http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2012/07/09/513136/food-stamp-cuts-school-meals/
By Pat Garofalo on Jul 9, 2012 at 2:00 pm
Members of the House Agriculture Committee this week will be
marking up a “compromise” version of this year’s farm bill, which includes cuts
to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) — i.e. food stamps —
that would result in two to three million people losing their food
assistance. 45 percent of the proposed cuts to federal spending in the bill come
from reductions in the food stamp program.
The bulk of the cuts would be a result of eliminating what
is known as “categorical eligibility,” which gave states the flexibility to
enroll families in SNAP even if their assets (such as a car or modest savings)
or income push them barely above the line to qualify for assistance. According
to the Congressional Budget Office, such a move would not only boot 1.8 million
people off of food stamps, but would knock 280,000 children off of
the free school lunch program:
The legislation would restrict categorical eligibility to
only households receiving cash assistance. Based on data from the Department of
Agriculture, CBO estimates that about 1.8 million people per year, on average,
would lose benefits if they were subject to SNAP’s income and asset tests. In
addition, about 280,000 school-age children in those households would no longer
be automatically eligible for free school meals through their receipt of SNAP
benefits. Assuming enactment on October 1, 2012, CBO estimates that this
provision would lower direct spending by $11.5 billion over the 2012-2022
period.
These families’ free lunch benefits are tied to their
receipt of SNAP funds. As the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities noted, “A
typical working family that qualifies for SNAP benefits due to categorical
eligibility is a mother with two young children who has monthly
earnings just above the program’s monthly gross income limit ($2,008 for a
family of three in 2012).”
Republicans have mounted quite the campaign to
convince the public that food stamp spending is somehow out of control, and
this “compromise” bill buys into the worst of that rhetoric. Many House
Democrats are voicing their objections. “This is a bill that robs the poor to
pay the rich,” said Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-CT). “This bill is an outrage.”
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