Posted by AzblueMeanie:
The Arizona Capitol Times (subscription required) has the Arizona numbers for the number of people affected by the expiration of the stimulus funds for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) aka food stamps, because of the failure of Congress to act before midnight tonight. Cuts to food stamp benefits hit more than 1 million Arizonans Friday:
More than 1.1 million Arizonans who depend on the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program – better known as food stamps – will see their benefits reduced Friday in a long-planned national cut.
The Nov. 1 cuts range from $11 a month for a single recipient to $65 or more for large families. Advocates said that poses a severe challenge for recipients on a tight budget.
“It does seemlike a small amount of money, but it is significant to people who are counting on every penny,” said Angela Schultz, outlook and community development manager at Arizona Community Action Association.
The maximum SNAP benefit for one person is $200 a month, but the level is often lower because benefits are adjusted according to income and the number of people in a family. The average benefit for a single recipient in Arizona in September, for example, was just $124.49, said John Bowen, legislative specialist of Arizona Department of Economic Security.
The cut is “not a huge amount, but for those whose primary source of food is SNAP, it is a half-week budget,” said Brian Simpson, a spokesman for the Association of Arizona Food Banks.
The reduction in benefits was scheduled in 2009, when Congress passed a temporary increase in benefits as part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act – the federal economic stimulus. The increase was set then to expire this Nov. 1.
House Democrats introduced a bill in September that would extend SNAP benefits at their current levels through 2016. But that bill has yet to get a hearing in the House Agriculture Committee, all but ensuring that the reductions will take effect as planned Nov. 1.
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The pending cut has charity organizations in the state bracing for an increase in business, as food-stamp recipients try to stretch their food budgets.
“They are going to visit food bank more frequently,” which will put more pressure on food pantries to keep up with demand, Simpson said.
[These agencies are also facing cuts in federal assistance due to cuts to TEFAP as a result of the automatic sequester.]
Pregnant women and infants can seek help from the Women, Infants and Children (WIC) nutrition program, and the elderly can turn to the Commodity Supplemental Food Program, Simpson said. But people outside those groups have few other options.
State officials said that just under half of the 1.1 million Arizonans who get food stamps are children. Schultz said another 13 percent of the state’s recipients are seniors or the disabled.
MSNBC's All In with Chris Hayes did an excellent report on this on Wednesday night. Food stamp cuts to create 'hunger cliff': "About 47 million poor people are about to have less to eat -- and the worst may still be coming."
Here is the panel discussion in the second segment The poor take another hit "Chris Hayes and his panelists look at the "Hunger Cliff" and the disconnect between Washington and the most desperate Americans."
Millions of Americans fell victim to food insecurity when the Great Recession hit in 2009, but didn't benefit from the economic recovery. And the worst may be yet to come. America’s new hunger crisis:
Food activists expect a “Hunger Cliff” on November 1, when automatic cuts to food stamp benefits will send a deluge of new hungry people to places like the River Fund Food Pantry, which are already strained.
“I thought we were busy now; I don’t know what it will be like then, because all of those people getting cut will definitely be accessing a pantry,” said Das. “It definitely will be a catastrophe.”
Those cuts were never supposed to be catastrophic; instead they were intended to gradually wind food stamp spending back down to normal levels, after boosting them in response to the 2008 financial collapse.
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The 2009 stimulus bill raised the cap on food stamp benefits and pumped an additional $45.2 billion into the program over the next several years. But as provisions of the law expire, the program is scheduled to receive a $5 billion cut over the next year alone. Those cuts will reduce monthly benefits for every single food stamp recipient in the country; a family of four will receive $36 less per month, on average.
Billions more in cuts are scheduled to occur in the following two years, despite the fact that food insecurity in America has not even begun to return to pre-recession levels.
“I believe we have a hunger crisis,” said Rep. Jim McGovern, who sits on a House committee responsible for the food stamp program. “When 50 million people in the richest country on the planet are hungry, that’s a crisis.”
There’s little sign that McGovern’s colleagues in Congress will step in to stave off the crisis. In fact, some Republicans in Congress are pushing further cuts to the food stamp program as part of broader budget negotiations that could bump an additional 4 million people off of the food stamps rolls by the end of next year.
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Visiting food pantries is a common practice for those who can’t stretch their food stamp money, also known as SNAP benefits, until the end of the month, according to Lisa Davis, senior vice president of government relations for the national food bank network Feeding America.
“Right now SNAP benefits are not overly generous,” Davis told MSNBC.com. “They average out to be about $1.49 per person per meal, and we know from our food banks that many of the clients coming to them are those who are receiving SNAP, but the benefits aren’t getting them through the entire month.”
* * *
On the same week that SNAP recipients are expected to lose $5 billion in benefits, members of both chambers of Congress are meeting to negotiate another potentially massive budget cut to the program.
This week, a committee will attempt to reconcile the House and Senate versions of the farm bill. The Senate version includes $4.1 billion in cuts to food stamps over the next decade; the House version includes no language related to food stamps, but House Republicans are expected to insist on including language from a separate House bill, which would slash $39 billion out of program over the course of the next ten years.
If House Republicans get their way and passed a $39 billion cut, it would cause nearly 4 million people to lose SNAP eligibility in 2014 alone, according to projections from the independent Congressional Budget Office. That cut would magnify the effect of the “Hunger Cliff” by orders of magnitude.
“I’m sad to say that we’re constantly putting out fires wherever Republicans try to light them,” said McGovern, D-Mass., a member of the Agriculture Committee and one of Congress’ leading advocates for more robust nutrition programs. As a member of the Farm Bill conference committee, McGovern will be conducting “damage control,” trying to limit the scope of the cuts.
McGovern believes that nutrition policy in the U.S. should be overhauled as part of a plan to end hunger entirely. But instead, “what we’re doing is body blocking this cut and that cut,” he said. Recalling that Barack Obama promised during his first presidential campaign to end child hunger by 2015, McGovern added, “we haven’t done a goddamn thing to do that, to be honest.”
* * *
The White House has promised to veto any major cut to food stamps, but with even the Senate legislation cutting $4 billion out of the program, some kind of haircut looks inevitable. If that happens, then food pantries will once again be forced to pick up the slack as best they can.
When people don’t have the resources to feed themselves, and government
welfare programs aren’t giving them the help they need, food banks are
often the safety net of last resort. However, these non-profit charities
are also dependent on government subsidies, and many of them are seeing
their budgets shrink even as demand for their services reaches
unprecedented levels. This holds especially true in low-income areas
where food pantries rely on the donations of churchgoers who are
themselves struggling[.]
* * *
At the same time, federal grants for food banks and pantries have taken a haircut. Although food stamps were left untouched by the across-the-board budget cuts known as the sequester, food banks took a modest hit when TEFAP, a USDA program which subsidizes food storage and distribution for food banks, got trimmed by 5%.
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For food banks across the country, the government shutdown strained resources even further. As government workers temporarily lost their jobs and preschool-aged children lost the free meals which they would have received at their Head Start programs, pantries raced to make emergency food deliveries. Had the shutdown lasted into November, many food banks would have lost their TEFAP funding and may have had to stop making food deliveries entirely.
Reopening the government has relieved some of the strain on food banks and pantries, but not by much. The USDA still estimates that 49 million Americans are food insecure, and there are no indications that the number will come down anytime soon.
In the wealthiest country in the world and the world's largest supplier of food products, it is a national disgrace that we allow our own children, and people in desperate financial circumstances to go hungry.
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