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Thursday, December 19, 2019
FOX News Videos
Nearly 6 million people are off food stamps since Trump took office
More than 5.9 million individuals have dropped off foods stamps since 2017 according to the USDA.
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Trump's food stamp cuts begin soon – and black Americans to be hardest hit
Photograph: Alamy Stock PhotoAs
Kyle Waide visited the Atlanta community food bank recently, where he
is CEO, he ran into a woman who had recently lost her administrative job
at a university. She was looking for work, she told him, but it was
hard to find. She was struggling to get by. Related: Trump impeachment: Pelosi condemns McConnell as 'rogue leader in the Senate' – live
Though
she had food stamp benefits, she still needed to visit Waide’s food
bank until she landed a new job, she added, because she had a home and a
child to pay for. With her job gone, she said, she needed all the extra
help she could get to feed her family.
Thousands in Atlanta like her are already struggling to make ends meet, even before the Trump administration scales back benefits to low-income Americans
to the supplemental nutrition assistance program (Snap) as food stamps
are known. Approximately 700,000 Americans will soon lose their benefits
as the government tightens the regulations around stable work
requirements for recipients, stretching the already scarce resources of
the communities that Waide’s operation helps.
Those communities
are often African American, raising the prospect that Trump’s move will
put extra stress on minority families. Approximately one in three households
using Snap benefits are African American. In general, African American
households are more likely to experience food insecurity, according to
the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. In 2016, Snap helped more
than 13 million African American households put food on the table,
according to data from the US agriculture department’s fiscal year 2016
Snap Households Characteristic data.
Waide stresses the importance
of Snap even as his food bank provides more than 63m meals to more than
750,000 Georgians annually. Snap, he says, provides 12 times the amount
of assistance that food banks do nationwide.
“[Snap] is a very
important source of nutrition for families, kids and seniors in our
community,” he says. Annually, the food bank helps 10,000 residents of
the state enroll for or renew Snap benefits.
Alex Camardelle,
senior policy analyst at the Georgia Budget and Policy Institute, says
many of the 100,000 Georgians who are thought to be affected by the
coming change will be African American.
“We’re concerned that high
levels of unemployment in certain areas of the state, despite an
overall improvement in the unemployment numbers, is going to
disproportionately impact black Georgians,” he says.
Black
Georgians, he adds, have an unemployment rate in the state that could be
triple that of white residents, often because of additional barriers
they face, like where they live, access to transportation and the
difficulty of finding a job in a mandated period of time.
Waide
echoes the sentiment. “Poverty and hunger disproportionately affect
people of color. These are going to be low-income folks in rural
communities who are economically vulnerable by definition,” he said.
“When they can’t eat, they can’t get over other hurdles.”
Rural
households experience more struggle with food security, according to the
Food Research and Action Center, compared with households in metro
areas. Food insecurity is also twice as high among African American
households compared with white households, in rural communities or not.
The
average Georgian on Snap benefits remains approximately eight months
before cycling out of the program as they get back to some sort of
stability, Waide explains, just as the program intends. The myth of
anyone perpetually staying on government benefits just is not true, he
says.
When the change to the work requirement takes place in April
next year, Waide is confident the food bank will see a high demand to
try to make up for the shortfall.
Last year, he points out, his
food bank stepped in when a government shutdown left thousands of
federal workers in Atlanta without pay.
“We mobilized our network
and donors to distribute hundreds of thousands of meals. And we’ll do
the same here, this time,” he said.
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