Critical programs that protect the integrity of our air, soil, water, and the habitats that sustain all living creatures are at risk. Take action today to advance this comprehensive legislation.
As Congress considers a budget for 2026, proposals across the government would make deep cuts to theAs Congress considers a budget for 2026, proposals across the government would make deep cuts to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Clean Water and Drinking Water State Revolving Funds, Superfund cleanup and environmental justice programs—rolling back progress on safeguarding public health and creation care. These cuts could result in increased pollution of our air, contamination of our water and degradation of the habitats creation calls home. As people of faith, we are called to steward creation so that all life may flourish. Programs that protect clean air, restore soil health, provide safe drinking water and safeguard habitats for wildlife are essential for the well-being of our neighbors, human and nonhuman alike.
As the ELCA social statement Caring for Creation: Vision, Hope, and Justice cautions, “Our current practices may so alter the living world that it will be unable to sustain life in the manner we know.”
Join us in asking Congress to ensure their budget negotiations reflect the vision of creation flourishing! What do you see locally? Customize this message to increase its effectiveness.
From ELCA Advocacy, October 10, 2025. As of this day in October 2025, the Farm Bill has expired, leaving critical hunger networks and many in rural communities in policy limbo. It was last reauthorized in 2018 and temporarily extended through September 30, 2025. This comprehensive legislation traditionally governs SNAP nutrition assistance, rural infrastructure, agricultural research, and farm-to-food bank connections that many of our congregations and social ministry organizations depend upon to serve those in need.
With the Farm Bill’s expiration, lawmakers have the opportunity to craft new legislation that strengthens our ability to support the hungry and those of us in the greatest need. We urge our representatives to support a renewed Farm Bill that prevents upcoming barriers to SNAP benefits, recognizing that these programs are lifelines for struggling families in our communities—including many in rural America facing mounting economic pressures from tariffs, declining commodity prices, and rising production costs.
The expiration has particularly impacted “orphan” programs, which have lacked reliable funding since 2023 – including agricultural research programs, scholarships for young farmers, and oversubscribed conservation programs. International feeding initiatives, such as Food for Peace and the McGovern-Dole school feeding program—which provide meals to hungry children worldwide—face uncertain futures. Domestically, farm-to-food bank programs that connect agricultural abundance with hungry neighbors have lost critical support, straining food ministries operated by Lutheran Social Services, church food pantries, and other faith-based hunger relief ministries already stretched thin by increased demand.
Congregations often witness firsthand how families who steward the land and feed our nation are themselves struggling. Through Action Alerts and federal advocacy, we ask lawmakers to restore these vital programs and support policies that uplift both rural communities and the vulnerable populations our faith compels us to serve.
The Farm Bill
The Farm Bill, which guides much of U.S. agriculture, rural and food policy, is currently being debated in Congress. The ELCA urges Congress to pass a 2024 Farm Bill that promotes:
food for hungry neighbors at home and abroad,
healthy rural and farming communities,
inclusion of people of all backgrounds,
care of creation to feed future generations
In a world of abundance, we strive for an end to hunger and poverty, and towards a just world where all are fed. Additionally, we are to work with each other and the environment to meet needs without causing undue burdens elsewhere. The Farm Bill is one of the most influential pieces of legislation affecting hunger and conservation in the U.S. and around the world.
Our social statements call for policies that provide adequate nutrition for all and create livelihood opportunities that are genuinely sustainable. We urge lawmakers to pass a 2024 Farm Bill that reflects these faith-based values.
The ACLU of Nevada has filed a lawsuit challenging ICE’s misuse of Nevada’s law enforcement to carry out its federal immigration agenda.
This unlawful 287(g) agreement between the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department (LVMPD), and ICE undermines Nevada’s justice system, obstructs state court orders, and wastes taxpayer dollars. Nevada’s law enforcement should serve our communities – not act as agents of federal immigration enforcement.
Creator God, we give you thanks for the first peoples of this land — for their care of the earth, their wisdom, and their resilience. We honor the stories, traditions, and lives of Indigenous communities who have lived in harmony with creation since time immemorial.
Forgive us for the ways colonization and injustice have silenced voices and broken relationships. Open our hearts to truth and healing, that we may walk in right relationship with our Indigenous neighbors, listening, learning, and standing in solidarity.
May your Spirit move among us to bring justice to the oppressed, healing to the wounded, and renewed hope for all peoples who call this land home.
In the name of the One who brings reconciliation and peace, Amen.
Earlier this month, the City of Sparks became one of the first cities in Nevada to begin the process of creating a city ordinance to regulate data centers.
Data centers are rapidly expanding across our state — often without clear guidance or oversight. These facilities can be highly resource-intensive, consuming large amounts of energy and water.
Unlike many other jurisdictions, Sparks is taking proactive steps to address these impacts through thoughtful regulation.
At Lutheran Engagement and Advocacy in Nevada (LEAN), we believe in caring for creation and protecting our shared, vulnerable resources. This step by the City of Sparks is an important example of how local governments can act to ensure technological growth doesn’t come at the expense of environmental stewardship.