"Restricting food stamps to use on certain foods is only fair if we put restrictions on dozens of other programs that assist people —to attend school, save for retirement, buy homes, take care of their children. Instead, let’s trust Americans to use that assistance as they see fit and not tell them how to live their lives. "
http://www.csmonitor.com/Business/Tax-VOX/2015/0416/Why-the-government-shouldn-t-tell-people-how-to-use-food-stamps
Sunday, May 31, 2015
Thursday, May 28, 2015
USDA wants low-income seniors to use their food stamps for fruits and veggies
"Advocates for low-income people and seniors said many in the older generation perceive a stigma in accepting food stamps. Others find the paperwork too cumbersome for such a small monthly benefit – as low as $16 per month in some states. The result is that only 42 percent of seniors who are eligible for SNAP participate in the program, compared with 83 percent of others who are eligible."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/local/wp/2015/04/07/usda-wants-low-income-seniors-to-use-their-food-stamps-for-fruits-and-veggies/
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/local/wp/2015/04/07/usda-wants-low-income-seniors-to-use-their-food-stamps-for-fruits-and-veggies/
Friday, May 22, 2015
Antifraud effort on food stamps hurts poor, advocates say
"The state’s efforts to modernize the food stamps program and root out fraud have instead cut off thousands of deserving residents from their benefits, leaving many unable to buy food, pay bills, or both, according to advocates for the poor."
http://www.bostonglobe.com/business/2015/03/26/fraud-detection-system-erroneously-cuts-thousands-from-food-stamps/AENK4Bv77zdn59AtlBKUzH/story.html
http://www.bostonglobe.com/business/2015/03/26/fraud-detection-system-erroneously-cuts-thousands-from-food-stamps/AENK4Bv77zdn59AtlBKUzH/story.html
Tuesday, May 19, 2015
Emmet: "You have to be creative"
Today I asked my neighbor, Emmet, to share what he buys for a month on food stamps. Emmet is the sole caregiver for his mother who is disabled. The two live in his childhood home. He is employed as a dishwasher at a local restaurant. They receive $102 a month for food benefits and usually spend about $125-$150 on food purchases. Emmet says that you have to be creative to eat well on food stamps and that you shouldn't be afraid to save up your benefits month to month so you can splurge for holidays and backyard BBQs. This is from last month, a typical month for Emmet and his mother.
In this month Emmet and his mother spent $137.51 on food, $102 of which was food stamp benefits.
In this month Emmet and his mother spent $137.51 on food, $102 of which was food stamp benefits.
| Pork chops - 1lb | $1.99 |
| jumbo beef franks | $1.59 |
| ground beef 30% fat 1 tube | $3.29 |
| turkey necks and gizzards 2 lbs | $2.69 |
| white flour | $2.79 |
| white sugar | $1.99 |
| cheese - 3 small packs | $6.00 |
| Smart Ones frozen dinners - 4 | $10.00 |
| apples - 1 lb | $0.99 |
| clementines - 1 bag | $3.99 |
| iceberg lettuce | $1.29 |
| tomatoes - 2 | $2.42 |
| potatoes - 10lbs | $3.49 |
| green grapes - 1 lb | $2.49 |
| frozen veggies - 6 bags | $6.00 |
| eggs - dozen | $1.89 |
| Kraft cheese singles | $2.00 |
| cinnamon rolls in a tube - 2 | $5.00 |
| margarine | $2.99 |
| coffee creamer | $2.29 |
| coffee | $4.62 |
| frozen hash browns | $2.00 |
| hamburger helper - 4 boxes | $5.00 |
| Little Debbie snack cakes - 2 boxes | $5.00 |
| Tube noodles - 7 bags | $9.03 |
| instant noodles - 20 packs | $6.00 |
| pork rinds | $0.99 |
| malt o meal hot cereal | $4.98 |
| corn oil - small bottle | $2.99 |
| cooking spray | $1.99 |
| taco seasoning pack | $0.49 |
| taco shells | $1.29 |
| re-fried beans canned | $1.39 |
| milk - 4 cartons whole | $11.92 |
| decaf coffee - 1 pack | $4.99 |
| greens - farmer's market | $2.00 |
| watercress - farmer's market | $2.00 |
| kale - farmer's market | $2.00 |
| mulberries - farmer's market | $3.75 |
Thursday, May 14, 2015
Food-stamp cuts would hurt the needy
"These cuts could lead to 11 million to 12 million children and adults losing benefits. The U.S. Census reports that SNAP lifted 4.8 million people out of poverty in 2013."
