Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Food stamp change fuels anxiety as states try to curb impact

- By Sophia Tareen

CHICAGO » Having food stamps offers Richard Butler a stability he’s rarely known in his 25 years. He was in state custody at age 2, spent his teen years at a Chicago boys’ home and jail for burglary, and has since struggled to find a permanent home.

The $194 deposited monthly on his benefits card buys fresh produce and meat.

“It means the world to me,” said Butler, who shares a one-bedroom apartment with two others. “We can go without a lot of things, like phones and music. We can’t go without eating.”

But that stability is being threatened for people like Butler, who are able-bodied, without dependents and between the ages 18 and 49. New Trump administra­tion rules taking effect April 1 put hundreds of thousands of people in his situation at risk of losing their benefits. They hit particular­ly hard in places like Illinois, which also is dealing with a separate, similar change in the nation’s third-largest city.

From Hawaii to Pennsylvan­ia, states are scrambling to blunt the impact of the new rules, with roughly 700,000 people at risk of losing benefits unless they meet certain work, training or school requiremen­ts. They’ve filed a multi-state lawsuit, expanded publicly funded job training, developed pilot programs and doubled down efforts to reach vulnerable communitie­s, including the homeless, rural residents and people of color.

Social service agencies say they won’t be able to fill the gap, making increased homelessne­ss and more hospital visits among the biggest concerns. Experts say they’ve already seen troubling signs in some states.

“This is a cascading effect,” said Robert Campbell, managing director at Feeding America, a network of hundreds of food banks nationwide. “It will increase demands on the emergency food system, food banks and pantries.”

Currently, work-eligible, able-bodied adults without dependents under 50 can receive monthly benefits if they meet a 20-hour weekly work, job training or school requiremen­t. Those who don’t are are limited to three months of food stamps over three years.

However, states with high unemployme­nt or few jobs have been able to waive time limits. Every state except Delaware has sought a waiver at some point, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

The new rules make it harder to get waivers. They’re the first of three changes to the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, which feeds 36 million people nationwide.

The Trump administra­tion has touted the change as a way to get people working and save $5.5 billion over five years. Able-bodied adults without dependents are 7% of SNAP recipients.

But states fighting the change say that argument is misguided.

“Not everyone is in a position to get a job tomorrow, and taking away access to food is only going to make that more difficult,” said Pennsylvan­ia Department of Human Services Secretary Teresa Miller. “We’re going to have more hungry people in the state.”

 ?? CHARLES REX ARBOGAST — THE
ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? On Feb. 27, Richard Butler poses for a portrait on Chicago’s Southside. From Hawaii to Pennsylvan­ia, states are scrambling to curb the impact of a new Trump administra­tion rule that could cause nearly 700,000 people including Butler to lose food stamp benefits unless they meet certain work, training or school requiremen­ts.
CHARLES REX ARBOGAST — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS On Feb. 27, Richard Butler poses for a portrait on Chicago’s Southside. From Hawaii to Pennsylvan­ia, states are scrambling to curb the impact of a new Trump administra­tion rule that could cause nearly 700,000 people including Butler to lose food stamp benefits unless they meet certain work, training or school requiremen­ts.

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