The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Not all eligible Connecticu­t children are receiving coronaviru­s food aid

- By Ana Radelat

WASHINGTON — This week, 55,200 families in Connecticu­t enrolled in the food stamp program received extra money to compensate for children in those households who received free and reducedpri­ce meals in their schools before the pandemic closed school houses in midMarch.

But tens of thousands of other families that relied on those school meals to keep their children fed will have to wait a while longer to benefit from part of the Families First Coronaviru­s Response Act passed by Congress more than two months ago.

The state Department of Social Services says the 265,631 public school and 1,748 private school students who receive free or reduced school lunches in the state are eligible for a one time payment of $364.80 per child to purchase food.

But many of those children who qualify for the Pandemic Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT) program have not yet received help partly because they live in about 80,000 households that are were not previously enrolled in the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, the official name for food stamps.

Those households don’t have the EBT cards that allow food stamp recipients to buy groceries at supermarke­ts and other places. To be able to access that food aid, those households must receive EBT cards from the state.

The process to set up the Pandemic-EBT program in Connecticu­t has also been impacted by a “myriad” of “planning and technologi­cal factors involved in delivering the benefits,” the Department of Social Services said.

The department had to coordinate with and obtain informatio­n from the state Department of Education, which in turn had to seek informatio­n about children who received free and reduced-price meals from each individual school district.

“We appreciate the phenomenal job by the Department of Education and participat­ing school districts in getting us up-todate informatio­n about eligible children,” said Dan Giacomi, SNAP program manager for DSS. “We created this new process, tested it, and are running it in what we believe is a timely manner under the circumstan­ces, which included getting an amendment with additional funding from USDA because of the changing date of school closure.”

Yet Robin Lamott Sparks, executive director of End Hunger Connecticu­t!, said the pandemic has shown a weakness in the way Connecticu­t agencies communicat­e and share informatio­n with each other.

“What this has really done is show that social service sectors have been operating in silos,” she said, and that more efforts should be made to “get systems talking to each other.”

“But that’s not something that can happen overnight,” Lamott Sparks said.

Connecticu­t’s plan also had to be submitted to the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e for approval.

U.S. Secretary of Agricultur­e Sonny Perdue announced Connecticu­t – and California – had been approved to implement the Pandemic EBT program on April 24. The USDA had already approved state Pandemic EBT plans for Michigan, Rhode Island, North Carolina, Massachuse­tts, Arizona, Illinois, Alabama and Wisconsin.

But an analysis by The New York Times found that by May 15, only about 15 percent of eligible children had received benefits and just 12 states had started sending money.

So most of the nation has been slow to get billions of dollars in food aid to hungry kids.

However, the Times said that finally “the pace is accelerati­ng, with millions of families expected to receive payments in the coming weeks.”

Many of the children who once ate their free or reduced-price meals at school are picking up graband-go meals and food at pickup sites now that the USDA relaxed rules so that schools can offer them. Lamott Sparks said Connecticu­t’s schools have done a good job at providing these meals, but they are not enough to keep hunger at bay.

“It’s sometimes difficult for a parent to get them,” she said, because the meals are available only at certain times which can conflict with a parent’s work schedule.

And some parents lack transporta­tion to visit a school or site distributi­ng food, Lamott Sparks said.

She also said giving households SNAP benefits funnels money to local grocers and other businesses. “Ultimately, SNAP is better for the economy,” she said.

 ?? CTMirror.org file photo ?? A Mobil Food Mart in Hartford that accepts SNAP benefits.
CTMirror.org file photo A Mobil Food Mart in Hartford that accepts SNAP benefits.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States