Advocates Fear Food Stamp Requirement Will Affect Food Banks

Advocates say West Virginia’s plan to make food stamp recipients meet a work or training requirement could increase the burden of food banks.

The Charleston Gazette-Mail reports that the state Department of Health and Human Resources announced last year that it would reinstate a requirement calling on Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program recipients to meet a monthly work or training requirement of 20 hours per week or lose benefits. The changes took effect in January.

Chad Morrison, executive director of the Mountaineer Food Bank, says the changes will discourage people from applying for SNAP and the burden of supplying additional hunger relief would subsequently fall on food banks.

The Department of Health and Human Resources says there are fewer than 7,000 recipients who are most at risk of losing benefits.

House Looks to Tackle 3 Social Issues in 2016

West Virginia families have been struggling with issues like substance abuse and poverty for decades.

This year, lawmakers are taking a hard look at ways they can combat these issues, and members of the House of Delegates are wasting no time at all.

  • House Bill 4021 – SNAP Benefits

This bill would require adults without dependents be employed or in a work program for at least 20 hours a week to continue to be eligible for SNAP benefits. SNAP is the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.
The bill would not affect seniors, people with disabilities, or those going to school.

“Right now the state’s in a money crunch,” said Democratic Delegate Patsy Trecost of Harrison County, “we need all hands on deck, we know by putting people back to work, or asking people to go to work, even if it’s just twenty hours a week, that’s gonna generate revenue for them, it’s gonna generate spending dollars, and essentially help the economy.”

Trecost is the lead sponsor of the bill and says House Bill 4021 is mainly trying to encourage West Virginians to get back to work.

  • House Bill 4010 – TANF Drug Screening

This bill would require drug screening and testing of applicants for TANF, or the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program.
TANF offers temporary assistance to low-income families with the hope of making them more self-sufficient, but the bill would require those recipients to be drug tested before receiving their benefits.

If a recipient tests positive for a drug they don’t have a prescription for, he or she would then be required to go through a substance abuse treatment program to continue to receiving assistance. Children of those parents’ who test positive will not lose their benefits.

  • House Bill 4044 – Addiction Prevention and Treatment Fund

This bills would create the Ryan Brown Addiction Prevention and Recovery Fund Act. The fund would provide money for drug addiction prevention and treatment not otherwise covered by legislative appropriations, Medicare, Medicaid or private insurance.
“The Ryan Brown Addiction Prevention and Treatment Fund is designed to help those that don’t have any other means of payment,” said the bill’s lead sponsor, Republican Delegate Chris Stansbury of Kanawha County, “so they don’t qualify for Medicaid or they’re kind of in process waiting for that Medicaid to come through, or they don’t qualify for any other types of grants, public insurance, private insurance; anything like that, so it’s going to be a payer to help them get into recovery.”

Stansbury says he also hopes this bill will help decrease wait times for treatment by helping to fund new facilities.

What Do the SNAP Benefits Changes Mean for West Virginians?

On January 1st, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefit requirements changed for about 38 thousand adults in West Virginia. These…

On January 1st, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefit requirements changed for about 38 thousand adults in West Virginia. These individuals must now meet a work requirement of 20 hours a week or be enrolled in a work or education-related training program to continue receiving food assistance. Those who do not meet these requirements will cease to be eligible for benefits after three months.

 

 The change affects adults ages 18-50 with no documented disabilities or dependent children in the nine West Virginia counties with the lowest unemployment in the state: Berkeley, Cabell, Harrison, Jefferson, Kanawha, Marion, Monongalia, Morgan, and Putnam.

 

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At the Covenant House Food Pantry in Charleston, Misty White is helping her elderly mother pick out groceries. White doesn’t currently use the food pantry herself, she has SNAP benefits, but says she might have to start soon.

“What I get a month,” White says, “I survive all month on it. I make it stretch, I make meals that will last a couple days, three days.”

White gets $194 a month in food assistance. It’s her only source of income for food – she is currently unemployed.

 

But the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources says benefits like White’s weren’t intended to be used the way they are now.

 

“The SNAP program is a supplemental assistance program. It was never meant to be the only source for the purchasing of food,” said Nancy Exline, Commissioner of the West Virginia Bureau for Children and Families, which falls under the DHHR.

 

“And over the course of the last couple of years federally, the USDA food nutrition services have been moving to more of an employment and training programs to try to help those individuals, particularly those individuals that have no source of income and are in this population of individuals that are really in the prime of their, should be, working career and to figure out ways, in which we can utilize training and employment to help them get into the workforce.”

