[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 172 (Tuesday, December 21, 2010)]
[House]
[Page H8918]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                             END HUNGER NOW

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the 
gentleman from Massachusetts (Mr. McGovern) is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. McGOVERN. Madam Speaker, as we near the end of 2010 and the 111th 
Congress, I want to take a few minutes to talk about an issue that is 
critically important to the health and the well-being of our country. 
It's also an issue that I care deeply about and it's an issue that's 
rarely discussed. And that issue, Madam Speaker, is hunger. I've said 
it over and over again, but it bears repeating. Hunger is a political 
condition. We know how to end hunger in America. We have the resources 
to do it. What we need is the political will to make it happen.
  We've made some important progress over the last few years. We 
enacted historic improvements in the food stamp program, now called 
SNAP. WIC, the program that ensures that pregnant mothers and their 
newborns and infant children have access to nutritious food, has been 
fully funded. Food banks received the assistance they need to fill 
their shelves as they worked to put food in the hands of hungry 
families. We passed the Hunger-Free Communities Act, a law that 
provides localized grants to combat hunger around the country. The farm 
bill included historic improvements to antihunger programs--most 
importantly, indexing SNAP to inflation. The Recovery Act did even more 
by increasing emergency funds to SNAP beneficiaries, allowing them to 
buy more food at a time when their incomes were falling because of the 
economy. Finally, on December 13, President Obama signed the Healthy, 
Hunger-Free Kids Act into law. This will improve the quality of food 
served at schools to our Nation's children.
  Madam Speaker, I have been honored to serve as the cochair of the 
House Hunger Caucus, and I want to thank my colleagues on that caucus, 
Democrat and Republican, for their commitment to this critical issue. I 
especially want to thank Jo Ann Emerson for her incredible work. But we 
have much more to do.
  The USDA recently released their annual food insecurity, or hunger, 
statistics. The simple and unfortunate fact is this: Because of the 
economy, hunger is getting worse in America, not better. In 2009, the 
number of hungry Americans increased by 1 million over the previous 
year. According to the latest data, over 50 million Americans, 
including 17.2 million children, went hungry at some point in 2009. 
Madam Speaker, these are the highest numbers ever collected by USDA. 
And if that weren't bad enough, future SNAP funds--money provided under 
the Recovery Act--have been raided for other critical programs.
  Madam Speaker, I love this institution and I am honored to serve as a 
Member of Congress, but it is a peculiar place. None of my colleagues, 
Democrats or Republicans, will tell you that they are pro-hunger. 
You'll never see a Member of Congress take a bottle out of the mouth of 
a hungry baby or swipe a can of beans that has been donated to a local 
food bank, but that's precisely what we will be doing if we choose to 
balance the budget on the backs of the poor and the hungry in this 
country.
  I want to tackle our deficit as badly as anyone else. And in order to 
dig ourselves out of this fiscal hole, then all of us will need to 
sacrifice--not just the poor and not just the middle class. It is 
simply unacceptable to provide billions in tax relief for millionaires 
and billionaires while at the same time cutting programs that literally 
put food in the mouths of hungry people.
  Ending hunger is not just the right thing to do--it's also in the 
best interest of our Nation's future. It's a national security issue. 
It's an education issue. It's a jobs issue. It's a health care issue. 
It's a productivity issue. It's a fiscal health issue.
  We have a lot of work to do, Madam Speaker. The President said he's 
committed to ending childhood hunger by 2015, but we're not doing 
enough to reach that goal. Budgets will be tight for the foreseeable 
future, and it's going to be difficult to fund these vital programs. 
I've repeatedly called on the White House to convene a conference on 
hunger and nutrition. Let's develop a comprehensive plan to tackle this 
terrible problem.
  But, Madam Speaker, this issue is not going away. We must not ignore 
the needs of the hungry in America. We must continue to work with 
antihunger groups, nutrition groups, religious groups, and the 
administration and others to finally end hunger in America.
  We can do this. We can end hunger in America if we have the political 
will to do it. I urge my colleagues in the 112th Congress to join in 
this effort.

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