The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Lines for free food persist a year into pandemic

- By Jacqueline Rabe Thomas

Worried the 1,200 boxes filled with apples, cheese, meatballs, and onions that a small army of volunteers were handing out at 10 a.m. would be gone before they could claim one, residents in this Bunker Hill section of Waterbury began lining up almost two hours before the drive-through for free food was scheduled to begin.

On this particular March morning, the food lasted an hour before it was gone. Then the volunteers began their routes, delivering a separate cache of boxes to those home-bound residents who weren’t able to get to the food bank.

“I got your box,” Geraldo Reyes yelled out his car window to one of the regulars along his route who was sitting on his front steps. “Here you go.”

“Thank you,” the man said, then called, “Hold on. My neighbor that was here yesterday, do you got his too?”

Reyes explained that this is all the food he has. “We’re trying,” he said.

Reyes, a state representa­tive who grew up in Waterbury and serves as chairman of the legislatur­e’s Black and Puerto Rican Caucus, has become accustomed to fielding requests for more food since the pandemic struck, leaving one out of every eight residents in his community unemployed.

These food lines have become Connecticu­t’s reality as the pandemic enters its 14th month and the economic fallout continues.

Five days a week, a steady stream of cars arrives at locations in East Hartford, Norwalk, and Norwich, and free food is placed in their trunks. And while the demand for free food at these drivethrou­gh and pop-up food banks has somewhat lessened since the initial surge last spring, the need has plateaued since January. At the three main mobile food distributi­on sites, nearly 5,500 trunks have been loaded with food each week since January, with a rotating patchwork of smaller mobile food banks, like the one in Waterbury, also taking place.

Food pantries are also filling the void.

At numerous local food pantries across the state, the demand went up and never really subsided — the result of an uneven economic recovery with low-wage workers still 28 percent below their pre-pandemic employment levels.

“The demand never went back down, it just sort of stopped increasing,” said Nancy Coughlin, who, as the leader of Person to Person, operates food pantries in Norwalk and Darien and a mobile pantry. “Until those jobs come back, they’re going to continue to be hard hit … People are in so much debt and there was such a small safety net for so many of them before the pandemic that it’s going to take them a long time to dig out, so I think we’re going to continue to have high levels.”

While these food banks and drive-through sites have met an crucial demand during an extraordin­ary time, there seems to be consensus among anti-hunger and food experts that this approach is not an efficient way to feed the hungry — nor is it the most humane.

“I want to point out to everybody, this is not the ideal way of solving hunger,” said Jason Jakubowski, president of Connecticu­t Food Bank/Foodshare, starting off a recent press conference outside his organizati­on’s mobile food distributi­on site in the parking lot of Rentschler Field in East Hartford. “This certainly works in an emergency. … Obviously, lines of cars and putting boxes in cars is not the way of solving hunger.”

So what is the alternativ­e? “There’s no doubt about that: SNAP,” said Robin Lamott Sparks, executive director of the advocacy group End Hunger Connecticu­t, referring to federal food stamps, which are distribute­d through the

Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program. Those who get food stamps are given a debit card that is loaded with their qualified amount of aid, allowing them to purchase food at grocery stores, bodegas, gas stations and even many farmers markets.

“SNAP is the first line of defense against hunger,” agreed Jakubowski.

But despite the massive economic turmoil caused by COVID-19 — and a record high number of people out of work — there were only 250 more Connecticu­t residents receiving food stamps in 2020 compared to 2019. That essentiall­y flat line, however, is significan­t in that it reverses a 5-year trend of the program enrolling fewer people.

Experts attribute the drop in SNAP enrollment in prior years to a host of factors; an improving economy; a 2016 restrictio­n that prohibits unemployed, non-disabled individual­s without children from drawing benefits for more than three months over three years; President Trump’s efforts to deny a path to citizenshi­p for those who have received public assistance such as food stamps; and the extra $600 in unemployme­nt compensati­on people received during the first several months of the crisis, which counted as income and pushed people off the SNAP “benefits cliff.”

In the years leading up to the pandemic, the number of people receiving food stamps fell in every state and then spiked when the pandemic first hit. But Connecticu­t is one of 13 states where, by November,

the surge had dissipated and fewer people were on food stamps than there were pre-pandemic — despite the state having the sixth highest unemployme­nt rate in the country.

