Santa Fe New Mexican

Don’t complicate access to food for the poor

-

The Trump administra­tion, which often talks about the importance of reducing regulation, has found at least one place where it would like to add red tape. The Agricultur­e Department wants to make it more difficult for poor children to get enough food.

The department is proposing to end programs in 40 states and the District of Columbia that make it easier for low-income families to sign up for food stamps. The stated rationale is that some people who are getting help do not need it. But the evidence suggests that problem is quite small, while the proposed solution is likely to keep millions of Americans who do need help from getting it.

The Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program helped 33.5 million people in the average month over the last year — mostly families with children, older Americans and people with disabiliti­es — to buy a limited range of groceries from a list of supervised retailers. In place of the original coupons,

beneficiar­ies now get an average of

$127 loaded on a special debit card.

The program is enormously successful in mitigating poverty. Studies of Americans born in the 1960s, when the program was implemente­d nationally, show that children in families that received benefits went on to lead healthier and more productive lives.

Most beneficiar­ies live in households with incomes up to 130 percent of the federal poverty line — $32,640 a year in 2019 for a family of two adults and two children. But in 1996, as part of a broad overhaul of federal aid for lower-income families, Congress let states expand eligibilit­y even as it curtailed benefits. States can offer food stamps to households with incomes up to 200 percent of the poverty line, or around $50,200 a year for a family with two children. States also can waive a requiremen­t that beneficiar­ies must have no more than $2,250 in assets.

Critics have long argued that the expansion was overly generous; the Trump administra­tion is proposing to substantia­lly restore the old rules. Officials at the Agricultur­e Department have highlighte­d the example of Rob Undersande­r, a 66-year-old Minnesota resident who qualified to receive food stamps even though he had $1 million in assets because Minnesota, like most states, chose to waive the asset cap.

Undersande­r applied for food stamps in 2016, in the manner of a man who robs a bank to demonstrat­e the need for more security. He collected more than $6,000 in benefits he did not need, donating the money to charity while seeking to publicize his story.

“There may be other millionair­es” on food stamps, an administra­tion official told reporters.

But the proposed changes are not tailored to keep millionair­es from getting food stamps. They would keep millions of lowincome families from getting food stamps.

… In all, the administra­tion says the government can save about $2 billion a year by denying benefits to 3.1 million people who would not meet the old standards. By the same logic, the government could save $60 billion a year by suspending the entire program. But those savings will not come from denying food stamps to millionair­es. The vast majority of the government’s money is given to Americans who are hungry so they may eat.

The proposal once again highlights the gap between Trump’s rhetorical promises to help lower-income American families and the reality of his policies, which have systematic­ally made life more difficult for those very families. The administra­tion has slashed taxes on affluent Americans and significan­tly increased total federal spending — on Thursday, it announced plans to give another $16 billion to farmers hurt by Trump’s trade policies — even as it seeks to make a show of fiscal discipline at the expense of children.

Congress should move to codify the current food stamp rules, which have been embraced by red and blue states alike, to protect millions of Americans from this act of theatrical cruelty.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States