INDIANAPOLIS – Since February, Amanda Foster-Moudy has had a progressively harder time finding formula for her 8-month-old, Leo.

She’s joined online groups where mothers share tips and photos of where to find the precious nutrition for their babies and share excess product. Sometimes, she said, her husband Dave Moudy has spent two to three hours driving around to different stores, only to find empty shelves.

“He’s my runner,” she said. “If he can’t find it, he goes to another place. Then another place, then another place.”

On Sunday, the Moudys and young Leo watched with delight as a C-17 military plane with a belly full of formula produced in Europe landed at Indianapolis International Airport – the first shipment to hit the United States as part of President Joe Biden’s recently announced Operation Fly Formula initiative.

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Importing formula from Europe would typically take about two weeks under the normal commercial process, said U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, speaking at the airport as the shipment was unloaded and packed on to FedEx trucks that delivered it to a Nestlé distribution plant just a few miles away.

But last week, Biden announced a special protocol to expedite the process with an eye toward easing the shortage.

“The reason we are doing this is obviously the critical need that is out there,” Vilsack said. “We’re going to get this here in a matter of days, and a matter of days means a lot to the moms and dads who are worried.”