Another Special Session Is Called, A Popular Food Benefits Program Gets Paused And Addressing Hunger In The State, This West Virginia Week 

On this West Virginia Week, we’ll tell you about a popular nutrition assistance program that has been temporarily paused, and Gov. Jim Justice formally calls a special session of the legislature

On this West Virginia Week, we’ll tell you about a very popular nutrition assistance program at local farmers’ markets that has been temporarily paused because of a lack of funding.   

Plus, Gov. Jim Justice formally calls a special session of the legislature, and lawmakers discuss what they want to accomplish.

We’ll also hear a conversation with the director of a local food bank about hunger in West Virginia.

Also, we have stories on efforts to address mental health issues in the state’s military veteran community, rate hikes at one power utility company and avoiding head injuries.

Chris Schulz is our host this week. Emily Rice produced this episode.

Our theme music is by Matt Jackfert.

West Virginia Week is a web-only podcast that explores the week’s biggest news in the Mountain State. It’s produced with help from Bill Lynch, Briana Heaney, Caelan Bailey, Chris Schulz, Curtis Tate, Emily Rice, Eric Douglas, Jack Walker, Liz McCormick and Maria Young.

Learn more about West Virginia Week.

A SNAP Program Incentivizing Healthy Eating Has Paused Due To Lack Of Funding

A program that doubles or triples nutrition assistance benefits when consumers use them at local farmers’ markets has been temporarily paused because of a lack of funding. The problem is the program’s popularity.

The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) is intended to alleviate hunger and malnutrition among low-income households. In 2019, the program served an average of more than 282,000 West Virginians per month.

SNAP is a fully federally funded program, except for some state administrative costs. But in West Virginia, the average benefit is $1.29 per person per meal. With those meager benefits, it can be difficult for SNAP households to afford fresh, healthy foods like local produce.

Nationally, SNAP incentive programs have emerged in recent years to encourage increased food and vegetable purchases, and for those purchases to be made at local farms and markets.

The West Virginia Food and Farm Coalition created an incentive program called SNAP Stretch in 2018 to increase the buying power of SNAP recipients, increase the consumption of locally grown produce and decrease food insecurity.

When a customer uses their SNAP benefits at a participating market, they receive a one-to-one match in SNAP Stretch dollars that can be used to buy fresh fruits and vegetables; canned, dried, or frozen fruits and vegetables; seeds and plants; or fresh herbs.

Senior shoppers and customers with children get an increased match rate.

Evan Osborne is the executive director of the Capitol Market in Charleston. For now, Capitol Market is able to continue operating SNAP Stretch through a grant from the city.

“It’s not just an added source of revenue for our farmers and producers, but this has real world implications for the families that utilize the program,” Osborne said. “That goes beyond just putting food on the table the way that the program is structured. It’s incentivizing them to spend it on healthier items.”

The West Virginia Food and Farm Coalition reimburses local markets to provide scrip, or market currency like a ticket, token, or receipt, for SNAP and EBT users, according to Spencer Moss, the group’s executive director.

“Most of our sites do thousands of dollars a year in SNAP and snap stretch sales,” Moss said. “So if you think of it this way, these were customers that you just did not have at your market before. And because of the program, you’ve got people coming and spending their SNAP EBT dollars that would otherwise go out the door to a big box grocery, Kroger, Walmart.”

Kimberly Stemple is the owner of LEC Farm and Garden Market in Kingwood, West Virginia. She calls the SNAP Stretch program a “godsend” to her market and community.

“Many of them told us the price of fresh fruits and vegetables in the grocery store, the price of meats, cheeses, just everything that discount was the difference between choosing whether we could add fresh fruits and vegetables to our diet, or if we just had to buy the staples like bread and milk and things like that, so that to them, you know, even that little bit amount that we were able to match because of their limited EBT dollars was, I mean, amazing,” Stemple said.

The program was originally funded by a United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) Food Insecurity Nutrition Incentive award.

When the COVID-19 pandemic hit, the West Virginia Food and Farm Coalition saw a 442 percent increase in the use of the SNAP Stretch program, reaching 8,426 families.

The popularity of SNAP Stretch in 2020 caused a brief hiatus in the program, freezing SNAP Stretch benefits for three months due to an exhausted budget.

