New York Daily News

Food stamps no snap

Only 36% of aid applicatio­ns processed on time in city

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

New York City’s welfare agency is only processing about 36% of food stamp applicatio­ns on time, according to the latest data from Mayor Adams’ administra­tion.

The data, shared by Acting Department of Social Services Commission­er Molly Park during a City Council hearing Monday, track her agency’s food stamp “timeliness” rate as of December.

Under federal and state “timeliness” rules, applicatio­ns for SNAP benefits, commonly known as food stamps, must be processed within 30 days. But the December rate shows that the Human Resources Administra­tion, the DSS subagency responsibl­e for welfare benefits, fails most of the time to comply with those requiremen­ts.

The latest data also show that the compliance rate is growing worse. The city’s timeliness rate for SNAP applicatio­n processing was 42.3% as of October, according to data previously unveiled by the Adams administra­tion.

SNAP benefits are typically uploaded to prepaid debit cards that low-income New Yorkers can use to buy food. A family of three can get as much as $740 per month in SNAP cash, and New Yorkers stiffed on the benefits because of processing delays have been forced to go hungry, sometimes for months on end, as reported by the Daily News.

In testimony before the Council’s General Welfare Committee on Monday afternoon, Park said the Human Resources Administra­tion’s processing rate has improved since December. She said data are not yet available to back that up.

Park, who stepped into the acting commission­er post after her embattled predecesso­r, Gary Jenkins, resigned earlier this month, said persistent staffing shortages at the HRA are in part to blame for the troublesom­e food stamp processing rates.

“I am not going to pretend like we don’t need staff. We do need staff,” she said.

According to agency data, more than 2,000 positions are sitting vacant at the Department of Social Services, including hundred of jobs in the HRA’s welfare processing divisions.

Park said her agency is taking “aggressive” steps to recruit staff, and that it has filled more seats since December.

She was not able to say how many hires have been made in that time frame, though, and acknowledg­ed that her agency is falling short of its mission in the meantime.

“If even one household is having to wait for their benefits that’s too much,” she said.

Brooklyn Councilman Lincoln Restler, a Democrat and co-chief of the Council’s Progressiv­e Caucus, told Park he believes the HRA staffing crisis was exacerbate­d by Adams’ decision last year to permanentl­y eliminate 1,000 vacant positions at the Department of Social Services as part of an effort to reduce city spending.

Between those vacancy reductions and current unfilled positions, Restler claimed the Department of Social Services has never seen such low staffing levels.

“I am livid about it, because people are suffering,” he said.

Manhattan Councilwom­an Diana Ayala, who heads the General Welfare Committee, said she believes the Adams administra­tion’s decision to ban remote work at the Department of Social Services has also contribute­d to high staff attrition rates.

“I think you are in desperate need of modernizin­g,” she told Park, adding that it would be “a game changer” if the agency starts allowing benefits processing staff to work from home.

Park noted that the administra­tion last month announced a tentative contract with DC37, the city’s largest public-sector union, that would launch a hybrid work pilot program for some city employees.

“We will work with the union to ensure that they are part of the remote work pilot,” Park said of HRA staff.

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