http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/31/us/31foodstamps.html?_r=1&th=&adxnnl=1&oref=slogin&emc=th&adxnnlx=1206964813-J0WuxpEmml4Qzb3USb8glQ
 


New York Times
March 31, 2008

As Jobs Vanish, Food Stamp Use Is at Record Pace
By ERIK ECKHOLM

Driven by a painful mix of layoffs and rising food and
fuel prices, the number of Americans receiving food
stamps is projected to reach 28 million in the coming
year, the highest level since the aid program began in
the 1960s.

The number of recipients, who must have near-poverty
incomes to qualify for benefits averaging $100 a month
per family member, has fluctuated over the years along
with economic conditions, eligibility rules,
enlistment drives and natural disasters like Hurricane
Katrina, which led to a spike in the South.

But recent rises in many states appear to be resulting
mainly from the economic slowdown, officials and
experts say, as well as inflation in prices of basic
goods that leave more families feeling pinched. Citing
expected growth in unemployment, the Congressional
Budget Office this month projected a continued
increase in the monthly number of recipients in the
next fiscal year, starting Oct. 1 - to 28 million, up
from 27.8 million in 2008, and 26.5 million in 2007.

The percentage of Americans receiving food stamps was
higher after a recession in the 1990s, but actual
numbers are expected to be higher this year.

Federal benefit costs are projected to rise to $36
billion in the 2009 fiscal year from $34 billion this
year.

“People sign up for food stamps when they lose their
jobs, or their wages go down because their hours are
cut,” said Stacy Dean, director of food stamp policy
at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities in
Washington, who noted that 14 states saw their rolls
reach record numbers by last December.

One example is Michigan, where one in eight residents
now receives food stamps. “Our caseload has more than
doubled since 2000, and we’re at an all-time record
level,” said Maureen Sorbet, spokeswoman for the
Michigan Department of Human Services.

The climb in food stamp recipients there has been
relentless, through economic upturns and downturns,
reflecting a steady loss of industrial jobs that has
pushed recipient levels to new highs in Ohio and
Illinois as well.

“We’ve had poverty here for a good while,” Ms. Sorbet
said. Contributing to the rise, she added, Michigan,
like many other states, has also worked to make more
low-end workers aware of their eligibility, and a
switch from coupons to electronic debit cards has
reduced the stigma.

Some states have experienced more recent surges. From
December 2006 to December 2007, more than 40 states
saw recipient numbers rise, and in several - Arizona,
Florida, Maryland, Nevada, North Dakota and Rhode
Island - the one-year growth was 10 percent or more.

In Rhode Island, the number of recipients climbed by
18 percent over the last two years, to more than
84,000 as of February, or about 8.4 percent of the
population. This is the highest total in the last
dozen years or more, said Bob McDonough, the state’s
administrator of family and adult services, and
reflects both a strong enlistment effort and an upward
creep in unemployment.

In New York, a program to promote enrollment increased
food stamp rolls earlier in the decade, but the
current climb in applications appears in part to
reflect economic hardship, said Michael Hayes,
spokesman for the Office of Temporary and Disability
Assistance. The additional 67,000 clients added from
July 2007 to January of this year brought total
recipients to 1.86 million, about one in 10 New
Yorkers.

Nutrition and poverty experts praise food stamps as a
vital safety net that helped eliminate the severe
malnutrition seen in the country as recently as the
1960s. But they also express concern about what they
called the gradual erosion of their value.

Food stamps are an entitlement program, with
eligibility guidelines set by Congress and the federal
government paying for benefits while states pay most
administrative costs.

Eligibility is determined by a complex formula, but
basically recipients must have few assets and incomes
below 130 percent of the poverty line, or less than
$27,560 for a family of four.

As a share of the national population, food stamp use
was highest in 1994, after several years of poor
economic growth, with an average of 27.5 million
recipients per month from a lower total of residents.
The numbers plummeted in the late 1990s as the economy
grew and legal immigrants and certain others were
excluded.

But access by legal immigrants has been partly
restored and, in the current decade, the federal and
state governments have used advertising and other
measures to inform people of their eligibility and
have often simplified application procedures.

Because they spend a higher share of their incomes on
basic needs like food and fuel, low-income Americans
have been hit hard by soaring gasoline and heating
costs and jumps in the prices of staples like milk,
eggs and bread.

At the same time, average family incomes among the
bottom fifth of the population have been stagnant or
have declined in recent years at levels around
$15,500, said Jared Bernstein, an economist at the
Economic Policy Institute in Washington.

The benefit levels, which can amount to many hundreds
of dollars for families with several children, are
adjusted each June according to the price of a
bare-bones “thrifty food plan,” as calculated by the
Department of Agriculture. Because food prices have
risen by about 5 percent this year, benefit levels
will rise similarly in June - months after the
increase in costs for consumers.

Advocates worry more about the small but steady
decline in real benefits since 1996, when the
“standard deduction” for living costs, which is
subtracted from family income to determine eligibility
and benefit levels, was frozen. If that deduction had
continued to rise with inflation, the average mother
with two children would be receiving an additional $37
a month, according to the private Center on Budget and
Policy Priorities.

Both houses of Congress have passed bills that would
index the deduction to the cost of living, but the
measures are part of broader agriculture bills that
appear unlikely to pass this year because of
disagreements with the White House over farm policy.

Another important federal nutrition program known as
WIC, for women, infants and children, is struggling
with rising prices of milk and cheese, and growing
enrollment.

The program, for households with incomes no higher
than 185 percent of the federal poverty level,
provides healthy food and nutrition counseling to 8.5
million pregnant women, and children through the age
of 4. WIC is not an entitlement like food stamps, and
for the fiscal year starting in October, Congress may
have to approve a large increase over its current
budget of $6 billion if states are to avoid waiting
lists for needy mothers and babies.


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