New USDA hub is not coming to Iowa
August 1st, 2025 by Ric Hanson
(Radio Iowa) – As the U-S Department of Agriculture consolidates operations away from Washington D-C and into five new “hubs” across the country, Iowa was named among the early favorites for one of those locations — but it’s not going to happen. Kansas City is the final choice for the region, according to a memo from U-S Ag Secretary Brooke Rollins to her staff. Missouri Agriculture Director Chris Chinn says relocating U-S-D-A offices can benefit the people the agency serves. “We think it will be a great opportunity for the state of Missouri,” says Chinn. The process is to take place over the next few years. Along with Kansas City, the hubs are to be located in: Indianapolis, Indiana; Salt Lake City, Utah; Fort Collins, Colorado; and Raleigh, North Carolina.
The agency moved two research agencies to Kansas City in 2019: the Economic Research Service and the National Institute of Food and Ag. Chinn says having U-S-D-A personnel close to land-grant institutions and ag research has been positive. “They have the opportunity to travel out to those schools if they want to, to observe that research, to have those meeting opportunities,” says Chinn, “but more importantly, they know what agriculture needs because Kansas City, while it is an urban area, you don’t have to drive very far and you’re out in the country where you can see tractors, combines, hogs, cattle, the list goes on and on.” Iowa State University is a land-grant university.
The Rollins memo noted how Kansas City has a lower cost of living compared to Washington D.C., and she noted the U-S-D-A will continue to maintain critical agency service centers in locations like St. Louis. Robert Bonnie, a former U-S-D-A Under Secretary of Farm Production and Conservation, says strong relationships between the agency and land-grant universities are important, but he’s not sold on the hub plan. “I don’t think you get USDA closer to its constituents and stakeholders by dividing it up,” Bonnie says. “I actually think it’s served exactly the opposite purpose.” Bonnie says relocating the agency makes it more difficult for farmers and others to get information from the agency.
The number of jobs that will come with the Kansas City move is unknown.