From VOA:
“US States Scale Back Food
Stamp Benefits Even as Prices Soar”
Month by month, more of the
roughly 40 million Americans who get help buying groceries through the federal
food stamp program are seeing their benefits plunge even as the nation
struggles with the biggest increase in food costs in decades. The payments to
low-income individuals and families are dropping as governors end COVID-19
disaster declarations and opt out of an ongoing federal program that made their
states eligible for dramatic increases in SNAP benefits, also known as food
stamps. The U.S. Department of Agriculture began offering the increased benefit
in April 2020 in response to surging unemployment after the COVID-19 pandemic
swept over the country. The result is that depending on the politics of a
state, individuals and families in need find themselves eligible for
significantly different levels of help buying food.
Nebraska took the most aggressive
action anywhere in the country, ending the emergency benefits four months into
the pandemic in July 2020 in a move Republican Gov. Pete Ricketts said was
necessary to "show the rest of the country how to get back to
normal." Since then, nearly a dozen states with Republican leadership have
taken similar action, with Iowa this month being the most recent place to slash
the benefits. Benefits also will be cut in Wyoming and Kentucky in the next
month. Arkansas, Florida, Idaho, Missouri, Mississippi, Montana, North Dakota,
Nebraska, South Dakota and Tennessee have also scaled back the benefits.
Republican leaders argue that the
extra benefits were intended to only temporarily help people forced out of work
by the pandemic. Now that the virus has eased, they maintain, there is no
longer a need to offer the higher payments at a time when businesses in most
states are struggling to find enough workers. But the extra benefits also help
out families in need at a time of skyrocketing prices for food. Recipients
receive at least $95 per month under the program, but some individuals and
families typically eligible for only small benefits can get hundreds of dollars
in extra payments each month. The entire program would come to a halt if the
federal government decides to end its public health emergency, though the Biden
administration so far hasn't signaled an intention to do so.
For Tara Kramer, 45, of Des Moines,
the decision by Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds to end the emergency payments starting
April 1 meant her monthly SNAP benefit plunged from $250 in March to $20 in
April. Kramer, who has a genetic disorder that can cause intense pain, said the
extra money enabled her to buy healthier food that made her feel better and
help her to live a more active life. "My heart sank," Kramer said.
"All the memories from before the emergency allotment came rushing
back." Alex Murphy, a spokesman for Reynolds, noted the extra benefits
were always intended to help people who lost jobs because of the pandemic and
said, "we have to return to pre-pandemic life." Murphy pointed out
that Iowa has over 86,000 job openings listed on a state unemployment website. But
Kramer said she's not able to work and that even getting out of her apartment
can be a struggle at times. Vince Hall, who oversees public policy for the
nationwide food bank network Feeding America, said ending the extra benefits
ignores the reality that even as the pandemic wanes there hasn't been a decline
in demand at food banks.
Wages have been increasing in the
United States and the national unemployment rate in March dropped to 3.6%, but
those gains have been offset by an 8.5% increase in inflation compared to a
year ago. Food is among items rising the fastest, leaving many families unable
to buy enough groceries. "The COVID pandemic is giving way to a hunger
pandemic," Hall said. "We're in a real, real struggle."
Feeding America, which represents
200 food banks, reports that demand for food has increased just as these
organizations are seeing individual donations dwindle and food costs rise. The
organization estimates the nation's food banks will spend 40% more to buy food
in the fiscal year ending June 2022 as in the previous year.
For people like Annie Ballan, 51,
of Omaha, Nebraska, the decision by Ricketts to stop participating in the
program reduced the SNAP payments she and her son receive from nearly $500 a
month to $41. Both have health problems and can't work. "From the middle
of the month to the end of the month, people have no food," Ballan said,
her voice rising in anger. "This is all the governor's fault. He says he
loves Nebraskans, that Nebraskans are wonderful, but he's cut off our
food." The demand on food banks will only grow as more states reduce their
SNAP payments, which typically provide nine meals for every one meal offered by
food banks, Hall said. Valerie Andrews, 59, of St. Charles, Missouri, said the
SNAP benefits that she and her husband rely on fell from $430 a month to $219
when Missouri ended the extra payments in August 2021. Andrews, who is
disabled, said she tries to budget carefully and gets food regularly from a
food pantry but it's difficult. "We're barely making it from paycheck to
paycheck," she said. "It gets pretty rough most of the time."
Officials at food banks and
pantries said they will do their best to meet increased demand but there is no
way they can fully offset the drop in SNAP benefits. Matt Unger, director of
the Des Moines Area Religious Council network of food pantries in Iowa's
capital city, noted the pantry's cost for a 5-ounce can of chicken has jumped
from 54 cents in March 2019 to a current price of $1.05. "Costs are just
going through the roof," he said.
^ Food Stamps, Food Banks and
other programs need MORE help now - NOT
less! Not only are there the hungry who have traditionally been using these programs,
but now a lot more people - mostly the
Middle Class and Retirees – that have had to start using them because of the
inflation caused by the Russian War in Ukraine and Covid. ^
https://www.voanews.com/a/us-states-scale-back-food-stamp-benefits-even-as-prices-soar/6532090.html
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