma Tribal Engagement Partners team

Oklahoma Tribal Engagement Partners, or OKTEP, collaborates with sovereign tribal nations and tribal organizations throughout Oklahoma to tailor SNAP-Ed programming to meet the needs of Native families. Over time, focus groups have expressed what matters to Natives: the need to be “real.” As...

Equity Food and Nutrition Nutrition Security

More than just a co-op: How Cooperatives Strengthen Economic Power

October 24, 2022 Darrah Perryman, Public Affairs Specialist, USDA Rural Development

On the brinks of Beaufort, South Carolina, lies the brimming, remote island of St. Helena where the Gullah farmers are hard at work. For years, the Gullah Geechee community, an African American ethnic group located in the low region of the U.S., have struggled to make a living off their biggest...

Equity Rural