Santa Fe New Mexican

Republican­s hope Trump warms up to more food stamp restrictio­ns

GOP leaders renewing efforts to limit candy, soda purchases

- By Marina Villeneuve

AUGUSTA, Maine — Maine resident Zak McCutcheon says he likes soda but acknowledg­es he’d drink less of it if his governor convinced Republican President Donald Trump to put restrictio­ns on the approximat­ely $200 a month he receives in food stamps. He thinks it may even make recipients healthier and less overweight.

“If I was more restricted to what I could buy, I would become more of a veggie eater,” said McCutcheon, who recently perused grapes and packages of pre-chopped vegetables at an Augusta food bank with his pregnant girlfriend.

But another one of Maine’s 180,000 food stamp recipients, Samantha Watson, said she believes a ban from using food stamps on soda and candy won’t make low-income people any healthier. It would take more than that to change eating habits, she said, since food stamps cover only a fraction of the monthly grocery bill for herself and her 3-year-old daughter.

Maine Gov. Paul LePage and fellow Republican­s in two other states are now renewing their efforts to restrict food stamps in the hopes that Trump will be more amenable than the previous administra­tion.

In 2011, former Democratic President Barack Obama’s administra­tion rejected then-New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s soda ban for food stamp recipients and in June, he raised “significan­t” concerns with LePage’s proposal, saying there’d be no meaningful way to evaluate whether the ban changed the way recipients bought sweets.

While Trump’s budget proposal doesn’t include food stamp changes, his choice for secretary of agricultur­e, Sonny Perdue, of Georgia, has signaled support for overhaulin­g the $71 billion Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program.

LePage is optimistic the new administra­tion will approve his revived proposal, which he says is backed by common sense and a desire to reduce high rates of obesity and diabetes.

The governor’s efforts in Maine have inspired legislator­s in Tennessee and Arkansas, who say they won’t give up trying to restrict food stamp purchases.

A study of one leading U.S. grocery retailer released in November by the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e found that in 2011, 20 cents of every dollar spent on food stamps went to sweetened beverages, desserts, salty snacks, candy and sugar. SNAP households spent about 5 cents per dollar on soft drinks and 2 cents per dollar on candy, similar to the spending habits of households not receiving SNAP benefits.

Jim Hanna, the executive director at Cumberland County Food Security Council, said poor people have enough issues to manage without being told what to eat and drink, and that a soda or candy tax would be a better approach than eliminatin­g the state’s SNAP education program.

“It seems very contradict­ory to, on the one hand, limit people’s access to foods that have negative nutrition content and then to limit access to informatio­n to support them to make better choices about nutrition,” Hanna said.

 ?? ROBERT F. BUKATY/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? From left, Sunny Larson and Zak McCutcheon pick produce in March at a Food Bank in Augusta, Maine. Republican Gov. Paul LePage says his call to ban the use of food stamps for soda and candy is backed by science and a desire to reduce obesity in the...
ROBERT F. BUKATY/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO From left, Sunny Larson and Zak McCutcheon pick produce in March at a Food Bank in Augusta, Maine. Republican Gov. Paul LePage says his call to ban the use of food stamps for soda and candy is backed by science and a desire to reduce obesity in the...

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