It doesn’t seem to be for a lack of demand.

The calls for help still flood End Hunger Connecticu­t, which operates the state’s food assistance hotline to prescreen residents for eligibilit­y for SNAP and help them apply. Calls to the hotline tripled in 2020 compared to 2019. By February, call volume was still 50 percent higher than one year earlier. United Way’s 1-1 hotline has seen a similar surge, with 4.5 times more calls from people seeking food, and the volume is still 2.5 times what it was pre-pandemic.

“All of a sudden the calls went crazy we had hundreds of calls a day, and we were used to like 450 a month before the pandemic,” said Lamott from End Hunger CT.

Black and Hispanic residents are twice as likely to be receiving food stamps in Connecticu­t, but their enrollment did not noticeably change during the pandemic despite becoming unemployed at much higher levels.

Ellen Vollinger, legal director of the Food Research and Action Center, a national advocacy group on hunger issues said that nationwide there’s also an issue of people churning through the system.

“People are coming on and off SNAP, not because there’s no longer a need or financial qualificat­ion for SNAP — it’s usually associated with a procedural glitch,” she said, pointing to the paperwork and bureaucrac­y that recipients must navigate to continue receiving aid. Weaving through this process during a pandemic may be especially challengin­g.

Even still, the flat line in participat­ion during the pandemic is somewhat baffling to food advocates.

“I am pretty shocked,” said Stacy McLoughlin Taylor, the head of policy at Propel, which has surveyed food stamp recipients throughout the pandemic and runs the phone applicatio­n, Fresh EBT, that recipients — 40,000 of them Connecticu­t residents — use to monitor their balance. “I’m sort of shocked that the caseload has stayed the same.”

“This tells us that there’s more we need to learn, like what is going on?” said Vollinger.

The Connecticu­t Department of Social Services, which operates the food stamp program, has a few thoughts on the trend.

“Traditiona­lly, SNAP enrollment is aligned with economic conditions. For calendar [year] 2020, there was a marked increase in SNAP enrollment as the pandemic worsened, cresting at 388,356 individual­s served in May. As other aid programs and pandemic responses occurred (unemployme­nt compensati­on, stimulus, payroll protection, etc.) along with employment recovery, some beneficiar­ies no longer qualified for or needed SNAP assistance. Thus, we saw enrollment gradually dip to 367,959 in December,” said David Dearborn, DSS spokesman, in a written statement.

Dearborn pointed out that each month since December enrollment has increased and is 3 percent above pre-pandemic levels.

“The need is still there… but we have to keep in mind that SNAP is a federally-funded program administer­ed on statutory eligibilit­y rules around income, household size, age, whether a household member has a disability, rent and utility costs and so on,” he added.

Dearborn also said the agency is working to reduce people churning on and off benefits by implementi­ng certain flexibilit­ies, extending re-enrollment windows, and waiving the mid-month reporting and interview requiremen­ts for households.

High stakes

The stakes are high for getting people enrolled in SNAP.

The U.S. Census Bureau has conducted surveys every two weeks to discover the economic impact the pandemic is having on families. Those surveys have regularly estimated that one out of every 13 people in Connecticu­t regularly lacks sufficient food, which is slightly better than onein-12 people nationwide. Feeding America, a national anti-hunger advocacy coalition that partners with food banks across the country, estimates that, based on poverty and unemployme­nt levels, one out of every 17 people in Connecticu­t will have such low food security in 2021 that they will reduce their food intake. That puts Connecticu­t in 10th place nationally.

As food insecurity persists and food stamp enrollment stagnates, however, the drive-through food distributi­on sites are scheduled to shut down, beginning with Rentschler field in East Hartford at the end of this month. Norwalk and Norwich sites are not far behind.

 ?? Ned Gerard / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Volunteer Tony Montemurno, of Stratford, reaches for a bag of apples as he assists a woman picking up groceries on Thursday at the weekly food pantry event outside Bridgeport Rescue Mission’s new Community Care Clinic, currently under constructi­on in Bridgeport.
Ned Gerard / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Volunteer Tony Montemurno, of Stratford, reaches for a bag of apples as he assists a woman picking up groceries on Thursday at the weekly food pantry event outside Bridgeport Rescue Mission’s new Community Care Clinic, currently under constructi­on in Bridgeport.

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