Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire
  • omnibus

Elon Musk and DOGE Slash Funding for Major Black Kansas City Neighborhood Councils
Ryan S.
26 Feb 2025
Elon Musk and Black farmers

Elon Musk & DOGE are targeting one of Kansas City’s most prominent Black-led neighborhood councils—slashing a federal grant and threatening a vital food sovereignty movement.

Originally published in The Kansas City Defender.

At exactly 7:17 p.m. on Valentine’s Day, Ivanhoe Neighborhood Council Executive Director Alana Henry received a terse notice from the USDA: the agency was canceling its three-year Farmer’s Market Promotion Program (FMPP) award to Ivanhoe Neighborhood Council. The cut was swift, shocking, and, for those who’ve been paying attention, all too predictable.

The Ivanhoe Neighborhood Council (located in one of Kansas City’s historically Black neighborhoods) had already launched a visionary plan to boost food sovereignty and economic power in the community.

Their programs offered training for local growers—many of them Black, brown, and small-scale—so they could sell fresh, affordable produce at neighborhood farmers markets.

The project intended to expand market days, incorporate new services for elders and mothers on WIC, and improve healthy food access for families reliant on SNAP/EBT. In short, it aimed to upend the long history of Black land loss, the lack of access to fresh food in disinvested areas, and the systemic obstacles that keep Black farmers from thriving.

Then, out of nowhere, came the letter.

The USDA’s justification? Under the new unelected oligarch, Elon Musk, and his DOGE cronies, these kinds of community-based initiatives are apparently labeled “DEI” and “wasteful.” The hammer fell: termination—effective immediately.

“Elon made sure to head to Twitter for his latest gloating, propagandized message for the masses about how many ‘wasteful’ USDA contracts were just bid adieu,” says Henry. “Taking a hacksaw to federal agencies with no plan? That is…not a winning strategy for our nation.”

A Nationwide Pattern of Attacks on Black Farmers

Yet, this isn’t an isolated or even entirely new story. For decades, Black and brown farmers have struggled under oppressive federal agriculture policies that favor Big Ag while leaving smaller, community-focused growers out in the cold.

From the early 1900s to the present day, Black farmland ownership in the U.S. has plummeted. According to a report by FoodPrint, “Racist violence, anti-Black legislation, discrimination at federal agencies and other systemic injustices all contributed to that decline over the course of the 20th century.”

From 1992 to 2002, 94 percent of Black farmers lost part or all of their farmland – three times the rate at which white farmers lost land. Today, Black landowners make up less than one percent of farmland ownership in the country. – Berkeley Food Institute

One estimate suggests that farmland lost since 1920 has meant more than $326 billion in lost wealth for Black farmers and their families. These losses continue to reverberate, as organizations like the Ivanhoe Neighborhood Council struggle to maintain and expand precious community agricultural spaces in historically redlined neighborhoods.

The Ivanhoe Neighborhood Council’s now-canceled project was working against this tide by carving out space for Black-led agriculture, local business development, and equitable access to healthy food.

Call it “food sovereignty,” call it “community self-determination”—the point is that these neighbors were building power from the ground up. That’s precisely what makes this abrupt USDA shutdown so concerning and in fact violent: it threatens to choke out one of the last remaining Black-led agricultural efforts in Kansas City.

A Historic Neighborhood Under Siege

Ivanhoe itself sits in the heart of Kansas City, a historically disinvested area shaped by redlining, environmental racism, and the flight of grocery stores to wealthier white neighborhoods. Locals have long relied on convenience stores with limited (and often low-quality) produce, driving up health disparities and preventing any semblance of self-sufficiency.

Ivanhoe Neighborhood Council had a different vision. Their plan involved:

  • Empowering Black and brown growers with the training and tools to increase food production.
  • Expanding farmers markets to ensure families on SNAP/EBT, WIC, and seniors using the Senior Farmers’ Market Nutrition Program (SFMNP) could easily purchase nutritious food.
  • Supporting new and established growers to take on leadership roles, foster generational wealth, and revitalize a local agricultural economy.

