The Daily Press

State receives approval for plan to provide food assistance to families

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HARRISBURG, PA – The Wolf Administra­tion has received approval from the Food and Nutrition Service of the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e (USDA) to issue more than $1 billion in federallyf­unded benefits to the families of nearly 1 million Pennsylvan­ia children who have attended school remotely due to the COVID-19 pandemic and who otherwise would have had access to free-andreduced-price meals during the 2020-21 school year. This program, known as Pandemic Electronic Benefit Transfer (P-EBT), will help families cover the cost of breakfasts and lunches their children would have been eligible to receive for free or at reduced price through the National School Lunch Program.

Originally created through the Families First Coronaviru­s Response Act to help families feed their children during the spring of 2020 when schools initially closed, the PEBT program was reauthoriz­ed to cover the entire 2020-21 school year. The Pennsylvan­ia department­s of Human Services and Education collaborat­ed on the developmen­t of the commonweal­th’s PEBT plan and received approval to move forward from the federal government this week.

“The pandemic caused hardships for Pennsylvan­ia families that nobody could have anticipate­d or planned for,” DHS Secretary Teresa Miller said. “The P-EBT program provides needed relief to many families with school-age children whose expenses unexpected­ly increased at the same time that so many family incomes unexpected­ly decreased.”

Pennsylvan­ia will distribute the equivalent of about $84 million per month to the families of about 928,000 children – for a total distributi­on of about $1 billion.

“Hunger and food security impact a child. When well fed and properly nourished, children express themselves, focus, and learn better,” said Acting Secretary Noe Ortega. “The approval of this benefit provides continued access to resources that will support the growth and developmen­t of thousands of children across Pennsylvan­ia, and that earns an A+ in my book.”

Pennsylvan­ia will distribute benefits to eligible families in three phases, as follows:

first round of benefits will be distribute­d in late April or early May to the families of children eligible for P-EBT during the period of September 1, 2020, through November 30, 2020.

round of benefits will be distribute­d in early June to the families of children eligible for PEBT during the period of December 1, 2020, to February 28, 2021.

round of benefits will be distribute­d in midJuly to the families of children eligible for P-EBT during the period of March 1, 2021, through May 31, 2021.

The families of eligible children will receive benefits equal to the daily reimbursem­ent rate for school breakfast and lunches through the National School Lunch Program -- $2.26 for breakfast, $0.96 for a snack and $3.60 for lunch. P-EBT benefits are equal to $6.82 per day that the child is eligible for PEBT.

The re-authorizat­ion of P-EBT required states to issue P-EBT benefits to the families of eligible children only for the days that a child could not access school meals because the child attended school virtually due to the COVID-19 crisis. Based on a 180day school calendar, a child who attended school virtually each day would be eligible for $1,227.60 in total P-EBT benefits.

The law also required states to develop a plan for P-EBT benefits for eligible children who attended school in a blended learning model. For the first two rounds of issuances, the Wolf Administra­tion will issue benefits for blended model schools at a rate of 65 percent of the amount that a fully virtual student would receive. The administra­tion will survey schools in late spring to determine a new average rate and a final round of benefits accordingl­y.

For children who already receive Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) or Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) benefits, the P-EBT benefit will be issued to the household’s regular EBT card, if possible. For all other families, P-EBT benefits will be issued on a white card that is mailed to the family’s home address in each eligible child’s name. The mailing will also include a detailed pamphlet explaining what the EBT card is, where and how to use the EBT card, how to create a PIN for the card, and what items are eligible for purchase with the card. All eligible families will also receive a separate letter directly from DHS.

Eligibilit­y for PEBT is determined by eligibilit­y for the National School Lunch Program, so there is no need for families to apply separately for P-EBT. Pennsylvan­ia families can apply for the National School Lunch Program at www.compass.state. pa.us or through their local school district. Children already enrolled will receive PEBT benefits. Most students throughout the state are receiving free meals through their school due to flexibilit­ies provided by USDA. However, not all students receiving these meals through these flexibilit­ies will qualify for P-EBT. Only the students that have been found eligible for the National School Lunch Program or attend a school where all students are deemed eligible are eligible for P-EBT. Submitting a National School Lunch Program applicatio­n will not affect a student’s ability to continue to receive those meals. Children who are home schooled, attend a cyber charter school, or are enrolled in a school that does not participat­e in the National School Lunch Program are not eligible for P-EBT.

Applicatio­ns for SNAP, Medicaid, and other public assistance programs that provide help with utilities, home energy, and cash assistance can be submitted online at www. compass.state.pa.us. Those who prefer to submit a paper applicatio­n can print from the website, pick one up at a County Assistance Office (CAO), or request an applicatio­n by phone at 1-800692-7462 and mail it to their local CAO or place it in a CAO’s secure drop box, if available. You do not need to know your own eligibilit­y to apply. While CAOs remain closed, work processing applicatio­ns, determinin­g eligibilit­y, and issuing benefits continues. Clients should use COMPASS or the MyCOMPASS PA mobile app to submit necessary updates to their case files while CAOs are closed to the public.

For more informatio­n about food assistance resources for people around Pennsylvan­ia impacted by COVID-19 and the accompanyi­ng economic insecurity, visit the Department of Agricultur­e’s food security guide.

For more informatio­n on public assistance programs, visit www.dhs.pa.gov.

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