Fast food and food stamps: Big controversy, small program, By Pamela M. Prah, September 20, 2011, Stateline.org: “The notion that welfare recipients might be able to buy fast food with their food stamps caused a ruckus on blogs and Twitter earlier this month, but some key facts often got muddled. ