For the best experienceDownload the Mobile App
App Store Play Store
Washington state farmers suffer after feds cut program to provide schools with local fresh foods
Washington state farmers suffer after feds cut program to provide schools with local fresh foods
Washington state farmers suffer after feds cut program to provide schools with local fresh foods

Published on: 09/14/2025

This news was posted by Oregon Today News

Go To Business Place

Description

Summer might be winding down, but the berries are still plentiful at Sidhu Farms in Puyallup, Washington.

On a recent visit to the farm, co-owner Kamal Sidhu plucked a few plump blackberries from one of the bushes, their bestseller.

“It’s called Triple Crown blackberry,” Sidhu said. “It’s one of the sweetest.”

Sidhu’s family has been growing berries in Puyallup since 2000. Farming was not part of the plan when his father moved to the U.S. in the 1980s, even though he came from a farming background in Punjab, India.

After retiring from the restaurant business, he planned to split his time between the U.S. and India. The family bought a piece of property in Puyallup that was an old blueberry farm, with plans to turn it into a residential development.

“One year, my grandma, my mom, my brothers, while he was gone, they had picked some berries and they took them to the Puyallup farmers market,” Sidhu said. “And when he came back, he was like, something just clicked. So ever since then, we’ve just been like full swing into farming.”

Kamal Sidhu, one of the owners of Sidhu Farm, is portrayed among triple crown blackberries on Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2025, at Sidhu Farm in Puyallup, Wash.

RELATED: Why a NASA satellite that scientists and farmers rely on may be destroyed on purpose

Over time, they started growing raspberries, marionberries, tayberries and loganberries. In 2015, they bought another farm. Today the two farms produce 40 varieties of berries.

During the pandemic, Sidhu Farms was one of a couple dozen Washington producers supplying fresh foods to school districts.

The federally funded Local Food for Schools (LFS) program helped the state purchase locally grown produce, bison meat, and salmon. Sidhu said it’s a venture he had always wanted to do but it was beyond reach.

“It used to be that everything the schools would get was like, the lowest bid from industrial farms that can afford to grow thousands of acres of something. They can afford to sell it, magnitudes cheaper than we can.”

Under the federal food program, created in 2021 in response to supply chain disruptions during the pandemic, Sidhu received fair pay for his berries.

RELATED: States sue USDA over efforts to gather food stamp data on tens of millions of people

Washington was among 40 states that joined the program. Its aim was to strengthen regional food systems while supporting socially disadvantaged farmers and small businesses.

According to a report by the Washington Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction, the federal program bolstered school meals at more than 2,100 public schools across the state.

In an email, OSPI said nearly 600,000 pounds of food were made available to schools and more than 850,000 students gained access to locally produced foods in their school meals.

The program also helped family farms stay afloat during the pandemic. Sidhu said the federal program brought in about $150,000 in revenue and saved his farm from going under during COVID.

Thanks to the federal support, he said his family could actually make plans to grow their business, like building a commercial kitchen.

“We can do more processed products with the berries,” he said, ”like more jam, and being able to freeze and hold all the product in the farm.”

Those plans are now on hold.

Washington state was scheduled to receive nearly $9 million to continue Local Food for Schools. In March, the U.S. Department of Agriculture cancelled the program, as part of a $1 billion funding cut.

“It was just like a gut punch,” Sidhu said.

Kamal Sidhu, one of the owners of Sidhu Farm, holds triple crown blackberries on Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2025, at Sidhu Farm in Puyallup, Wash.

RELATED: U.S. senator wants DOGE out of sensitive payment system for farmers

Sidhu said with one a reduced market for his berries, he’ll need fewer workers at the farm. It pains him to think it might even mean pulling out certain varieties or pruning them to the point where they don’t produce as much fruit.

At the Sidhu farm, workers have started pruning back the vines and cleaning up for next season.

Sidhu said his farm continued to supply berries to schools this fall, because some districts chose to opt in despite the federal cuts.

“Schools wanted it enough they’re dipping into their own pockets to pay for it,” he said. “They know there’s something special about it.”

Ruby de Luna is a reporter with KUOW. This story comes to you from the Northwest News Network, a collaboration between public media organizations in Oregon and Washington.

It is part of OPB’s broader effort to ensure that everyone in our region has access to quality journalism that informs, entertains and enriches their lives. To learn more, visit our journalism partnerships page.

News Source : https://www.opb.org/article/2025/09/14/washington-farmers-feds-cut-schools/

Other Related News

DraftKings promo code offers $200 in instant bonuses, NFL Sunday Ticket for Seahawks vs. Steelers
DraftKings promo code offers $200 in instant bonuses, NFL Sunday Ticket for Seahawks vs. Steelers

09/14/2025

Week 2 of the NFL regular season features an exciting interconference matchup between the ...

Where to watch the 2025 Emmy’s Red Carpet, stream free and on demand
Where to watch the 2025 Emmy’s Red Carpet, stream free and on demand

09/14/2025

The 77th Annual Emmy Awards is returning to television to recognize the best in television...

