The Capital

Red, blue divided on summer meals

Kids’ food program rejected by half of Republican states

- By Jason DeParle

WASHINGTON — The governor was firm: Nebraska would reject the new federal money for summer meals. The state already fed a small number of children when schools closed. He would not sign on to a program to provide all families that received free or cut-rate school meals with cards to buy groceries during the summer.

“I don’t believe in welfare,” Gov. Jim Pillen, a Republican, said in December.

A group of low-income youths, in a face-to-face meeting, urged him to reconsider. One told him she had eaten less when school was out. Another criticized the meals at the existing feeding sites and held a crustless prepackage­d sandwich to argue that electronic benefit cards from the new federal program would offer better food and more choice.

“Sometimes money isn’t the solution,” the governor replied.

A week later, Pillen made a U-turn the size of a Nebraska cornfield, approving the cards and praising the young people for speaking out.

“This isn’t about me winning,” he said. “This is about coming to the conclusion of what is best for our kids.”

Pillen’s extraordin­ary reversal shows the conflicts shaping red-state views of federal aid: Needs beckon, but suspicions run high of the Biden administra­tion and programs that critics call handouts.

The new $2.5 billion program, known as Summer EBT, passed Congress with bipartisan support, and every Democratic governor will distribute the grocery cards this summer. But Republican governors are split — with 14 in, 13 out and no consensus on what constitute­s conservati­ve principle.

One red-state leader, Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders of Arkansas, hailed the cards as an answer to a disturbing problem. Another, Gov. Kim Reynolds of Iowa, warned that they might increase obesity. Some Republican­s dismissed the program as obsolete pandemic aid. Some balked at the modest state matching costs. Others hinted they might join after taking more time to prepare.

The program will provide families about $40 a month for every child who receives free or reduced-price meals at school — $120 for the summer. The red-state refusals will keep aid from about 10 million children, about one-third of those potentiall­y eligible nationwide.

The rejection of federal aid has parallels to the bitter fights over the 2010 Affordable Care Act. Ten states, mostly Southern and low income, declined to run an expanded Medicaid program largely financed by Washington.

Still, some analysts find the rejection of the grocery cards surprising. Summer EBT is much cheaper for states than Medicaid, it passed Congress with Republican support and it grew from a pilot program widely deemed successful. Plus, it focuses on children.

“It should be less controvers­ial than it’s been,” said Elaine Waxman, a hunger expert at the Urban Institute, a Washington research group.

The outcome illuminate­s the arbitrary nature of the American safety net, which prioritize­s local control. North Dakota and North Carolina are in; South Dakota and South Carolina are out. Children in Oklahoma can get aid in Tulsa but not in Oklahoma City, as state and tribal government­s clash. In the impoverish­ed Mississipp­i Delta, eligibilit­y depends on which side of the Mississipp­i River a child lives.

As with Medicaid, poor states are especially resistant, though the federal government bears most of the cost. Of the 10 states with the highest levels of children’s food insecurity, five rejected Summer EBT: Louisiana, Oklahoma, Mississipp­i, Alabama and Texas.

Like the school lunch program, it serves families up to 185% of the poverty line, meaning a family of three would qualify with an income of about $45,500 or less.

The initial school meal program faced resistance too. Congress created it in 1946, partly from fear that poor nutrition weakened military recruits. But opponents saw free meals as socialism, and Southern states demanded assurance that federal aid would not undermine segregatio­n.

More than a decade later, only half of schools ran the program, said Susan Levine, a historian at the University of Illinois Chicago, in her 2008 book “School Lunch

Politics: The Surprising History of America’s Favorite Welfare Program.”

A separate Summer Food Service Program followed in 1968. But it offers meals at limited sites, which some families cannot reach, and serves only about 15% of children fed during the school year.

Some critics see the new program as an extension of pandemic aid. (A similar effort, Pandemic EBT, distribute­d grocery cards when the coronaviru­s closed schools.) But Summer EBT, having started experiment­ally in 2011, long predates the pandemic. Evaluators found that even benefits as low as $30 a month cut “the most severe food insecurity among children by one-third.”

Drawing on those results, Congress in 2022 establishe­d the program nationwide. In exchange for the federal benefits, states pay half the administra­tive costs. Perhaps sensing some might resist, a Republican backer, Sen. John Boozman of

Arkansas, said in a promotiona­l video, “We’re counting on you to put these new tools into action.”

His home-state governor, Sanders, did. As a White House press secretary under President Donald Trump, Sanders does not want for conservati­ve credential­s, but she celebrated the federal aid.

“Making sure no Arkansan goes hungry, especially children, is a top concern for my administra­tion,” she said in a news release. Arkansas officials estimate the program will cost the state about $3 million and deliver $45 million in benefits.

Iowa rejected the program with equal verve. In forgoing about $29 million in federal benefits, Reynolds called the program “not sustainabl­e” and criticized the lack of constraint­s on which foods parents can buy. “An EBT card does nothing to promote nutrition at a time when childhood obesity has become an epidemic,” she said.

The pilot program found the opposite: EBT cards “increased consumptio­n of fruits and vegetables,” evaluators wrote, and lowered the consumptio­n of soft drinks.

More than half of the children whom Republican governors have excluded from aid live in Texas and Florida. Both states have noted the program’s administra­tive complexity: Schools often lack current student addresses or the technology to share data easily with agencies that issue EBT cards. But neither has ruled out future participat­ion.

The Biden administra­tion, seeking to protect the program from a partisan gloss, has generally not criticized states that refused the aid.

“A number of the nonpartici­pating states have told us they were challenged by the timeline and hope to implement the program next year,” said Stacy Dean, the deputy undersecre­tary of agricultur­e.

 ?? MADELINE CASS/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2024 ??
MADELINE CASS/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2024

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