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By RF Buche, president and CEO of GF Buche Co.

I’ve spent my entire life in grocery stores. I am a fourthgeneration grocer and president and CEO of GF Buche Co., a family business that has operated in rural and tribal communities for 120 years. Some of our customers are the poorest people in the U.S. and live in the most remote areas of South Dakota. I know the role local grocers play in our communities

And right now, that need is growing

The government shutdown has thrown the future of SNAP benefits into uncertainty for November. Families are anxious, wondering if and when they’ll be able to put food on the table next month. Children should not be burdened with this fear, nor should they sense the stress of parents deciding whether to skip meals. Even if benefits do land, the scheduled cuts coming in 2026 keep me up at night. Because I know exactly who will pay that price

Parents working multiple jobs. Children relying on school lunches for their most dependable meal and sometimes their only meal. Elders choosing between groceries and medication. Veterans who served their country now struggle to feed themselves

When Washington plays politics, real families go hungry

Midnight on SNAP Day 

Every month, when SNAP benefits arrive, we keep our stores open late in the communities that need us most. If you stand in one of my stores at midnight when benefits hit, you’ll see the truth firsthand: two shopping carts – one for groceries and one padded with a blanket where a child sleeps while their parents finally shop for food. Exhaustion. Hunger. Relief. For some families, this is the first food they’ve had in days

There is nothing hypothetical about that moment. It happens every single month in South Dakota

Hunger in Rural America Looks Different 

In places like Pine Ridge, Mission, Marty and Lower Brule, hunger isn’t about poor choices, it’s about barriers built into geography and economy – long distances, lack of transportation and limited access to jobs

Across our state, more than 115,000 people, including one in five children, struggle with food insecurity

Nearly 6 percent of South Dakota veterans now live below the poverty line. Those aren’t statistics to me. They are real people we see every day in our stores

This Isn’t Political, It’s Personal

I’m not interested in pointing fingers or arguing about which political party should take the blame. I’m interested in making sure kids don’t go to bed hungry while Congress plays games over a shutdown

What’s happening to the most vulnerable isn’t a bargaining chip, it’s a moral failing

It’s wrong, they’re playing with people’s lives. That these things are happening in this state, let alone this country, is unacceptable. We need to do better

South Dakotans pride ourselves on taking care of one another. When one neighbor struggles, others lift them up. That’s not charity, that’s who we are. When one neighbor faces a hard year, the rest of us come together to ensure no one is left behind

But right now, policies written thousands of miles away are pushing more families to the edge

SNAP Works, And Cuts Will Hurt the Wrong People 

SNAP isn’t a luxury, it is the backbone of food access for struggling households

It supports

  • Working parents whose wages haven’t kept up with inflation 
  • Seniors stretching every dollar 
  • Kids who deserve nourishment to learn and grow 
  • Veterans who deserve better than survival mode 

When SNAP dollars enter a rural grocery store, they support the entire community. They keep doors open, shelves stocked and jobs local

Cutting this support, especially during a shutdown, is not responsible governance

[RELATED: Food Industry Associations Urge Congress To End Government Shutdown]

We Are Doing Our Part – Washington Must Do Theirs

Through our nonprofit, Team Buche Cares, we are doing everything we can to fill the gaps. This year, our goal is to serve 50,000 meals at Thanksgiving and 50,000 meals at Christmas through our Holiday Food Program

We help where we can, including urgent grocery assistance when a family requests support, because hunger doesn’t operate on a government timeline

Other nonprofit partners across the state are working hard and support, because philanthropy cannot replace federal responsibility. Even in South Dakota, one of the most generous states in the nation, we cannot solve hunger solely through good intentions and fundraisers. Donors help thousands. SNAP helps tens of thousands.

Hungry Children Shouldn’t Have to Wait 

What’s happening right now isn’t a policy debate to the families we serve. It’s dinner. Stability. Survival

It’s time for Congress to remember

  • You can’t delay a child’s next meal because negotiations stalled
  • You can’t cut food support for seniors and call yourself profamily
  • You can’t treat SNAP like a bargaining chip and deny the reality on the ground

This is about what kind of country we choose to be

I don’t pretend to have all the answers on federal budgeting. But I do know this

At an early age, my father taught me that it is our moral obligation in the grocery business to make sure nobody goes hungry. That has been my guiding principle in the work I do, and the work my team does at GF Buche Co. and Team Buche Cares, every single day

In the United States of America, in the heart of South Dakota, no child should have to worry about eating

So, here’s what I’m asking Congress to do

  • End the shutdown 
  • Fully fund SNAP for November 
  • Reverse the cuts planned for 2026 
  • Remember the families living with the consequences 

My family built our grocery stores on one belief: food is love, food is dignity and food is hope. I am simply continuing their work for a new generation that needs us more than ever.

South Dakotans take care of each other. Caring for our neighbors, sharing in times of plenty and ensuring no one is forgotten, those are the values that make our state strong

It’s time for Washington to do the same

About the author

RF Buche is the president and CEO of GF Buche Companies and founder of Team Buche Cares. He is a fourth-generation grocer serving rural and tribal communities across South Dakota, where his family’s business has operated for 120 years. 

[RELATED: Growing GF Buche Co. Remains Passionate About Helping Those In Need]

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