9/10/25 - LCSO Case 25-4312   
  
Lane County Sheriff’s Office search warrants yield illegal marijuana grows, stolen RV, firearms   
  
On the morning of September 10th, Lane County Sheriff's detectives and deputies served search warrants at:    
 - A residence in the 89800 block of Armitage Road, north of Eugene    
 - A property in the 89900 block of Coburg Road, north of Eugene   
 - A residence in the 85100 block of Forest Hill Lane, southwest of Eugene    
  
During the service of the search warrants, detectives located and destroyed 7,000 plants and 800 pounds of marijuana bud. Deputies also located a trailer stolen from Springfield and seized 6 firearms including a sawed-off barrel shotgun. Seven people were arrested during the service of the search warrants.    
  
The Lane County Code Compliance Program and Oregon Watermaster will be following up with code violations discovered on the properties, including unlawful sewage dumping, unpermitted structures and other work, unlawful storage of hazardous materials, and an unapproved well.   
  
The Lane County Sheriff’s Office was assisted on this case by the Douglas Interagency Narcotics Team (DINT), Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), the Oregon Watermaster, and the Lane County Code Compliance Program.     
  
This investigation would not have been possible without the ongoing grant funding from the Oregon Criminal Justice Commission’s Illegal Marijuana Market Grant (IMMEG). This grant was created in 2018 by the Oregon Legislature to assist local law enforcement agencies and district attorneys’ offices in their efforts to address the illegal marijuana market in Oregon.     
  
This is an ongoing investigation. Further details may be provided at a later time. Anyone with additional information is asked to contact LCSO at 541-682-4141 and reference case #25-4312.Photos from Lane County Sheriff's Office's post
9/10/25 - LCSO Case 25-4312   
  
Lane County Sheriff’s Office search warrants yield illegal marijuana grows, stolen RV, firearms   
  
On the morning of September 10th, Lane County Sheriff's detectives and deputies served search warrants at:    
 - A residence in the 89800 block of Armitage Road, north of Eugene    
 - A property in the 89900 block of Coburg Road, north of Eugene   
 - A residence in the 85100 block of Forest Hill Lane, southwest of Eugene    
  
During the service of the search warrants, detectives located and destroyed 7,000 plants and 800 pounds of marijuana bud. Deputies also located a trailer stolen from Springfield and seized 6 firearms including a sawed-off barrel shotgun. Seven people were arrested during the service of the search warrants.    
  
The Lane County Code Compliance Program and Oregon Watermaster will be following up with code violations discovered on the properties, including unlawful sewage dumping, unpermitted structures and other work, unlawful storage of hazardous materials, and an unapproved well.   
  
The Lane County Sheriff’s Office was assisted on this case by the Douglas Interagency Narcotics Team (DINT), Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), the Oregon Watermaster, and the Lane County Code Compliance Program.     
  
This investigation would not have been possible without the ongoing grant funding from the Oregon Criminal Justice Commission’s Illegal Marijuana Market Grant (IMMEG). This grant was created in 2018 by the Oregon Legislature to assist local law enforcement agencies and district attorneys’ offices in their efforts to address the illegal marijuana market in Oregon.     
  
This is an ongoing investigation. Further details may be provided at a later time. Anyone with additional information is asked to contact LCSO at 541-682-4141 and reference case #25-4312.Photos from Lane County Sheriff's Office's post
9/10/25 - LCSO Case 25-4312 Lane County Sheriff’s Office search warrants yield illegal marijuana grows, stolen RV, firearms On the morning of September 10th, Lane County Sheriff's detectives and deputies served search warrants at: - A residence in the 89800 block of Armitage Road, north of Eugene - A property in the 89900 block of Coburg Road, north of Eugene - A residence in the 85100 block of Forest Hill Lane, southwest of Eugene During the service of the search warrants, detectives located and destroyed 7,000 plants and 800 pounds of marijuana bud. Deputies also located a trailer stolen from Springfield and seized 6 firearms including a sawed-off barrel shotgun. Seven people were arrested during the service of the search warrants. The Lane County Code Compliance Program and Oregon Watermaster will be following up with code violations discovered on the properties, including unlawful sewage dumping, unpermitted structures and other work, unlawful storage of hazardous materials, and an unapproved well. The Lane County Sheriff’s Office was assisted on this case by the Douglas Interagency Narcotics Team (DINT), Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), the Oregon Watermaster, and the Lane County Code Compliance Program. This investigation would not have been possible without the ongoing grant funding from the Oregon Criminal Justice Commission’s Illegal Marijuana Market Grant (IMMEG). This grant was created in 2018 by the Oregon Legislature to assist local law enforcement agencies and district attorneys’ offices in their efforts to address the illegal marijuana market in Oregon. This is an ongoing investigation. Further details may be provided at a later time. Anyone with additional information is asked to contact LCSO at 541-682-4141 and reference case #25-4312.Photos from Lane County Sheriff's Office's post

09/14/2025

91025 - LCSO Case 25-4312 Lane County Sheriffs Office search warrants yield illegal mari...

5 takeaways from Oregon State football’s blowout loss at Texas Tech
5 takeaways from Oregon State football’s blowout loss at Texas Tech

09/14/2025

LUBBOCK Texas Things went from bad before the weather delay to worse for Oregon State foo...

What they’re saying nationally, in Evanston after No. 4 Oregon beats Northwestern
What they’re saying nationally, in Evanston after No. 4 Oregon beats Northwestern

09/14/2025

EVANSTON Ill No 4 Oregon crusied to a 34-14 win over Northwestern Saturday afternoon at M...

ShoutoutGive Shoutout
500/500