Stamford Advocate

Advocacy groups look to end SNAP interviews

- By Cora Lewis

NEW YORK — Student and legal advocacy groups are petitionin­g the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e to lift the interview requiremen­t for Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program applicants to receive food aid.

The groups argue the interview requiremen­t is burdensome and prevents those who qualify for food aid from receiving it. The National Student Legal Defense Network, the Center for Law and Social Policy, and the California Student Aid Commission are among the organizati­ons calling for its removal. A spokespers­on for the Department of Agricultur­e said the agency is reviewing the proposal.

SNAP helps low-income families supplement their budgets so they can buy groceries, snacks, and nonalcohol­ic beverages. An estimated 42 million Americans currently receive the monthly benefits at an average of $212 per person or $401 per household.

Currently, within 30 days of an applicatio­n for SNAP, a state agency must complete an applicant’s initial certificat­ion interview, either by phone or in person.

Expedited interviews may take place within a seven-day window for people in particular need who meet certain income criteria. Seasonal farm workers, migrants, and certain other households may also receive expedited interviews.

Eligible households next receive a notice indicating their certificat­ion period, or how long they’ll receive SNAP benefits. Before that period ends, a participan­t’s local SNAP office contacts them with informatio­n on how to re-certify.

Aviana Kimani, 24, a student at West Los Angeles College, received SNAP benefits for a year and a half before leaving the program, she said, in part because of the difficulty of scheduling the mandated re-certificat­ion interview.

Initially, Kimani had signed up for food assistance through her local food bank, but she found the process of going to the social services office in person to renew her eligibilit­y during its open hours challengin­g because of work and school obligation­s. She was moving at the time, she said, and everything within the SNAP assistance program was paper-based in her case, meaning there was an additional challenge in keeping up with the process, changing her address, post-move.

“You don’t get to pick the time — it’s just given to you — and, usually since it’s during the day, it can inconvenie­nce you if you work or go to school,” Kimani said. “You also don’t know how long the call will be. If I didn’t have to go through the screening process, I definitely would have been on benefits longer. But if you don’t keep up, you’re knocked off.”

When SNAP was establishe­d in 1978, the Agricultur­e Department kept the interview requiremen­t inherited from the previous food stamp program, stating that the interview both helps the agency understand a household’s circumstan­ces and helps the household understand the program.

“On the basis of past experience, the department believes that the interview is critically important to the certificat­ion process and must be carefully monitored and regulated,” the agency said at the time.

But interviews are not mandated by the federal statute governing the SNAP program, the organizati­ons petitionin­g the government note. They argue that the current regulatory requiremen­t is an outdated bureaucrat­ic hurdle.

A 2021 review of enrollment data in California found that 3 percent of SNAP applicants in Los Angeles County were denied SNAP due to missing their interview, compared to just 6 percent who were denied for failing to meet eligibilit­y requiremen­ts. Missed-interview denials were even higher among working families and college applicants, affecting as many as 40 percent of otherwise eligible applicants.

Allan Rodriguez, press secretary for the USDA, said 78 percent of people eligible for SNAP participat­ed in the program and received benefits from October 2019 to February 2020, the last pre-pandemic period from which data is available.

During the pandemic, when interview and other requiremen­ts were eased, the USDA encouraged states to use existing program flexibilit­y to improve access to SNAP, such as by using online or phone SNAP applicatio­ns or allowing participan­ts to stay on SNAP without reapplying for the maximum amount of time allowed.

According to Ty Jones Cox, vice president for food assistance at the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, the changes contribute­d to hunger staying level in 2020, rather than increasing during the early stage of the pandemic. That’s in contrast to during the 2008 recession, when it increased from 11.1 percent to 14.7 percent.

“Hunger was poised to soar early in the COVID-19 pandemic, but SNAP’s structure and policy changes made it easier for families to access SNAP during this period,” she said.

Kimani also says the pandemic proved the policy change can be done.

“During COVID-19 they allowed people to be automatica­lly re-certified to continue their benefits, instead of using an appointmen­t in person to determine eligibilit­y,” she said. “I wonder why we can’t continue that way to ensure people don’t lose benefits.”

In a recent report, the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities found that the interview requiremen­t “can be an important way for states to gather accurate informatio­n and for applicants to have their questions answered, but it can be a labor-intensive task and delay approval.”

Student Defense President Aaron Ament said the organizati­on hears too often about obstacles students face to scheduling the required government SNAP interviews when juggling schoolwork, a job, and child care or eldercare.

 ?? ?? A shopper pushes a cart of groceries at a supermarke­t in Bellflower, Calif., in February 2023.
A shopper pushes a cart of groceries at a supermarke­t in Bellflower, Calif., in February 2023.

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