“In 2020, the program went on pause because we actually didn’t have any federal funding for the program at the time we were between federal grants,” Moss said.

The program was restarted in 2020 with $200,000 in funding from the federal Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act.

Since then the program has only grown, with the Food and Farm Coalition fundraising and applying for grants to keep pace.

“For six years, [we] sustained the match from the program from philanthropic dollars,” Moss said. “We get those philanthropic dollars in somewhere between $5,000 to like $50,000 chunks. And we’ve put out over a million dollars in the program. So you can imagine how exhausted my team is with trying to fundraise the money, to get the match, to get the program operating.”

On Aug. 12, the coalition announced the program was placed on a temporary pause, affecting 26 markets operating in 21 counties.

“I get emails, Facebook messages, text messages every day from participating sites that are asking, ‘Hey, are we coming back anytime soon? Has that funding come through yet?’ I’ve got customers who are asking every day and we’re letting them know that we’re fundraising like crazy,” Moss said. “We’re talking to political actors like crazy, just trying to do everything we can to bring the program back online.”

Stemple says the pause comes at the worst time for her customers who use SNAP Stretch benefits to purchase bushels of produce to can for the winter.

“Knowing that we were going to have to pause it was so very disheartening,” Stemple said. “We had told customers that that was a possibility. It was always budget-based, so when and if we met our budget, then we would have to pause it. It did not help that it came as possibly the worst time of the season.”

According to a press release, the coalition is seeking additional funding partners and hopes a portion of the state’s 2024 budget surplus can help the program.

“We’re really thankful to the governor’s office, who saw a press release last week about the program being paused, and they called to talk more about what they could do to help out,” Moss said.

The office of Gov. Jim Justice did not respond to a request for comment on this story by the time of publication.

While funding from the state’s surplus would get the program back up and running in the short term, Moss is seeking a more reliable form of funding: a line item in the state’s budget.

“The deal with that is that the federal grant requires a one-to-one match,” Moss said. “So if we’re asking for a million dollars from the USDA for the program, I have to come up with a million dollars in match. The best way for me to do that is to have a state budget line item to make that happen, because that means year on year, I’m going to get $300,000 or $500,000 from the state legislature to make the program operate, and that’s the most sustainable way to keep this program going year on year having pauses in the program.”

Any money from the budget surplus would have to come during a special session of the legislature.

On Monday, Gov. Jim Justice announced he would call lawmakers back to the state capitol on Sept. 30 for a special legislative session on new tax cuts and child care in the state. Budgetary decisions were not listed as a topic of discussion for the session.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Marshall Health.

Food Benefits Program Paused And Wheeling University’s New President, This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, a government program that can triple nutrition assistance benefits for shoppers at local farmers markets has been temporarily paused because of a lack of funding. The problem centers around the program’s popularity.

On this West Virginia Morning, a government program that can triple nutrition assistance benefits for shoppers at local farmers markets has been temporarily paused because of a lack of funding. Emily Rice reports that the problem centers around the program’s popularity.

Plus, Chris Schulz reports that Wheeling University has named a new president.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Shepherd University and Marshall University School of Journalism and Mass Communications.

Maria Young produced this episode.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

Lawmakers Question W.Va. PATH’s Progress

Lawmakers had questions Tuesday about a seven-year project to modernize West Virginia’s public assistance programs.

Lawmakers had questions Tuesday about a seven-year project to modernize West Virginia’s public assistance programs. 

The program, called People’s Access To Help, or PATH, makes it easier for the public to access programs like Medicaid, food assistance and its child welfare system.

Secretary of the Department of Human Services (DoHS), Cynthia Persily testified during a meeting of the Legislative Oversight Commission on Health and Human Resources Accountability (LOCHHRA) about the cost and implementation of the program.

In 2017, West Virginia contracted with Optum to develop a system to help the agency efficiently manage public access.

The client portal became accessible in February 2020. According to Persily, the project’s progress remained consistent after the Child Welfare portion became operational in January 2023, streamlining data to support DoHS staff in investigating child welfare cases.

In April 2024, the Integrated Eligibility and Family Assistance service went live, followed by the Child Support services and Integrated Eligibility and Child Care services in July 2024.

These services allow West Virginians to determine and track their eligibility for assistance programs. They will also help DoHS staff manage child support workflows and process payments to providers who care for those with disabilities.

