HR-7906-119
Referred to the Committee on Agriculture, and in addition to the Committee on Energy and Commerce, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
Sponsored by Robin Kelly (D-IL)
What it does
This bill would direct the Secretary of Agriculture, in coordination with the Secretary of Health and Human Services, to establish a competitive grant pilot program supporting "Food is Medicine" programs — community-based initiatives that provide medically tailored meals, produce prescriptions, nutrition counseling, and related services to people with or at risk of diet-related diseases. The program would run from fiscal years 2027 through 2031, with $20 million authorized in total. The Secretary would be required to submit progress reports to Congress at two and six years after the program launches.
Who benefits
People with diet-related diseases (diabetes, hypertension, obesity, cancer, cardiovascular disease, kidney disease, HIV/AIDS, eating disorders, and others) who would receive medically tailored food or nutrition services. Low-income and food-insecure individuals who may not otherwise access specialized nutrition support. Community health clinics and community-based organizations (including food banks and emergency feeding operations) that would receive grant funding. Registered dietitians and nutrition professionals who would be employed by funded programs. Local and regional food producers and farmers, who are given priority consideration. Rural, urban, and tribal communities, as well as U.S. territories, which are explicitly included in the geographic equity provisions.
Who is hurt
Entities that apply for grants but are not selected in the competitive process would receive no funding. Conventional food retailers and meal delivery services that do not qualify as community-based health partnerships may face indirect competition. Taxpayers would bear the cost of the $20 million authorization. Organizations that do not incorporate local/regional foods or registered dietitians may be disadvantaged in the grant competition due to the bill's stated priority criteria.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that diet-related diseases account for roughly 80% of chronic illness in the United States and drive hundreds of billions in annual healthcare costs, making food-based interventions a cost-effective upstream strategy. They contend that existing pilot programs — such as those tested under Medicaid and Medicare — have shown measurable reductions in hospitalizations and emergency department visits among participants receiving medically tailored meals, providing an evidence base for federal investment. At $20 million over five years, supporters argue the program is a modest, time-limited pilot designed to generate rigorous data before any larger commitment.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's authorization language is broad enough to fund a wide range of activities — including transportation, cooking classes, and digital technology — that go well beyond direct food provision, raising questions about program focus and accountability. They contend that food and nutrition programs already exist across USDA, HHS, and Medicaid, and that adding another overlapping pilot without consolidating existing efforts may produce duplicative spending with limited marginal benefit. Critics may also argue that the Secretary's broad discretion to define eligible diseases and activities — including an open-ended "any other disease as determined appropriate by the Secretary" category — delegates significant policymaking authority without sufficient congressional guardrails.