Submitted by: Nancy Battle
TIME TO TAKE A BITE OUT OF FOOD STAMPS
By CONNIE CASS and MARY
CLARE JALONICK
WASHINGTON (AP) – Food stamps look ripe for the picking,
politically speaking.
Through five years and counting of economic
distress, the food aid program has swollen up like a summer tomato. It grew to
$78 billion last year, more than double its size when the recession began in
late 2007.
That makes it a juicy target for conservative
Republicans seeking to trim spending and pare government.
But to many
Democrats, food stamps are a major element of the country’s commitment to help
citizens struggling to meet basic needs.
These competing visions are now
clashing in Congress.
The Republican-led House has severed food stamp
policy from farm legislation, its longtime safe harbor. A group of GOP lawmakers
is planning a separate food stamp bill that would cut the program by as much as
5 percent, or about $4 billion a year.
The Democratic-led Senate,
meanwhile, has passed a joint farm-and-food-stamp bill bearing a more modest
reduction of about $400 million annually.
The way the conflict is
resolved could have a big impact on the future of food stamps.
From
President Lyndon Johnson’s vision of a Great Society to President Ronald
Reagan’s condemnation of “welfare queens” to President Bill Clinton’s embrace of
welfare work requirements, food stamps have been a potent
symbol.
Partisans tend to see what they want to see in the program:
barely enough bread and milk to sustain hungry children, or chips and soda,
maybe even steak and illicit beer, for cheaters and lay-abouts gaming the
system.
A look at the history and future of food
stamps:
___
NO MORE STAMPS
These days, people in the
nation’s largest food aid program pay with plastic.
These special debit
cards are swiped at convenience store or supermarket checkouts to pay for
groceries. The cards can’t be used for alcohol or cigarettes or nonfood items
such as toothpaste, paper towels or dog chow. Junk food or high-priced treats
are OK.
The first food stamps were a temporary plan to help feed
the hungry toward the end of the Great Depression of the 1930s. The government
subsidized the cost of blue stamps that poor people used to buy food from farm
surpluses.
The idea was revived in the 1960s and expanded into a
permanent program that sold food coupons to low-income people at a discount.
Beginning in the 1970s, food stamps were given to the poor for free. Benefit
cards began gradually replacing paper in the 1980s.
Food stamps aren’t
the government’s only way to feed those in need. There are more than a dozen
smaller programs, including the one for Women, Infants and Children, and free
and reduced-price school lunches.
In 2008, food stamps were officially
renamed the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP. But most people
still know the name that’s been familiar since 1939.
___
ONE IN
EVERY 7 AMERICANS
In a nation of 314 million people, roughly 47 million
are eating with food stamps each month.
Who are they? Children and
teenagers make up almost half the rolls, according to the Agriculture
Department. About 10 percent are seniors.
The vast majority don’t receive
any cash welfare. Many households that shop with SNAP cards have someone who’s
employed but qualify for help because of low earnings.
The average food
stamp allotment is $133 a person per month. The monthly amount a family gets
depends on the household’s size, earnings and expenses, as well as changing food
prices and other factors.
Households can qualify for help with earnings
up to 30 percent higher than the federal poverty level, making the limit about
$30,000 for a family of four this year. These households are limited to no more
than $2,000 in savings, or $3,250 if there are elderly or disabled
residents.
In addition, most states allow people to qualify automatically
for food stamps if they are eligible for certain other welfare programs.
Although food stamps are paid for with federal tax dollars, states administer
the program and have some choices in setting requirements.
Able-bodied
adults who aren’t raising children are supposed to work or attend job training
or similar programs to stay on food stamps more than three months. But work
requirements across most of the nation have been waived for several years
because of the high unemployment rate.
People who are living in the
United States illegally aren’t eligible for food stamps. Most adults who
immigrate legally aren’t eligible during their first five years in the
country.
___
RISING LIKE YEAST
The cost to taxpayers more
than doubled over just four years, from $38 billion in 2008 to $78 billion last
year.
Liberals see a program responding to rising need at a time of
economic turmoil. Conservatives see out-of-control spending, and many
Republicans blame President Barack Obama. While seeking the GOP presidential
nomination in 2012, Newt Gingrich labeled Obama the “food stamp
president.”