Food-stamp cuts would hurt the needy
Food-stamp cuts would hurt the needy
Monday, May 11, 2015
"Sometimes I dream of grapes"
I asked another friend -- this one is a 20 something customer service rep from the east side of Detroit -- to share what she buys with her food benefits. Her benefits vary from month to month because she's only part time right now. Her job is seasonal. She's attending community college and works in the evenings. Like my neighbor she has difficulty finding good, cheap produce and she says sometimes she dreams of grapes, honeycrisp apples, and blueberries.
My friend spends about $150 each month on food. She doesn't have a car and lives in a part of the east side with few stores, so most of her shopping is done at a small store near her house that has a limited selections.
She spent 121.73 on food this past month; less than usual because she needed to see a dentist after she broke her tooth. She paid $120 to get the tooth pulled and has to make payments of $35 a month until she's paid it off.
My friend spends about $150 each month on food. She doesn't have a car and lives in a part of the east side with few stores, so most of her shopping is done at a small store near her house that has a limited selections.
She spent 121.73 on food this past month; less than usual because she needed to see a dentist after she broke her tooth. She paid $120 to get the tooth pulled and has to make payments of $35 a month until she's paid it off.
| Club crackers small box | $1.88 |
| Honey nut Cheerios small box | $2.98 |
| Milk gallon | $2.99 |
| Scalloped Potato box | $0.98 |
| spaghetti thin | $1.29 |
| spaghetti regular | $1.19 |
| tri color noodles | $1.89 |
| Parmesan cheese small | $3.79 |
| canned tomato sauce | $0.98 |
| chicken drumsticks 2 lbs | $2.96 |
| canned pineapple | $1.00 |
| Velveeta cheese regular size | $4.48 |
| Instant rice small size | $1.98 |
| catsup | $0.98 |
| turkey dogs - 8 packs | $8.00 |
| country crock spread small | $2.98 |
| Mac and cheese - 10 boxes | $7.90 |
| yogurt - 10 | $10.00 |
| frozen orange juice concentrate | $2.68 |
| frozen grape juice concentrate | $2.68 |
| bagged salad mix - 2 | $4.00 |
| bologna - 1 package | $3.68 |
| miracle whip | $2.77 |
| bag of apples | $4.98 |
| wonder bread - 2 | $3.98 |
| salad dressing | $2.49 |
| coffee | $3.98 |
| top ramen - 2 cases | $18.00 |
| sugar free jello mix | $1.49 |
| pickles | $3.49 |
| powdered lemonade mix | $2.98 |
| tuna - 5 cans | $5.00 |
| hot dog rolls | $1.28 |
Saturday, May 9, 2015
Homeless Persons’ Rights under the SNAP/Food Stamp Program
Homeless persons have all the same rights under the SNAP/Food Stamp Program as persons who are housed. They also have some additional rights due to the fact that they are homeless. In addition, certain provisions in SNAP/Food Stamp law that apply to all persons often particularly affect homeless people.
Read it here: http://frac.org/federal-foodnutrition-programs/snapfood-stamps/homeless-persons-rights-under-the-snapsnapfood-stamp-program/
Read it here: http://frac.org/federal-foodnutrition-programs/snapfood-stamps/homeless-persons-rights-under-the-snapsnapfood-stamp-program/
Sunday, May 3, 2015
Food stamps are my ticket to school
Food stamps are my ticket to school
Lyn Duff, SPECIAL TO THE EXAMINER
Published 4:00 am, Thursday, March 16, 1995
THE DAY I get food stamps is like Christmas - it turns grocery shopping into the high point of my month.
First I go through the Sunday paper to cut out all the coupons. Then I talk a friend into driving me to the least expensive Safeway in the city. Because it's far away and because I can't always get a ride, I buy my groceries for the whole month at one time.
