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US hunger rates rise as pandemic aid ends, data shows

FILE PHOTO: Residents wait in line at the food pantry run by La Colaborativa in Chelsea

FILE PHOTO: Residents wait in line for free groceries from the twice-per-week food pantry run by La Colaborativa, a Latina-led organization founded in 1988 to serve immigrant communities around Boston, in Chelsea, Massachusetts, U.S., June 23, 2023. REUTERS/Brian Snyder/File Photo

Food insecurity is rising in the U.S. as the end of pandemic-era aid and higher food costs strain low-income Americans, according to data released on Wednesday by the U.S. Census Bureau and two surveys from anti-hunger groups.

About 26.5 million Americans reported sometimes or often not having enough to eat between June 7 and June 19, according to the Census鈥檚 latest Household Pulse Survey 鈥 up 4.4% from last month鈥檚 survey and 12% from June 2022.

The number of people who reported picking up free groceries in June was 10.9 million, down about 10% from May but up 22% from June 2022, according to the data.

Most food aid programs tied to the COVID-19 pandemic, like a nationwide waiver that allowed schools to temporarily serve meals for free, have ended. Poor households have also seen a decline in benefits from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) program, after a pandemic provision that expanded benefits ended in March.

Propel, a company that provides financial services to low-income people, found in a survey that 31% of its users reported relying on friends and family for food in June, up from 19% in February, before the expanded benefits ended.

The USDA last week committed $2.3 billion to food purchases for schools and emergency food providers like food banks.

Food costs are up 6.7% over last year, according to the most recent data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

A report released Wednesday by the Food Research and Action Center (FRAC), an anti-hunger advocacy group, said the school meals waiver had helped ease hunger.

鈥淭he return to pre-pandemic operations results in too many children missing out on the nutrition they need,鈥 Luis Guardia, president of FRAC, said in a statement.

The number of students getting school lunch fell 7% after the waiver ended, according to FRAC.

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