 

Exline says the change is not meant to be a punishment, rather it’s an attempt to slowly return the SNAP program to how it was originally intended to be used – as a stopgap between employment or as a supplement for working adults. However, critics say that the change is penalizing the most disadvantaged – the poorest of the poor.

Back at the food bank, White says she will have to find a job – hopefully as a cashier at Wal-Mart where she has worked before. She says a physical disability, arm weakness that caused her to drop things, has prevented her from working for the past couple of years, but her doctor recently cleared her to start looking again.

 

“When I was working there nine years ago, when I left there I was making $9 an hour,” she said. If White worked at Wal-Mart for $9 an hour, 40 hours a week she would make just over $1400 a month. The problem, she said, is that many cashier positions are part-time.

 

She said she is worried that if she is only able to find employment for 15 hours a week (five hours shy of the required 20) she would lose her benefits. But Exline says that’s not necessarily true.

 

“An individual is being asked to take some responsibility for the benefits that they receive” said Exline. “If they lose those benefits it’s because they did not register and work with workforce. That’s the only way they lose their benefits.”

 

Exline says most individuals receive a little over a $100 a month in SNAP benefits.

 

“We’re just simply trying to enforce and utilize what is available through the federal government to try to move individuals into employment. They may not go into employment, they may go into a training program, they may work some community service. There’s lots of different things that they can do. They won’t be cut off as long as they are doing those things.”

 

The three-month time limit on SNAP benefits for unemployed, able-bodied adults is actually nothing new. Prior to Great Recession of 2008, it was standard federal law. When unemployment was high, though, states could request waivers of the time limit for either all or part of the state. For the past several years, the entire state of West Virginia has been exempt from the time limit.

 

“The waiver that we had had in 2011 that said everyone could be waived off of this was being eliminated,” said Exline. “So we thought this was an opportunity for us to help those receiving SNAP benefits.”

 

Federal waivers are now available to states on a year-by-year basis. For 2016 West Virginia chose not to apply for the waiver in the nine counties with the lowest unemployment rates as part of their “plan moving forward,” according to Exline in an email exchange. The idea is that the SNAP Employment and Training program has the greatest likelihood of success when piloted in these areas.

 

Exline says the state will evaluate the program every year and submit its plans to the USDA for approval.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from the Benedum Foundation.

Department of Health and Human Resources Announces Changes to SNAP

The West Virginia Department for Health and Human Resources announced a change today (Monday) in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. As of…

The West Virginia Department for Health and Human Resources announced a change today (Monday) in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. As of January 1, 2016, able-bodied adults without dependents in nine West Virginia counties must meet a work or education requirement in order to continue receiving SNAP benefits.

To avoid losing their benefits, SNAP recipients ages 18-49 with no dependent children need to either work or be in an educational program for 20 hours a week, every week.

Or, they must qualify for an exemption, which includes participating in an addiction treatment and rehabilitation program, being responsible for an incapacitated adult, or currently being at least a half-time student, among other things.

The change affects adults in Berkeley, Cabell, Harrison, Jefferson, Kanawha, Marion, Monongalia, Morgan, and Putnam counties – the nine counties with the lowest unemployment rates in West Virginia, according to a DHHR news release.

SNAP participants can go to the WorkForce Investment Boards in Charleston, Huntington, White Hall and Martinsburg to find work or be placed in a work-related training program.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from the Benedum Foundation.

Food Stamp Use Increases in West Virginia

A new report says West Virginia is one of seven states to see an increase in the number of residents receiving benefits through the Supplemental Nutrition…

  A new report says West Virginia is one of seven states to see an increase in the number of residents receiving benefits through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.

The report by the nonprofit Food and Research Action Center says 362,133 West Virginians received benefits from the program in February. That’s up nearly two-and-a-half percent from January and three-and-a-half percent from February 2013.

McDowell County had the most recipients at 34 percent. Monongalia and Jefferson counties both had the fewest recipients at 9 percent.

Dawn Hawkins with the Department of Health and Human Resources tells the Charleston Daily Mail that the increase is due to a number of factors, including job loss.

Other states seeing an increase in February were Nevada, California, Connecticut, Maryland, Hawaii, and Pennsylvania.

West Virginia Morning – November 1, 2013

One in five West Virginians are seeing a reduction in food assistance, Downstream Strategies takes a critical look at the water-use data provided by natural gas drillers in the past couple years to the state Department of Environmental Protection, and Huntington Prep’s basketball team enters their season with high expectations.

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