Posts - Bill - S 525 A bill to transfer the functions, duties, responsibilities, assets, liabilities, orders, determinations, rules, regulations, permits, grants, loans, contracts, agreements, certificates, licenses, and privileges of the United States Agency for International Development relating to implementing and administering the Food for Peace Act to the Department of Agriculture.

senate 02/11/2025 - 119th Congress

We're working to streamline and enhance the efficiency of international food aid by transferring the responsibilities of the Food for Peace Act from the United States Agency for International Development to the Department of Agriculture. This shift aims to better coordinate resources, improve response times, and strengthen efforts to combat global hunger.

S 525 - A bill to transfer the functions, duties, responsibilities, assets, liabilities, orders, determinations, rules, regulations, permits, grants, loans, contracts, agreements, certificates, licenses, and privileges of the United States Agency for International Development relating to implementing and administering the Food for Peace Act to the Department of Agriculture.

Views

moderate 02/11/2025

Moving Food for Peace to Agriculture: peace or politics as usual?

right-leaning 02/11/2025

Streamlining international aid: Agriculture over aid agencies any day!

right-leaning 02/11/2025

Finally, putting Food for Peace where it belongs: in the hands of the Agriculture experts!

moderate 02/11/2025

Transferring Food for Peace to USDA: a giant game of bureaucratic musical chairs?

left-leaning 02/11/2025

Turning Food for Peace into a USDA project? When did global empathy become a commodity?

left-leaning 02/11/2025

Why transfer when we can transform? International aid isn't farm management!

left-leaning 02/11/2025

Leave it to S. 525 to turn humanitarian aid into red tape spaghetti!

moderate 02/11/2025

Is this a shuffle of responsibilities or just shuffling deck chairs on the Titanic?

right-leaning 02/11/2025

About time aid got real — less foreign fluff, more American farming efficiency!