A three-year, $165,000 federal award (plus a 25% match) was supposed to help realize that vision. In the grand scheme of government budgets, $165,000 is peanuts. But for a neighborhood facing systemic barriers to healthy food access, it was a lifeline—now cruelly cut off.

Local Leadership Responds

Kansas City’s mayor Lucas also weighed in, condemning Elon Musk’s brazen cuts and acknowledging the direct blow to Ivanhoe’s efforts.

“Cuts by Elon Musk continue to devastate American communities like Kansas City,” said Mayor Lucas. “Ivanhoe recently had funding eliminated that supports urban food production, backyard gardeners, local growers, an inner-city farmer’s market, and resources to provide healthy food to young mothers… this is being echoed at organizations across our city… And we’re just one place. Stay alert. Organize. Make a difference.”

Another community member, Dina JNewman wrote on her Facebook;

Screenshot-2025-02-18-at-9.05.36 AM.png

Musk & DOGE’s Funding Slashes Are Direct Attacks on Black Community Lifelines

The abrupt termination can’t be separated from the larger political climate. Under Musk’s ongoing coup, federal agencies across the board are taking hits and being outright destroyed—especially programs that uplift oppressed communities and communities of color. He and his cronies are gutting everything from healthcare services at the VA to local food initiatives at the USDA.

It is without question that these cuts represent a deliberate, fascist overthrow of any program that empowers poor and working-class people of color. There’s no replacement plan, no alternative strategy—just a gleeful slash-and-burn approach aimed at leaving vulnerable communities out to die.

“Don’t be fooled. We are not an outlier,” Henry warns. “We are going to see the impacts of this for decades. We’re in the middle of a hostile takeover, and some of us are asleep at the wheel.”

Why This Matters to You—Wherever You Live

Even if you live miles away from Kansas City, make no mistake: what happens in Ivanhoe matters to every farmer, every grassroots organization fighting for healthy food access, and every Black community who believes in local self-determination.

When programs like Ivanhoe’s get axed without warning, it sends a terrifying message to people organizing for food sovereignty in other cities and rural areas nationwide: You will be next.

Ivanhoe’s Call to Action

Despite this targeted blow, Ivanhoe Neighborhood Council refuses to fold. They will continue hosting monthly markets, albeit on a leaner, more uncertain budget. And they’re calling on folks across Missouri, Kansas, and the entire nation to stand in solidarity:

  1. Donate:
    • Ivanhoe Neighborhood Council Donation Link
      Your contributions help replace damaged tents, pay local trainers, and fill budget gaps left by the USDA’s abrupt termination.
  2. Volunteer:
    • They need 2–4 volunteers on the 2nd Saturday of each month (7 a.m. – 11 a.m. and 10 a.m. – 2 p.m.).
    • They need 1–2 volunteers on the 4th Friday of each month (2–6 p.m. and 4–8 p.m.).
    • A weekly volunteer can help with outreach for about 4 hours each week.
    • They need four white 10×10 tents and folks willing to lead trainings for local growers.
  3. Demand Accountability:
    • Write, call, or email your state and federal representatives. Ask why the USDA continues to target programs that are crucial to Black and brown communities—and demand an immediate end to these cuts.
  4. Stay Vigilant:
    • Get passports, keep key documents in order, support local nonprofits that do vital community work.
    • Lobby philanthropic groups and local foundations to fill the gap with unrestricted funding.

A New Chapter in the Fight for Food Sovereignty

Across the country, Black farmers and community organizers are aware of these vicious attacks on their livelihoods, and are tired of waiting for the state to “allow” them to feed their neighbors. Ivanhoe’s story makes clear: federal funding can and is vanishing overnight, so real power lies in grassroots organizing and mutual aid networks that can’t be so easily dismantled.

“We’re not shutting down,” Henry says. “We will still host our monthly markets… but our plans for expansion won’t be what they were. I’m sad for the community. But we are not giving up on doing the right thing for the people.”

