Forum Post: The Hunger Cliff
Posted 11 years ago on Nov. 2, 2013, 7:51 p.m. EST by GirlFriday
(17435)
This content is user submitted and not an official statement
The hunger cliff has a few parts to it. To begin with, the Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program, or food stamps, is set to lose $5 billion from its annual budget beginning today. The cut comes as the last of Obama’s 2009 stimulus expires and SNAP begins to return to pre-recession capacity. The problem is hunger in America is nowhere near what it was before the crisis. Food stamp recipients have been increasing every year since 2007, and have nearly doubled since the recession began.
And $5 billion is a big deal for a program that’s been struggling with skyrocketing need. Today’s cutback is equal to the amount of food private charities and food banks distribute nationwide over the course of a year, says Joel Berg, executive director of the New York Coalition Against Hunger. In an interview with Chris Hayes, Berg says it’s as if all private charity didn’t exist for an entire year.
Even before the cuts took effect, SNAP was woefully underfunded. The average recipient gets $133 per month, or about $1.50 for each meal. According to Feeding America, the nation’s largest network of food banks, 90 percent of SNAP benefits are redeemed by the third week of each month, and more than half of recipients rely on food banks to supplement benefits for at least six months out of the year.
As bad as all this is, today’s cuts are not the first part of the hunger cliff to take effect. As more and more Americans are turning to food pantries and hunger programs, these initiatives have already been hit hard this year by the sequester. Automatic cuts this past March kicked more than half a million women and children out of the WIC nutrition program while Meals on Wheels was forced to make 19 million fewer deliveries. Meanwhile, the sequester slashed $2.4 million in federal subsidies to food banks, a source more than 30 million Americans rely on.
And it gets worse. Also this week, a conference committee met for the first time to try to reconcile House and Senate versions of this year’s Farm Bill—an umbrella of food and agriculture policy that includes food stamps. Neither version appears to take America’s hunger crisis very seriously: while Democrats propose to cut food stamps by $4.1 billion over the next decade—remember, that’s not so far from the sum total of annual private donations nationwide—Republicans in the House demand nearly $40 billion in cuts, effectively kicking millions of Americans out of the program. It’s hard to say how much this year’s bill will slash food stamps, but it’ll probably be pretty big. This is potentially the most devastating part of the hunger cliff, threatening to throw millions of Americans into food insecurity.
Read more: http://www.utne.com/politics/hunger-cliff.aspx#ixzz2jXIz1Nzz
[Removed]
They better start thinking soon, you will have your bread riots.
Tea nuts roasting on an open fire.............
We are walking along a razors edge as a society and world.
No. These bitches are walking on a razor's edge. But, fuck ya.......HCHC should be jumping up and down for joy. It's all about community. So, he's personally going to go down and buy the food for all.
Heh - if you mean its all about community destruction - then yeah hchc would be ecstatic - I think - about destruction ( if anyone was wondering ).
Well, sure.
Ow - but yeah you are correct = Totally Obvious.
If JP Morgan decides it doesnt want to make billions off of the people relying on this sick ass government to feed them, does America have the will to take care of this on their own?
Tea nuts roasting on an open fire...