Mostly I just buy what's on sale, making sure to get necessities like potatoes, rice, bread and pasta. That way I know I'll never starve. Next come fruits and vegetables - whatever's cheap and will last as far into the month as possible without going bad.
At that point I usually don't have much left but if I do, I buy something special - peanut butter, milk, bagels, tomato sauce. Meat is too expensive and prepared or packaged food is out of the question.
Putting the food away is almost like a party, with my friends helping and everybody in a good mood. We ration the food out, freezing half the bread and butter, dividing the packages into small piles to last through the month.
The downside of all this are "the looks" I get on the checkout line - you know, the ones that say "You're an able-bodied young woman. Why don't you get a job and pay for your food like everyone else?" Those looks make me feel ashamed despite myself.
Like most food stamp recipients I'm white and I'm female. I'm also 18, on my own and going to college to make sure I don't spend my life depending on government aid.
What I want to know is why working 40 hours a week at three different jobs - at slightly above the minimum wage - still doesn't allow me to feed myself. Whoever says we're coming out of the recession must be living under a rock!
Getting $115 in food stamps, in fact, allows me to do a lot more than just eat. Almost 90 percent of what I take home from my jobs each month - about $540 - goes for rent, phone and utilities. I'm not even counting non-food items like toothpaste and laundry, or the occasional emergency (like needing a new pair of shoes because it's been raining for 27 days straight). If the last 10 percent went for food, there'd be nothing left for school. I'd be like a rat in a maze with no way out.
Last month when I enrolled in school my food stamps were cut off. They have to decide whether I meet new student eligibility rules and that may take another two months. When the social worker told me, all I could ask was: "What do you want me to do? Choose between school and eating?"
In fact, I've started dumpster diving again, something I used to do when I was homeless. That's when you go to trash cans behind a restaurant or supermarket and pick out food you can eat.
Supermarkets are the best - they throw away cans that are dented or missing a label, or packaged food that's been opened, or stale bread. When I get stale bread I wrap it in a damp towel and stick it in the oven and it's as good as new.
Right now I can tell you I dream about food, think about it during class, obsess about it when I'm at work or just walking along the street. It's unbelievable to me that when there's so much food around, I can't afford to buy it.
Politicians who want to cut food stamps rarely talk about young people like me. They want the public to think we're all lazy, we're all having kids to get more benefits (as if raising kids wasn't the hardest work there is). But to me food isn't something extravagant. It's a basic necessity - like air and water. In a country as rich as ours, it should be a basic human right.
Lyn Duff is on the staff of YO! (Youth Outlook), a newspaper by and about Bay Area teens produced by Pacific News Service.<
http://www.sfgate.com/style/article/Food-stamps-are-my-ticket-to-school-3150290.php
Friday, May 1, 2015
The Faces of Food Stamps
These poignant, touching photos show us the lives of food stamp recipients in the wake of program cuts...
Take Carly Poe, a 33-year-old single mom from Portland, Ore. She’s working on her Master’s in Public Health at Portland State University so that she’ll one day be able to provide more for her family. She works about 10 hours a week, part-time, at the hospital where her 14-year-old son was treated for cancer as a baby. She’s one of 805,000 Oregonians, about 20% of the state’s population, who depend on SNAP. Though her benefits were only set to fall to $220 from $240, she and her son received about $120 for food in February— money she says lasted about a week. In March she received $220, which she says will last just over two weeks, at most. To supplement her SNAP funds, Carly gets creative with her bills; she takes money she would use for bills and buys food. (She says it’s like playing a game of Tetris).
Take Carly Poe, a 33-year-old single mom from Portland, Ore. She’s working on her Master’s in Public Health at Portland State University so that she’ll one day be able to provide more for her family. She works about 10 hours a week, part-time, at the hospital where her 14-year-old son was treated for cancer as a baby. She’s one of 805,000 Oregonians, about 20% of the state’s population, who depend on SNAP. Though her benefits were only set to fall to $220 from $240, she and her son received about $120 for food in February— money she says lasted about a week. In March she received $220, which she says will last just over two weeks, at most. To supplement her SNAP funds, Carly gets creative with her bills; she takes money she would use for bills and buys food. (She says it’s like playing a game of Tetris).
See it here: http://time.com/3808213/people-on-food-stamps/
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