Citizen Portal
Sign In

Get AI Briefings, Transcripts & Alerts on Local & National Government Meetings — Forever.

Committee approves study to map food deserts, shifts mapping responsibilities to LSU AgCenter

House Agriculture Committee · April 27, 2026

Loading...

AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

HB1194 was reported favorably after amendments that assign LSU AgCenter responsibility to identify, map and develop a 10‑year elimination plan for food deserts. Members debated funding, metrics and long‑term sustainability and recorded a roll-call vote of 10–3.

The House Agriculture Committee voted to report HB1194, an amendment package that directs the LSU AgCenter to identify and map food deserts across the state, create a public-facing geospatial database, and develop a 10‑year elimination plan with annual benchmarks.

Representative Terry Landry, sponsor of the amended bill, said the change moves technical research and mapping from the Department of Agriculture and Forestry to LSU’s research arm. "We already have the Healthy Food Retail Act," Landry said. "What we do not have is a strong definition or a definition for food deserts here in Louisiana." The bill adopts the USDA definition in its text.

The amendments (numbers 5–7 in the packet) transfer responsibility to the LSU AgCenter to identify food deserts, maintain an accessible public database and prepare the 10‑year plan; other amendments shift annual reporting duties to the AgCenter. Committee materials list a set of technical amendments as well.

Commissioner Strain and other witnesses explained how the program historically worked as a competitive grant and matching program administered through the Agriculture Finance Authority and offered examples, including the Fresh Food Financing Initiative in Pennsylvania and local projects such as the Red Stick Market and certain Whole Foods partnerships. Members raised practical questions about whether a one‑mile urban radius is sufficient for viability in every context, about funding sources and whether the program can be structured to launch stores that later become self‑sustaining.

Representative McCormick objected when the motion to report favorably was called; the secretary conducted a roll-call vote with 10 yeses and 3 noes, after which the committee reported the bill favorably.

What happens next: HB1194 is headed to the next legislative stage with the mandate for LSU AgCenter to prepare mapping, data and an elimination plan that lawmakers could use to evaluate any later appropriation requests.

Provenance: bill read and amendments described (SEG 1176–SEG 1203), sponsor presentation and Q&A (SEG 1219–SEG 1380), detailed floor-style questioning about funding and definition (SEG 1399–SEG 1760), roll-call (SEG 2160–SEG 2204).