Howard Buffett helps start rural feeding program
Topics: From the Wires, News
FILE - In this Oct. 12, 2011 file photo, philanthropist Howard Buffett speaks at the World Food Prize symposium in Des Moines, Iowa. A billionaires son and gentleman farmer, Buffett is helping launch a new effort to fight hunger in rural areas. He is calling on other farmers to donate proceeds from one acres of their crops to help supply food pantries in agricultural areas. Advocates for the hungry say rural areas are more likely to be underserved by food programs. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall, File) (Credit: AP)TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. (AP) — Farmer and philanthropist Howard G. Buffett, son of billionaire investor Warren Buffett, wants to enlist fellow food producers in a new campaign to fight hunger in rural America.
Buffett and other organizers planned to announce the “Invest an Acre” initiative Thursday. It will encourage farmers around the nation to donate profits from the sale of 1 acre’s crop to the charity Feeding America, which will use the money to support food banks in rural communities where advocates say malnutrition is a serious — if often overlooked — scourge.
“Poverty and hunger in rural America is very much out of sight, out of mind,” said Howard Buffett, who in 1999 established a foundation to help the world’s needy. “It doesn’t jump out at you. It’s not like the brazen images of starving children in Ethiopia … but that doesn’t mean it isn’t just as devastating to people who are hungry.”
Anti-hunger groups are numerous. Buffett acknowledged in a phone interview that even his idea of challenging farmers to donate a share of their earnings isn’t original. But he hopes the support of another partner — agribusiness conglomerate Archer Daniels Midland Co. — will help “Invest an Acre” establish a nationwide reach that will set it apart.
ADM will send postcards to 80,000 commodity producers who sell their crops through the company’s network of grain elevators asking them to support the program, said Jen Hogan, manager of grain origination. They’ll be able to donate when dropping off truckloads of grain or make pledges when signing contracts with the company.
There are no financial incentives for participating and no obligation to do so, but Hogan said she expects many ADM customers will jump at the chance.
“Our farmers are very charitable to begin with. They’re giving donations to schools, churches,” she said. “We think they’ll see the value in being able to help feed their neighbors who have run into some hard times.”
Buffett’s foundation has focused largely on areas of the world that many aid groups avoid because of war, geographic isolation or other challenges. About 85 percent of its funding goes to other countries. Buffett said it has devoted more attention to domestic hunger in recent years as the economic downturn has driven many Americans into unemployment and want. Feeding America says the number of people served by its network of food banks rose from 25 million in 2006 to 37 million in 2010.




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