The base $308 million contract lasted six years, with optional one-year renewals for four years. Persily testified DoHS is in optional year two.

DoHS paid in portions as the vendor satisfactorily met benchmarks and has paid $103 million as of August 2024, Persily said. The federal portion is $89 million and $14 million is the state share.

“I suspect we’re going to get close to that amount in the design, development and implementation,” Persily said. “There are additional invoices, the additional benchmarks that were met.”

According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Administration for Children and Families (ACF), West Virginia is the only state with an operational Comprehensive Child Welfare Information System (CCWIS). 

However, Persily testified on Tuesday the WV PATH system needs to be certified by the federal government.

“Different agencies from the federal government will have to certify this system,” Persily said. “We are not yet certified, but we are in the process of doing that, and that’s just a part of the normal process.”

Persily said the project contract has moved from the “implementation stage” to the “management and operation stage,” which will be handled by a “reorganized Management Information Services (MIS) department” within the Office of Shared Administration.

“We are reorganizing so that our MIS system has much more ownership of this project and can assist us with a number of the different functions,” Persily said. “So that will be helpful that will lower our costs going forward when we have in-house expertise and not paying vendors.”

During questioning by Sen. Vince Deeds R-Greenbrier, Persily said DoHS will prepare a request for proposal (RFP) when the contract with Optum reaches its 10th year.

“We will constantly (need) updates, constantly need security, and so we will need a vendor to continue with the project,” Persily said. “It will depend on who responds and wins the RFP.”

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Marshall Health.

Us & Them Encore: SNAP — Do The Hungry Get More Policy Than Nutrition?

Hunger and poverty are universal challenges, but in the U.S. for more than 50 years, support programs like SNAP, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, have provided help to those in need. On this Us & Them, host Trey Kay talks with three people — a retiree, a mom and a lawmaker — who all say that nutritional support has made a difference in their lives.

Forty-two million Americans, or about 12 percent of the the population, need help feeding their families. 

That help often comes from a federal program called SNAP — which stands for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly called food stamps. The Mountain State is one of the top recipients of SNAP benefits. Nearly 45 percent of recipients are older adults or families with someone who’s disabled, while nearly 60 percent are families with children. 

The nation’s food support program began six decades ago, as a pilot program in McDowell County. Since then, it has reduced poverty and hunger across the nation. 

In an award-winning encore episode of Us & Them, host Trey Kay talks with three people — a retiree, a mom and a lawmaker who all say that nutritional support has made a difference in their lives. 

This episode of Us & Them is presented with support from the West Virginia Humanities Council and the CRC Foundation.

Subscribe to Us & Them on Apple Podcasts, NPR One, RadioPublic, Spotify, Stitcher and beyond.


Reenie Kittle, 75, from Harding, W.Va., is a widow and retired with a physical disability. She does what she can to get by on a meager fixed income.

“How do I live on a fixed income? Very scarcely,” Kittle told Us & Them host Trey Kay as they sat in the living room of her converted double-wide home. “So I have to buy pellets for my wood stoves in the winter months. I have to pay the water bill … all my bills. I don’t go out very much ‘cause I can’t afford the gas. With my income and my bills of $1,300 a month, I am lucky if I have $200, maybe $250 left over to try to find food. My neighbor sometimes will bring me supper, and that’s been a blessing to me. They try to help me food-wise as much as they can. For SNAP, I qualify for $23 a month. It is nothing. They just tell me that they’ve reviewed my case and that’s as much as they can do. They have no extra money to give and that’s it.

Photo Credit: Trey Kay/West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Each month, Reenie Kittle heads to the grocery store in Elkins, W.Va. with $23 from the federal government’s SNAP program. SNAP stands for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program — it used to be called “Food Stamps.” 

Reenie beelines past the produce section … beyond the tower of packaged strawberries, the cold case full of carrots and greens. She’s not here to buy what she wants to eat. She’s here to stretch the money she is allotted to the very last penny.

Photo Credit: Trey Kay/West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Roughly 18 percent of West Virginia residents use SNAP benefits. Nationally, that number is more like 12 percent, which means that 42 million people across America need help getting enough to eat. 

Seth DiStefano, with the West Virginia Center on Budget and Policy, lobbies to support programs like SNAP — which became a centerpiece of the social reform programs in President Lyndon Johnson’s “Great Society” initiative. DiStefano says SNAP has its roots in West Virginia. This goes back to when President John F. Kennedy started the original “Food Stamp” program in McDowell County.

