The Farm Bill is a massive piece of legislation that renews roughly every 5 years.
What Is the Farm Bill?
The Farm Bill is a giant package of laws that Congress renews roughly every 5 years.
It shapes how America grows food, supports farmers, protects natural resources, and helps families access nutritious meals.
The 2026 Farm, Food, and National Security Act continues and reforms programs across USDA through 2031. It touches everything from crop insurance to school lunches to soil health.
Why the Farm Bill Matters to Farmers
Financial Stability in Tough Times
Farmers face unpredictable challenges—storms, droughts, pests, and market disruptions.
The Farm Bill helps by strengthening programs like:
- Crop insurance
- Disaster assistance for specialty crops, orchards, and livestock
- Block grants to help states recover from agricultural losses
- Storage and supply‑chain improvements so food keeps moving even when disasters hit
This means farmers can stay in business, protect their land, and keep growing our food.
Why It Matters for Food Banks & Food Pantries
Food banks rely on strong farm and nutrition programs. The Farm Bill:
Supports the Emergency Food System
- Helps food banks get more fruits, vegetables, dairy, and protein through USDA purchasing programs.
- Strengthens supply chains so surplus food moves quickly to families in need.
- Expands tools for states to distribute food during disasters.
Helps Farmers Donate Food
Programs that support crop recovery and market stability often lead to more local food donations—especially fruits and vegetables that are harder for food banks to source.
Why It Matters for Families & SNAP
One of the largest parts of the Farm Bill funds the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP)—the nation’s biggest anti‑hunger program.
SNAP Helps Families Afford Groceries
SNAP helps millions of children, seniors, veterans, and working families buy nutritious food.
The Farm Bill ensures the program:
- Stays funded
- Is responsive during economic downturns
- Supports healthy eating
When SNAP is strong, hunger drops, children learn better, and communities thrive.
Why It Matters for School Meals
The bill also impacts school nutrition, which ensures students get healthy breakfasts and lunches.
School Nutrition Programs Supported by the Farm Bill
- Fresh fruits & vegetables in schools
- Nutrition programs for low‑income students
- Partnerships with local farmers to serve fresher food
Healthy meals help kids learn, grow, and stay energized throughout the school day.
Conservation: Protecting Land, Water & Climate
Farmers care deeply about their land. The Farm Bill invests in conservation programs that:
- Improve soil health
- Protect water quality
- Restore wetlands and grasslands
- Support precision agriculture technology (like GPS-guided equipment) to reduce fertilizer and water use
- Help states and tribes expand local soil-health programs
These programs keep farms productive and rural landscapes healthy for generations.
Protecting Farms from New Threats
The bill includes new initiatives such as:
- Feral swine control programs
- Flood prevention and watershed improvements
- Emergency programs to help farmers repair fencing, fields, and structures after fires or storms
This means farmers can recover faster when disaster strikes.
The Farm Bill Touches Every American
Whether you’re a farmer, a parent with kids in school, a volunteer at a food pantry, or someone buying groceries—the Farm Bill shapes your daily life.
It ensures:
✔ Farmers can keep farming
✔ Food banks can feed communities
✔ Children get nutritious meals at school
✔ Families can afford groceries through SNAP
✔ Our land, water, and climate are protected
The Farm Bill is an essential piece of legislation that directs America’s food system—helping us stay fed, supported, and resilient. Food Bank of the Albemarle and every hunger relief organization relies on the Farm Bill to continue this flow of food to our communities through programs like SNAP, TEFAP, CSFP, and supports our agricultural partners.
Want to take a deeper dive into the Farm Bill? Click the links below.