Some of the growth can be attributed to Obama’s food stamp
policies, but Congress’ budget analysts blame most of it on the
economy.
The big factors:
The SNAP program is an entitlement,
meaning everyone who is eligible can get aid, no matter the cost to
taxpayers.
Millions of jobs were lost in the recession that hit in
2007. Unemployment is still high, and many people who have jobs are working
fewer hours or for lower pay than before, meaning more people are
eligible.
Obama’s 2009 economic stimulus temporarily increased
benefit amounts; that boost is set to expire on Nov. 1. Time limits for jobless
adults without dependents are still being waived in most of the
country.
Food stamp eligibility requirements were loosened by
Congress in 2002 and 2008, before Obama became
president.
Fluctuating food prices have driven up monthly benefit
amounts, which are based on a low-cost diet.
___
FEWER TO
FEED?
The number of people using food stamps appears to be leveling off
this year, and long-term budget projections suggest the number will begin to
fall as the economy improves.
Why is it taking so long? Although the
jobless rate has dropped from its 2009 peak, it remains high, leaving a
historically large number of people eligible for food stamps. Since the
recession began, a bigger portion of people who are eligible have signed up for
food stamps than in the past.
Many people who enrolled during the worst
days of the recession still qualify for SNAP cards, even if they are doing a
little better now. For example, they may have gone from being laid off to
working a low-paying or part-time job.
The Congressional Budget Office
predicts in about a decade the number of people using food stamps will drop to
34 million, or about 1 in every 10 people.
___
FOOD AND
FRAUD
Abuse was a worry from the start. The 1939 food stamp program was
launched in May and by that October a retailer had been caught violating the
rules.
There’s been progress along the way, especially after the
nationwide adoption of SNAP cards, which are harder to sell for cash than paper
coupons were. The government says such “trafficking” in food stamps has fallen
significantly over the past two decades, from about 4 cents on the dollar in
1993 to a penny per dollar in 2008.
But many lawmakers say fraud is still
costing taxpayers too much. Some people lie about their income, apply for
benefits in multiple states or fail to quit the program when their earnings go
up. Recipients must tell their state agency within 10 days if their income goes
over the limit.
Some stores illegally accept food stamps to pay for other
merchandise, even beer or electronics, or give out cash at a cut rate in
exchange for phony food purchases, which are then reimbursed by the
government.
___
FOOD AND FARMS
In Congress, it’s a marriage
of convenience.
Food stamp policy has been packaged in the same bill with
farm subsidies and other agricultural programs since the 1970s. It was a canny
way of assuring that urban lawmakers who wanted the poverty program would vote
for farm spending. That worked until this year, when conservatives balked at the
skyrocketing cost of food stamps.
In June, a farm bill that included food
stamps was defeated in the Republican-led House because conservative members
felt it didn’t cut the program deeply enough.
In response, GOP leaders
stripped food stamps out of the farm bill and tried again. That version narrowly
passed the House on July 11, leaving food stamps in limbo.
Food stamps
remain in the farm bill passed by the Senate. That bill made only a half-percent
cut to food stamps and the Democratic Senate will be reluctant to cut more
deeply or to evict the poverty program from its home in the farm
bill.
The House and Senate versions must be reconciled before the
five-year farm bill can become law.
___
WHAT NOW?
The
current farm and food law expires in September.
If there’s no agreement
between the House and Senate on what to do about food stamps, Congress could
vote to extend the law as it is, at the expense of many planned updates to
agricultural policy.
Meanwhile, House Republican leaders say they plan to
advance a separate bill to cut food stamps as early as next month. Their plan
would find savings by tightening eligibility standards and imposing new work
requirements. It also may require drug testing and bar convicted murderers,
rapists and pedophiles from receiving food stamps.
But Democratic
senators and Obama oppose substantial reductions to food stamps and likely would
block them from becoming law.
Even if the Senate goes along with the
House bid to remove food stamps from the farm bill, SNAP benefits would still be
available for now.
While farm bills set food stamp policy, the money is
paid out through annual appropriations bills that so far have left benefits
intact.
But the appropriations process could be another opportunity for
lawmakers determined to pluck savings from food
stamps.
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