From News Nation:
“Thousands of military
families struggle with food insecurity”
(Brooklyn Pittman talks as she
sits in her car with her dogs after receiving food from an Armed Services YMCA
food distribution, Oct. 28, 2021.)
It’s a hidden crisis that has
existed for years inside one of the most well-funded institutions on the planet
and has only worsened during the coronavirus pandemic. As many as 160,000
active-duty military members are having trouble feeding their families. That
estimate by Feeding America, which coordinates the work of more than 200 food
banks around the country, underscores how long-term food insecurity has
extended into every aspect of American life, including the military. The exact
scope of the problem is a topic of debate, due to a lack of formal study. But
activists say it has existed for years and primarily affects junior-level
enlisted service members — ranks E1 to E4 in military parlance — with children.
“It’s a shocking truth that’s known to many food banks across the United
States,” said Vince Hall, Feeding America’s government relations officer. “This
should be the cause of deep embarrassment.” The group estimates that 29% of
troops in the most junior enlisted ranks faced food insecurity during the
previous year.
“It is what it is,” said James Bohannon, 34, a Naval E4 (petty officer third class) in San Diego who relies on food assistance to keep his two daughters fed. “You know what you’re signing up for in the military,” he said, after emerging from a drive-thru food distribution organized by the local Armed Services YMCA branch. “But I’m not going to lie. It’s really tough.” In addition to modest pay for junior enlisted ranks, the frequent moves inherent to military life make it difficult for military spouses to find steady work. Also, the internal military culture of self-sufficiency leaves many reluctant to speak about their difficulties, for fear they will be regarded as irresponsible. The problem is exacerbated by an obscure Agriculture Department rule that prevents thousands of needy military families from accessing the SNAP government assistance program, commonly known as food stamps.
“It’s one of these things that
the American people don’t know about, but it’s a matter of course among
military members. We know this,” said Sen. Tammy Duckworth, an Illinois
Democrat and former Blackhawk pilot who lost both legs in a helicopter crash in
Iraq. “We’re the mightiest military on the face of the earth and yet those who
are on the lower rung of our military ranks are — if they are married and have
a child or two– they’re hungry. How can you focus on carrying out the mission
and defending our democracy. If you’re worried about whether or not your kid
gets dinner tonight?” Meredith Knopp, CEO of a food bank in St. Louis and an
Army veteran, said the problem cuts across all branches of the military. She
recalls being a young officer in Texas when she was approached by a new private
with a baby. “They were getting ready to turn off his electricity because he
couldn’t pay his bills,” she said. “It was shocking to me.”
Perhaps the best indication of
how entrenched the problem has become is that a robust network of
military-adjacent charitable organizations such as the Armed Services YMCA and
Blue Star Families has developed an infrastructure of food banks near most
major domestic bases. San Diego may be one of the epicenters of the phenomenon,
with high housing costs and multiple military bases within driving distance.
For Brooklyn Pittman, whose husband, Matthew, is in the Navy, the move to
California from West Virginia this year was a financial shock. “We had a nice
savings built up and then we moved out here and it was rough,” she said. “We
still had student loans and everything on top of everything else.” Their
savings quickly disappeared and the small income she earns from dog-sitting
didn’t come close to covering the shortfall. For a while, the couple considered
sleeping in their car on the base grounds until the next paycheck. Pittman was
one of 320 families participating in the Armed Services YMCA’s late October
drive-thru food distribution. The organization had been hosting events like
this for more than 10 years, but when the pandemic struck, expanded operations
from six sites to 11 around the country and doubled the frequency of the San
Diego-area events.
(A volunteer loads food into a car at an Armed Services YMCA food distribution, Oct. 28, 2021, in San Diego.)
