The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Budget food box plan concerns some grocers

SNAP recipients would still get 60% of benefifits in cash.

- By Kristen de Grott and Gene J. Puskar

Finding fresh

RANKIN, PA. — food in this tiny riverside community that was hit hard by the steel industry’s decline has always been a challenge. Then, seven years ago, Carl’s Cafe opened.

The grocery store, nearnew government housing, offers cooking classes and a source of fresh, healthy food. Proprietor Carl Lewis even has customers signa pledge: If he provides fresh produce, they’ll buy it. Five such purchases, and they get their sixth free.

About half his customers pay with benefits from the federal Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program, so the government’s proposal to replace the debit card-type program with a pre-assembled box of shelf-stable goods delivered to recipients worries him and other grocery operators in poor areas about their patrons’ nutrition, and their own bottom line.

“If half of your business goes away, it’s going to hurt,” Lewis said, noting that if SNAP spending benefifits are taken away, so will recipients’ ability to participat­e in programs at his store. “I see kids educating parents on fresh food choices,” he said. “To see them reach for an apple before they reach for a Snickers bar, it’s fantastic. But if people are too worried about where their next meal is coming from, it’s going tobe hard to teach them how to cook an eggplant.”

The idea called “America’s Harvest Box” was fl floated in February in the Trump administra­tion’s 2019 budget proposal, tucked inside a plan to slash SNAP by roughly $213 billion, or 30 percent, over the next 10 years. Households that receive more than $90 in SNAP benefits each month — roughly 81 percent of households in the program, or about 16.4million — would be affected.

The plan immediatel­y raised concerns, and details were sparse. Grocery store trade associatio­ns, as well as non-profits like The Food Trust, argue that removing food stamp recipients’ ability to buy their own provisions could undermine recent successes in eliminatin­g “food deserts.”

“This notion that they need to be told what to buy is not borne out the by the data,” said Alex Baloga, president

and CEO of the Pennsylvan­ia Food Merchants Associatio­n. “Wewant to provide healthy, affordable products to everybody, and we want to give customers a choice to take these dollars and make the best decision for their families.”

Cache Flanagan, a shopper at Carl’s Cafe who has two children ages 6 years and 10 months, wondered: “What will be in it? What about food allergies? Do we get options to pick from? Whatever they decide to put in that Harvest Box isn’t going to be fresh.”

Shaker Ehmedi, who manages a Cousin’s Supermarke­t location in Philadelph­ia, observed: “We have a hard time delivering mail in this country. Howwould we ever deliver these boxes?”

Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Perdue on Feb. 22 acknowledg­ed the idea took congressio­nal members by surprise but said his staffff consulted with experts.

Brandon Lipps, administra- tor for the Agricultur­e Department’s food and nutrition service, told The Associated Press in an interview last week that he wants retailers to play a role, and stressed that SNAP recipients would still receive 60 percent of their benefifits in cash to spend at grocery stores.

Small stores in rural communitie­s could also benefifit,

Lipps said, arguing that recipients who typically travel long distances to large supermarke­ts for groceries would get shelf-stable goods in their box and be able to shop at their local grocer for produce.

“Themarket is changing in how people get their food,” Lipps said. “I think we in the government have a duty to be changing with that market.”

The Harvest Box model would have the federal Agricultur­e Department procuring foods, Lipps acknowledg­ed, but it would also rely heavily on states.

“We left the distributi­on to states, and there are a lot of models in that,” Lipps said. “That could include distributi­on through a grocery store, or a grocery store participat­ing in distributi­on.”

A few miles down the Monongahel­a River from Rankin, Dylamatos Market in Pittsburgh is its neighborho­od’s only source of fresh food, where about a quarter of the customers pay with SNAP, owner Dianne Shenk said. The program’s biggest benefifit is choice, she said.

“These boxes will be full of shelf-stable items, the same things we’re being told not to eat,” she said.

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR/AP ?? Dianne Shenk (left), owner of Dylamatos Market in Pittsburgh, lauds SNAP choices.
GENE J. PUSKAR/AP Dianne Shenk (left), owner of Dylamatos Market in Pittsburgh, lauds SNAP choices.

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