That resilience is the beating heart of this story. Musk and his DOGE fascists can attempt to kill one of Kansas City’s last remaining Black-led neighborhood councils, but they cannot extinguish the will of a community determined to grow, thrive, and feed itself.

And for all of us—from KC to California to the Carolinas—the lesson is also clear: The road to true food sovereignty doesn’t run through the good graces of oligarchs in Washington. It runs through our own unshakable commitment to one another.

Whether we’re planting seeds, hosting markets, or pushing back against racist and oppressive policies, our power lies in our solidarity and our refusal to be erased.

This is unquestioningly a national alarm. It’s time to wake up, stand with Ivanhoe, and make sure these brazen attempts to strangle Black-led agriculture do not go unanswered.

Ryan has a diverse background including working at one of the nation’s most esteemed Black think tanks, one of Chicago’s top B2B Tech PR agencies, a top 3 global PR firm, and founding Kansas City’s largest Black-led direct action group during the 2020 uprisings. During Ryan’s professional career he’s consulted brands such as Facebook, Samsung, Amazon and Google.

Black Farmers
Elon Musk
Food sovereignty
DOGE

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles. Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


Related Stories

Raymond Nat Turner, BAR poet-in-residence
DOGE— Department Of Grifter Enrichment
07 May 2025
“Empathy is the bane of western civilization.” 
Elon Musk
Raymond Nat Turner, BAR poet-in-residence
Is this ‘Constructive Engagement' 2.0— Or, Freddo frontin’ for Heil tech Hitler?
05 March 2025
“The limits of tyrants are prescribed by the
Raymond Nat Turner, BAR poet-in-residence
Gimme, gimme, gimme …
26 February 2025
A ‘wise’ guy’s got the power— To treason away With schemes of greed/The People end up With nothing/Or nothing at all …
Chuck Squatriglia
Feds Lend Tesla $465 Million to Build Model S
26 February 2025
Elon Musk is Donald Trump's right-hand man and viewed as an evil incarnate, but it was Barack Obama's administration which bailed out Tesla wit
“It Tears You Apart Mentally and Physically”: The Health Crisis Afflicting Black Farmers
Safiya Charles
“It Tears You Apart Mentally and Physically”: The Health Crisis Afflicting Black Farmers
18 May 2022
Farming is a stressful occupation. Black farmers face the additional burdens of racism, debt, and displacement.
“Rampant Issues”: Black Farmers are Still Left Out at USDA
Ximena Bustillo
“Rampant Issues”: Black Farmers are Still Left Out at USDA
15 July 2021
Farmers of color received less than one percent of the payments even though they are five percent of all U.S. farmers.

More Stories


  • BAR Radio Logo
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley and Glen Ford
    Black Agenda Radio May 23, 2025
    23 May 2025
    In this week’s segment, we discuss the legacy of Malcolm X and the state of the political party that many Black people feel trapped in. We are joined by a guest in Libya who explains the lasting…
  • Richard Medhurst
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Independent Jourmalist Richard Medhurst Targeted by Western Governments Acting on Israel's Behalf
    23 May 2025
    Our guest is Richard Medhurst. He is an independent journalist whose work has been severely impacted by state repression in the UK and Austria. He was arrested and detained in the UK in August 2024…
  • Malcolm X
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Malcolm X Legacy and Politics Today
    23 May 2025
    Anthony Rogers-Wright is a Black Agenda Report contributor and host of the WPFW program Full Spectrum, where Margaret Kimberley was recently a guest. They discussed the legacy of Malcolm X on the…
  • Libya
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    How the Libyan People Are Still Impacted By the U.S./NATO Destruction of Their State
    23 May 2025
    Our guest is Dr. Abdelkarim Kashkar. He is a physician and author who writes about politics in Libyan newspapers. He joins us from Benghazi, Libya, to discuss how the United States impacts the people…
  • Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
    Biden's Fate and Israel's Sadistic Revenge
    21 May 2025
    Israel is starving Gazans to death and continuing its bombing attacks on civilians. Israel also specializes in personal revenge, targeting men, women, and children who might be the subject of…
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us