In a year when the headlines are full of tariff battles, border crackdowns, and partisan bickering over who deserves help, the real fight for our future is happening right here in Williamson County — in our grocery aisles, farmers markets, and food pantries.
Every policy that raises prices or cuts nutrition assistance hits our neighbors first: the single parent choosing between milk and gas, the retiree quietly skipping a meal to stretch a fixed income, the farmer trying to keep a family business alive through another round of “market adjustments.” These aren’t abstract economic ripples — they’re human consequences.
That’s why local matters more than ever. Buying from area farms, supporting small grocers like Hayley’s Grains in Taylor, and volunteering with food banks or community gardens isn’t charity — it’s an act of resistance. It’s how we push back against systems that put profit and politics above people.
If you’ve ever wondered how to make a difference amid the noise, start here:
- Volunteer at your local food pantry or mobile food distribution.
- Donate to local programs.
- Shop local whenever possible — every dollar recirculated in WilCo strengthens our shared safety net.
As Democrats, we talk a lot about equity and opportunity. But food — the most basic human right — is where those ideals take root. What happens next depends on whether we’re willing to roll up our sleeves and feed our own community.
In the early days of the pandemic, Hayley Blundell launched a small business in Taylor: sell grains by weight and see if the community responded.
“I started in 2021 … really small, kind of risk-free,” she told me. “If it worked, then I’d have a business — and if it didn’t, I’d have grains for the next three years.”
People did respond. With grocery shelves bare and global shipping stalled, shoppers rediscovered local markets. “Farmers markets definitely saw growth,” Hayley recalled. “It was safer to shop outdoors, and I think COVID really made people realize the importance of buying local.”
Her store, Hayley’s Grains, grew from a refill-only concept into a community grocery focused on quality and proximity. “It became pretty clear that refill wasn’t what Taylor was looking for,” she said. “People wanted high-quality products that weren’t as processed or coming from so far away.”
She now sources produce across Texas and partners with distributors that support small farms. “Farm-to-Table was kind of an answer to all my problems — they let me buy in quantities that make sense, because I don’t have a ton of storage, and they are great at making sure the food is high quality and responsibly sourced”
Tariffs: When “Far Away” Costs Hit Close to Home
This year, tariffs emerged as a new challenge. “Tariffs were a really big concern at the beginning of the year,” Hayley explained. “I bring in high-quality pantry items from Italy, Greece, Thailand — some directly from Japan — and the tariffs definitely pushed those prices up.”
Even her Texas-made goods aren’t immune. “Products made in the U.S., especially from small businesses, often get their packaging materials overseas. That’s increased prices here as well,” she said.
The squeeze shows on the shelves. “Everything’s more expensive — fewer people coming in, smaller baskets. This summer I could really only keep produce, dairy, and meat stocked; the rest of the shelves were pretty bare.”
Hayley wishes more people understood that “buying American” alone can’t offset inflation. “We can all buy from the U.S., and that’s great,” she said, “but then supply and demand will just increase the cost of those products. It doesn’t automatically make things cheaper.”
Beyond Prices: Community, Policy, and Food Security
While tariffs raise costs, Hayley keeps her focus on neighbors helping neighbors. Her store runs a Pay It Forward program — donations that go directly toward groceries for local families navigating recent SNAP reductions and rising food insecurity. It’s a simple system built on trust: when customers give, others eat. Learn more or contribute at www.hayleysgrainstx.com.
“Every dollar spent here stays here,” Hayley said. “It supports farmers, keeps small businesses alive, and helps us all weather the next disruption — whatever it is.”
Why does all this matter?
The truth is, food insecurity isn’t a partisan issue — but the policies that create it often are. When Washington plays tariff roulette and Texas slashes SNAP, it’s our local farmers, grocers, and families who pay the price. The people on the ground — folks like Hayley Blundell, who built Hayley’s Grains out of hope and hard work — are holding the line while others debate whether help is “deserved.”
We don’t have to wait for Congress to fix it. We can strengthen our own food systems right here in WilCo — by funding local agriculture programs, electing leaders who believe feeding families is non-negotiable, and showing up for one another through the hard seasons. Every volunteer shift, every local dollar spent, every shared meal is a quiet act of democracy — proof that when we care for our neighbors, we build the kind of county, and country, worth fighting for.
About Hayley’s Grains
Hayley’s Grains, located on Main Street in Taylor, Texas, is a neighborhood grocery offering Texas-grown produce, local meats, and responsibly sourced pantry staples.