There’s a diversity of opinion as
to how much of a stigma the issue carries within military communities. Kelly
Klor, who works on food insecurity issues for Blue Star Families, recalls a
period of financial hardship 13 years ago as a young mother in Texas whose
husband had just enlisted. The family pinched pennies at every opportunity,
never eating out and relying on the local public library for entertainment. But
they still depended on WIC — a similar program to food stamps that serves
mothers and children — in order to afford expensive baby formula for her infant
daughter. “I felt embarrassed pulling out my vouchers,” she said. “But at the
same time, I was thinking ‘Should it be this hard?’ ” Klor recalls treating her
financial trouble as a taboo subject, even through she suspected many families
around her were in the same situation. “It seemed like it wasn’t something that
you share with other people,” she said. But Maggie Meza, a Blue Star Families
representative in San Diego, recalls the communal poverty as common knowledge
and a bonding element among families. “It was like ‘Your husband’s a sergeant,
my husband’s a sergeant. We’re both broke. Let’s go find some free stuff,’ ”
she said. One of the strangest aspects of the problem is a mysterious
Agriculture Department regulation that prevents thousands of needy military
families from receiving food stamps. Families living outside the base grounds
receive a Basic Allowance for Housing to help cover most of their costs.
But the 2008 Food and Nutrition
Act dictates that the allowance counts as income in calculating eligibility to
receive SNAP benefits, and that ends up disqualifying thousands of military
families. The allowance doesn’t count as income for tax reasons or for WIC
benefits. Food security activists say they’re confused by both the original
rule and the fact that it has endured for more than 12 years. “No one seems to
know why it’s still a law,” said Hall, the Feeding America official. Dorene
Ocamb, chief development officer for the Armed Services YMCA, speculated that
the regulation is “just a case of unintended consequences.” Added Sen.
Duckworth: “I couldn’t tell you where it comes from. I can only tell you that
they won’t change it.” A spokesman for the USDA said in an email reply that the
department is “taking a fresh look at our authorities with respect to this
policy.” The issue is more than just a humanitarian problem. It directly
impacts national security, said Josh Protas, vice president of public policy
for MAZON, an organization that has done extensive research on military hunger.
Armed forces members enduring
food insecurity are more likely to be distracted in the field and less likely
to re-enlist, he said. That talent loss may be generational because military
service tends to run in families. “We’re doing a disservice to future
recruitment efforts,” Protas said. “We could be losing good people because they
can’t support their families.” Several people involved in the issue criticized
the Pentagon for turning a blind eye to the problem. “The denial by the
Pentagon has been frustrating,” Protas said. “It’s embarrassing for our leaders
to acknowledge the problem.” Colleen Heflin, a professor of public
administration at Syracuse University, said the lack of Pentagon interest has
led to a critical shortage of proper study or data. “In my experiences, it’s
hard to explain this to Department of Defense officials,” she said. “They find
it embarrassing and something they would not like to acknowledge.” But Ocamb
pushes back against the criticism that the military is burying the issue. She
acknowledges that there are “some optics that people are trying to work around”
but says most base commanders welcome the assistance and points out that the
Navy literally owns the San Diego property where the ASYMCA food distributions
take place. “I think the military knows this is a complex issue and they rely
on partners like us,” she said. “This concept that the military wants to sweep
this under the rug … then why do they let us keep doing this on Navy-owned
ground?”
Some of those who had complained
about Pentagon reluctance to face the issue say the attitude has changed in
recent months under the administration of President Joe Biden. Shannon
Razsadin, president of the Military Family Advisory Network, says she has felt
a change in attitude from the Pentagon this year, and partially credits first
lady Jill Biden for publicly championing the issue. “They are focused on
understanding it in the Pentagon,” she said. “Six months ago, I wouldn’t have
said that.” Efforts to secure Pentagon comment on this issue were unsuccessful.
But a Pentagon official told The Associated Press that Defense Secretary Lloyd
Austin would be publicly speaking on the subject in the near future. There are
fresh attempts by Congress to tackle the problem. Duckworth has sponsored a
bill that would establish a Basic Needs Allowance payment for military families
in need. Rep. James McGovern, D-Mass., has appealed for a serious Pentagon
study of the problem and a repeal of the USDA’s Basic Allowance for Housing
regulation. “At this stage, there’s no excuse for anyone in the top echelons of
the Pentagon to say they don’t know this is a problem,” McGovern said. “It’s
not rocket science. This is solvable … somebody take responsibility and solve
it.”
^ As a Military Brat I had many
friends on bases across the US and around the world that struggled for basic
things like food and clothing. This is an issue that is as old as the modern US
Military itself. Billions of Dollars are thrown at Dictators and conflicts
overseas while little to nothing is done to make sure every single Soldier,
Military Spouse and Military Brat has enough food to eat every day. ^
https://www.newsnationnow.com/us-news/thousands-of-military-families-struggle-with-food-insecurity/
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