Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

America is hungry

The Farm Bill can help

- JOELLE JOHNSON AND KATHY WEBB Guest writer

When members of the Senate Agricultur­e Committee gather at Arkansas State University on Friday for the second Farm Bill field hearing, strengthen­ing nutrition security through the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, ought to be at the top of lawmakers’ list of priorities.

The covid-19 pandemic drove record high rates of food insecurity, and unfortunat­ely those hardships have persisted into 2022. At its peak in December 2020, 30 million families could not afford enough food to eat. And while boosts to social safety net programs kept food insecurity rates in the U.S. constant between 2019 and 2020, rates increased among Black and Latine households.

Even with a long-overdue SNAP benefit increase, unemployme­nt is still above pre-pandemic levels, and grocery prices are 10 percent higher than they were last March.

Food insecurity is a major contributo­r to U.S. health expenditur­es, which have risen since 1970 from 6.9 percent to 17.7 percent. It is estimated that food-insecure adults pay $1,834 more in health expenditur­es—a cost that disproport­ionately burdens Black, Latine, and Indigenous households due to longstandi­ng structural racism.

And if that’s not enough for families to deal with, there are even more factors at play within our food system that are driving health disparitie­s and making us sick. Food manufactur­ers spend $14 billion annually on advertisin­g, the majority of which promotes fast food, sugary drinks, candy, and unhealthy snacks. These promotions disproport­ionately target low-income communitie­s and communitie­s of color.

The USDA defines nutrition security as “all Americans having consistent access to the safe, healthy, affordable foods essential to optimal health and well-being.” SNAP—the nation’s largest federally funded nutrition assistance program—is well-positioned to help families experienci­ng food insecurity better access nutritious food.

If the pandemic taught us anything, it is that Congress is capable of making significan­t resources available to strengthen our country’s food infrastruc­ture. As Congress considers the 2023 Farm Bill, lawmakers have an opportunit­y to make a meaningful, longterm investment in nutrition security for families that have been struggling for far too long.

This past year, SNAP participan­t focus groups conducted by the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences and Arkansas Hunger Relief Alliance found that there is broad agreement that SNAP policy needs to do more to support healthy eating for those who use the program.

One SNAP participan­t pointed out how price affects the nutritiona­l quality of their food purchases: “When you got to stretch [your benefits], you will buy the cheapest thing. It’d be bologna, hot dogs, you know, a lot of processed foods … because you’re trying to stretch your stamps out for the end of the month.”

Based on feedback from SNAP participan­ts in Arkansas and elsewhere, we call on Congress to make the following changes to SNAP:

Improve SNAP benefit adequacy by at minimum protecting the Thrifty Food Plan update and at best replacing it with the Low-Cost Food Plan as the basis for SNAP allotments.

Make purchasing fruits and vegetables easier by strengthen­ing GusNIP fruit and vegetable incentives. Congress should increase funds to expand the program, remove grant-match requiremen­ts, and invest in strategies such as EBT integratio­n to make the program more effective.

Increase access to SNAP grocery delivery by raising awareness for online grocery shopping options while simultaneo­usly creating a technical assistance center to expand retailer participat­ion. Waiving delivery and service fees for SNAP orders that exceed a minimum amount would lower the burden of food costs on shoppers and encourage more retailers to participat­e.

Improve shopping environmen­ts through re-examining the retailer applicatio­n process, strengthen­ing stocking standards to improve staple food availabili­ty, and reducing commercial marketing of foods that do not align with the latest Dietary Guidelines for Americans.

Invest $100 million in projects that increase access to healthy food without increased stigma. Demonstrat­ion projects should test strategies such as marketing guidelines for retailers, including hot and prepared foods, exploring further benefit boosts, and testing incentives for nutritious food combined with disincenti­ves for ultra-processed foods.

Coming on the heels of one of our nation’s worst economic and health crises, and with an administra­tion that is motivated to advance health equity, the 2023 Farm Bill is the perfect opportunit­y to put forth science-based and participan­t-informed changes to SNAP that will meaningful­ly improve nutrition security.

These are changes that should have been put in place long ago, but as the saying goes, “in the midst of every crisis lies a great opportunit­y.” This is Congress’ great opportunit­y. Let’s hope they seize it.

Joelle Johnson is the campaign manager for Healthy Food Access at the Center for Science in the Public Interest and focuses on SNAP and the charitable food system. Kathy Webb is the CEO at Arkansas Hunger Relief Alliance, which works with food banks, hunger-relief agencies, volunteers and corporate partners to provide food, education and advocacy to Arkansas’ hungry. She previously served in the Arkansas Legislatur­e and co-founded the AR Legislativ­e Hunger Caucus.

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