“It truly is one of the most effective anti-poverty programs in the history of the United States,” DiStefano says.

Photo Credit: West Virginia Center on Budget & Policy
Mary Kathryn Molitor, 34, lives in St. Albans, W.Va. with her three daughters and an old dog named Brenda. Mary Kathryn works full-time at a local credit union, making about $13 an hour. When the Us & Them team first spoke with her, she wasn’t sure she wanted to talk on the record about her relationship with SNAP saying it was her “dirty little secret.”

“I don’t tell people that I use SNAP benefits because I know what that person looks like and that person doesn’t look like me,” Molitor explains while pulling one of her wriggling twin daughters up onto her hip. “That person doesn’t have a college education. That person doesn’t have a full-time job. That person isn’t who I am. I find it embarrassing. I don’t want to admit that I need help.”

Photo Credit: Trey Kay/West Virginia Public Broadcasting
To supplement her family’s food supply, Mary Kathryn Molitor often goes to the Capital Market in Charleston and checks to see if they have wilted vegetable plants that are about to be discarded. She takes them home to plant in her garden.

“Those are pumpkins right there. Volunteers. All those tomatoes? Volunteers. Sunflowers? Volunteers,” Molitor says while showing Us & Them host Trey Kay the plants around her home. “After Halloween — I threw my pumpkins into a couple of different areas and they rotted, seeded and they are giants now!  They grow on their own. They volunteer! If anybody needs a free pumpkin this year, just come to my house!”

Photo Credit: Trey Kay/West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Del. Jonathan Pinson represents the 17th District of West Virginia’s House of Delegates, on the western border of the state including parts of Mason and Jackson counties. Pinson, a Republican and a Baptist pastor was first elected in 2020. 

“I cannot say that I have issues with [SNAP] in general,” Pinson told Us & Them host Trey Kay when they met in Point Pleasant, W.Va. “One of the reasons that I can’t say that I’m opposed to that is because I think back prior to my adoption … at 15 years old … I go back to Saturday mornings sitting in a line at the armory in Florida, picking up corn flakes and powdered milk and five pound jugs of peanut butter. And I can tell you that there were many, many meals that I wouldn’t have had, had my parents not been on food stamps — and at the time, ‘commodities,’ that’s what it was called. So I can’t say that I’m opposed to the government helping when help is warranted.”

Photo Credit: West Virginia Legislature

Senate Education Chair Weighs In On Bills To Address Educational Problems In W.Va.

On this episode of The Legislature Today, from staffing to security, West Virginia’s schools are facing a variety of issues. Bills introduced this year have ranged from associate degrees for vocational students to reducing barriers to teacher certification. Chris Schulz spoke with Senate Education Chair Sen. Amy Grady, R-Mason, about legislative action to address the state’s educational problems.

On this episode of The Legislature Today, from staffing to security, West Virginia’s schools are facing a variety of issues. Bills introduced this year have ranged from associate degrees for vocational students to reducing barriers to teacher certification. Chris Schulz spoke with Senate Education Chair Sen. Amy Grady, R-Mason, about legislative action to address the state’s educational problems.

In the House, lawmakers considered bills on third reading that included cutting the Social Security tax, getting broadband fiber optic cable on poles, and making it easier to visit certain gravesites. Randy Yohe has the story.

In the Senate, the chamber looked at bills on missing children, SNAP benefits, and Oil and Gas property taxes. Briana Heaney has more.

Also, the House Education Committee moved to address a critical shortage of special education staff, while the Senate Education Committee took a rarely seen action in their meeting. Chris Schulz has the story.

Finally, war hero Hershel “Woody” Williams was honored at the U.S. Capitol following his death. Now, a statue of him could be on permanent display there. Curtis Tate has more.

And, scientific and social research has to start somewhere. On Undergraduate Research Day at the Capitol you can learn how theory and hypothesis develop into pragmatic information meant to help people. 

Having trouble viewing the video below? Click here to watch it on YouTube.

The Legislature Today is West Virginia’s only television/radio simulcast devoted to covering the state’s 60-day regular legislative session.

Watch or listen to new episodes Monday through Friday at 6 p.m. on West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

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