Houston Chronicle

Senate easily votes to pass huge farm bill

Food stamp rules remain unaltered

- By Bryan Lowry and Kate Irby

WASHINGTON — Rural Republican­s in the U.S. House now face a stark political choice: either saying no to a bill farmers in their districts desperatel­y need or saying yes and surrenderi­ng in their battle to crack down on the federal food stamp program.

The 807-page farm bill sailed to passage in the Senate by a bipartisan vote of 87-13 less than a day after its text had been released to the public. All 13 no votes were Republican­s.

The bill now heads to the House, where some Republican­s are bristling over the bill’s concession­s.

The measure will reauthoriz­e the nation’s nearly $900 billion food and agricultur­e programs for the next five years.

It will ensure farmers can rely on crop insurance to protect against financial risk and that lowincome Americans have access to food aid without new restrictio­ns on eligibilit­y or cuts to benefits.

“We’ve been trying to point out this is no time for a revolution­ary farm bill,” said Sen. Pat Roberts, RKan., the lead Senate negotiator. “It’s time to get a bill done so our farmers have predictabi­lity and certainty during a very difficult time.”

House Republican­s fought for months to crack down on what they saw as abuse of the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program, known as food stamps.

Under current law, able-bodied adults who do not have dependent children and are under the age of 50 must work for 20 hours a week or participat­e in job training to receive food aid under the program.

The original House Republican proposal expanded the work requiremen­ts to include people up to age 59 and parents of children over the age of 6. It also included proposals that would have made it harder for states to give exceptions to those rules.

“With unemployme­nt at a 50year low and more Americans on food stamps than the entire population of Canada, able-bodied adults should have to work to receive taxpayer dollars,” said Rep. Jim Jordan, an Ohio Republican who co-founded the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus.

But House Republican­s lost negotiatin­g power when they lost the House to Democrats in November, and the compromise bill is expected to pick up Democratic votes in the House.

Rep. Ron Estes, R-Kan., was disappoint­ed by the concession­s in the final bill, but voting against the farm bill isn’t an option for the Wichita Republican whose district includes farm-heavy counties in southern Kansas.

“There really were so many good provisions in our House version. I wish the Senate would have agreed to more of them,” Estes said minutes after the Senate passed the compromise bill.

Republican­s are now counting on President Donald Trump’s administra­tion to use its power to help tighten the rules on food assistance after it failed to do it at the legislativ­e level.

California has been a particular­ly big target for Republican ire because of what critics say are the state’s generous exemptions from the work standards.

States have the power to waive the work requiremen­ts to qualify for food aid in areas with high unemployme­nt. Currently 36 states and territorie­s, including California, are taking advantage of that.

Republican­s have criticized California for not being tougher with work requiremen­ts on food aid in areas with low unemployme­nt rates. GOP critics say state officials are using language in current law that allows state applicatio­ns to combine contiguous areas.

That means a county with low unemployme­nt can be combined with a nearby county with high unemployme­nt so they both qualify to excuse people from the work requiremen­ts. Of California’s 58 counties, 55 were approved to grant work requiremen­t exclusions to food aid recipients in the last applicatio­n period.

The only change to the process is that applying for the exclusions will now require the support of the state’s governor. Currently, a state’s agency submits the applicatio­n and doesn’t have to notify the governor beforehand.

It’s a change Republican­s are hoping will put political pressure on governors and deter states from the seeking the waivers.

But the requiremen­t for gubernator­ial OKs could be a largely symbolic change since the heads of state agencies applying for the waivers are usually appointed by the governor.

It’s unlikely to be an issue in California, whose governor has been a Democrat since 2011.

There’s another wrinkle, though: It’ll be up to the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e to determine what exactly “support of the governor” means when it drafts regulation­s based on the bill.

Secretary of Agricultur­e Sonny Perdue has indicated that he wants to use his regulatory authority to limit the use of waivers, contending in February that too many states are “are abdicating their responsibi­lity to move (SNAP) participan­ts to self-sufficienc­y.”

The bill is silent on Perdue’s power to use his authority to tighten the requiremen­ts, but House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., said in a statement the bill “ensures Secretary Perdue can continue his work on this critical issue.”

Roberts confirmed Tuesday that lawmakers expect Perdue to issue a rule in the near future that will tighten the rules on states, particular­ly those such as California that combine multiple counties when they seek exclusions from the work requiremen­ts.

Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., lead Democrat on farm bill negotiatio­ns, said she would oppose a rule proposed by Perdue to limit SNAP eligibilit­y and would be looking thoroughly into whether Perdue could act unilateral­ly.

A spokesman for California’s Democratic governor-elect, Gavin Newsom, did not return several requests seeking comment on whether he supported allowing counties to provide work requiremen­t exceptions to those seeking food aid. But Newsom was lieutenant governor to Gov. Jerry Brown during the last applicatio­n period, when the vast majority of the state was approved.

In California’s Central Valley, where unemployme­nt for decades has been consistent­ly more than double the national unemployme­nt rate, the looser requiremen­ts are sorely needed.

Work requiremen­ts are difficult to fulfill if there are already signs that work is scarce, and the unemployme­nt rates in areas of the Valley are typically some of the highest in the country.

In states that don’t use the exceptions, such as Kansas, SNAP recipients are limited to three months on the program during a three-year period if they fail to work 20 hours a week or participat­e in a job-training program.

“The time limit is a harsh policy that punishes people who are willing to work but can’t find a job,” said Stacy Dean, vice president for food assistance policy at the liberal-leaning Center on Budget Policies and Priorities.

Kansas will have a Democratic governor in January, but even if she wants to support allowing more people to not meet work requiremen­t in order to receive SNAP, Gov.-elect Laura Kelly won’t have that option. The state enacted a law in 2015 that forbids its stage agricultur­e department from seeking exemptions.

Kelly wants to roll back the law, but she’ll face an uphill battle against Republican supermajor­ities in the state Legislatur­e.

Kristina Rasmussen, vice president of federal affairs at conservati­ve Foundation for Government Accountabi­lity, said the change in the farm bill means governors could face political consequenc­es if their states waive the work requiremen­ts for able-bodied adults without children.

 ?? Christophe­r Smith / New York Times ?? Lawmakers overwhelmi­ngly approved an $867 billion bill that ditched new work requiremen­ts for food stamps that had been embraced by the House and president.
Christophe­r Smith / New York Times Lawmakers overwhelmi­ngly approved an $867 billion bill that ditched new work requiremen­ts for food stamps that had been embraced by the House and president.

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