Agriculture
How And Why America’s Food System Is Cracking
Before government shut the nation down, Americans ate half their meals outside home.
The farmers who served restaurants and cafeterias are dumping meat, veggies, and milk. And it's going to get worse.
By Christopher Bedford
May 14, 2020
America’s food system is cracking.
People are still eating, farmers are still farming, and grocery stores are still open, but in areas around the country, shoppers looking for meat, milk, and other products find empty shelves and limits on what they can purchase — all while farmers from coast to coast are forced to dump milk, plow up vegetables, and euthanize livestock. So what’s happening, and why?
There isn’t a simple answer: No single issue that can be cured by safety gear and precautions, or “phase 1†reopenings. Yes, sick workers in tight conditions are causing a jam-up in processing plants. And yes, a shortage of access to personal protective equipment (PPE) and the threat of employee lawsuits compounds those risks. But the broader problem appears to lie in an unbelievably rapid shift in Americans’ eating habits, and thereby the American food economy, compounded by a draconian reaction and lack of dependable information from elected government.
“You’ve got to remember, it’s a finely tuned system,†John Rieley, a former Sysco food company sales rep and a current councilman for the nation’s top chicken farming county, Sussex Country, Delaware, told The Federalist. That’s usually a good thing — unless you need to play a different note.
more
https://thefederalist.com/2020/05/14/how-and-why-americas-food-system-is-cracking/