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As unemployment benefits expire, Americans more at risk for hunger crisis
Farmer: Selling food within the community led to economic success
Tyner Pond Farms owner Chris Baggott says Indiana farmers selling food directly to consumers in their communities has contributed to their financial success during coronavirus.
The weekly $600 bonus to unemployment benefits, a lifeline for more than 40 million jobless Americans, expired Friday leaving more people at risk for food insecurity.
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A staggering 12,000 people per day could die from hunger fueled by the coronavirus health crisis by the end of the year, according to a recent report from Oxfam, a nonprofit that fights poverty. What's more, an analysis by Feeding America, which runs the country's biggest network of food banks, projects the food-insecure population in the U.S. could increase from 37 million to 54 million this year in the wake of COVID-19. Now, with unemployed Americans losing out on essential living benefits, providing meals for families could become increasingly challenging.
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