Schneider said she was concerned about cities’ emergency food and shelter programs in the coming years “if federal budgeting makes it harder, no easier, to meet our responsibilities to all of our people.”

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“[U]ntil our economy improves for all Americans, programs to combat poverty, hunger, and homelessness need to be protected — not compromised, not sacrificed — by our Congress,” she said.

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The report was not a comprehensive look at all cities, but included responses from the mayors of 25 cities and found that in the past year, 71 percent of those cities saw an increase in requests for emergency food assistance, and 43 percent saw an increase in the number of families experiencing homelessness. You can see a breakdown of the report by the numbers by my colleague Niraj Chokshi here.

Federal emergency food assistance makes up at least 20 percent of the food distributed in eight of the cities. Los Angeles had the highest reliance at 51 percent, and expressed worry over slashed funding, writing in the report it was “concerned that cutbacks by Congress to these critical programs are a harbinger of future cuts, specifically to child nutrition programs that come up for reauthorization next year.”

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“There’s no question that the nation’s economy is on the mend,” said conference CEO Tom Cochran in a statement. “But there’s also no question that the slow pace of the recovery in past years has made it difficult — and for many of our cities, impossible — to respond to the growing needs of hungry and homeless Americans.”

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