One in seven Americans relies on food stamps, yet lawmakers
are plotting to balance the budget on the backs of the neediest
by John Turner, guardian.co.uk
“The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the
abundance of those who have much; it is whether we provide enough for those who
have too little.”
So said President Franklin D Roosevelt, over 75 years ago, in
his second inaugural address. This idea could not be any more important
than now, when the health of millions of children, their families and older
adults are in danger.
Last Wednesday, the agriculture committee of the House of
Representatives voted to pass dramatic cuts to the Farm Bill. If passed by
Congress, the legislation will remove $16.5bn from food and hunger relief programs that
directly benefit children, seniors and families.
Approximately 80% of the Farm Bill budget funds the
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (Snap) – commonly known as food
stamps. As 45 million people – one in seven Americans – currently rely on Snap
to help feed and nourish themselves and their families, the program provides
the first line of defense in our country's hunger relief network.
The proposed cuts will affect between 2 and 3 million
Americans, and more than 300,000 people in Texas, where I work. These people
are our neighbors, classmates, co-workers, relatives and friends. Make no
mistake, these cuts will hurt many families already straining to pay their
summer electric bills, rent and gas, making it harder to put food on their
tables.
As almost three in five Snap recipients are children or
seniors, the advancement of this legislation is especially troubling as the
majority of those who stand to lose Snap benefits are the most vulnerable in
our society. The impact will ripple across our country starting in our
retirement communities and schools.
More seniors will be forced to choose between medical care
and food, or utilities and food. Many families receiving Snap benefits are also
eligible for free and reduced lunch. The proposed cuts could also mean lost
lunches for hundreds of thousands of children, exacerbating an already
intolerable situation.
Here, at the Capital
Area Food Bank of Texas, we believe hunger is unacceptable, and urge our
lawmakers to figure out a way to balance the budget that doesn't do it off the
backs of hungry children, their families and our older adults. (To see how you
can help, visit our advocacy
page.) It's not too late to help protect the most vulnerable members of our
community.
Any other outcome would surely mean that, as a society, we have failed the test Franklin D Roosevelt posed all those years ago.
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