The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

USDA moves to tighten work requiremen­ts for food stamps

- By Juliet Linderman

WASHINGTON >> The Trump administra­tion is setting out to do what this year’s farm bill didn’t: tighten work requiremen­ts for millions of Americans who receive federal food assistance.

The U.S. Department of Agricultur­e on Thursday proposed a rule that would restrict the ability of states to exempt work-eligible adults from having to obtain steady employment to receive food stamps.

The move comes the same day that President Donald Trump signed an $867 billion farm bill that reauthoriz­ed agricultur­e and conservati­on programs while leaving the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program, which serves roughly 40 million Americans, virtually untouched.

Passage of the farm bill followed months of tense negotiatio­ns over House efforts to significan­tly tighten work requiremen­ts and the Senate’s refusal to accept the provisions.

Currently, able-bodied adults ages 18-49 without children are required to work 20 hours a week to maintain their SNAP benefits. The House bill would have raised the age of recipients subject to work requiremen­ts from 49 to 59 and required parents with children older than 6 to work or participat­e in job training. The House measure also sought to limit circumstan­ces under which families that qualify for other poverty programs can automatica­lly be eligible for SNAP.

None of those measures made it into the final farm bill despite Trump’s endorsemen­t. Now the administra­tion is using regulatory rulemaking to try to scale back the SNAP program.

Work-eligible able-bodied adults without dependents, known as ABAWDs, can currently receive only three months of SNAP benefits in a three-year period if they don’t meet the 20-hour work requiremen­t. But states with an unemployme­nt rate of 10 percent or higher or a demonstrab­le lack of sufficient jobs can waive those limitation­s.

States are also allowed to grant benefit extensions for 15 percent of their workeligib­le adult population without a waiver. If a state doesn’t use its 15 percent, it can bank the exemptions to distribute later, creating what Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Perdue referred to as a “stockpile.”

The USDA’s proposed rule would strip states’ ability to issue waivers unless a city or county has an unemployme­nt rate of 7 percent or higher. The waivers would be good for one year and would require the governor to support the request. States would no longer be able to bank their 15 percent exemptions. The new rule also would forbid states from granting waivers for geographic areas larger than a specific jurisdicti­on.

Perdue said the proposed rule is a tradeoff for Trump’s support of the farm bill, which Trump signed Thursday.

“I have directed Secretary Perdue to use his authority to close work requiremen­t loopholes in the food stamp program,” Trump said at the signing ceremony. “That was a difficult thing to get done, but the farmers wanted it done, we all wanted it done, and in the end, it’s going to make a lot of people happy.”

Democratic House leader Nancy Pelosi on Thursday slammed the Trump administra­tion’s efforts to restrict SNAP.

“Why at Christmas would you take food out of the mouths of American people?” she said.

The USDA in February solicited public comment on ways to reform SNAP, and Perdue has repeatedly voiced support for scaling back the program.

The Trump administra­tion’s effort, while celebrated by some conservati­ves, has been met with criticism from advocates who say tightening restrictio­ns will result in more vulnerable Americans, including children, going hungry.

A Brookings Institutio­n study published this summer said more stringent work requiremen­ts are likely to hurt those who are already part of the workforce but whose employment is sporadic.

House Agricultur­e Chairman Michael Conaway, RTexas, was the primary champion for tighter SNAP work requiremen­ts in the House farm bill and remained committed to the provision throughout negotiatio­ns.

Conaway praised the rule Thursday for “creating a roadmap for states to more effectivel­y engage ABAWDs in this booming economy.”

Conaway in September blasted the Senate for refusing to adopt work requiremen­ts and suggested that Perdue doesn’t have the authority to make broad changes to the SNAP program.

“The Senate seems to have abandoned the idea that it is Congress’ responsibi­lity to fix the waiver issue and that somehow Secretary Perdue could wave a magic wand and fix that. It’s not his responsibi­lity; he does not have the authority,” Conaway said in an interview with Pro Farmer, a trade publicatio­n.

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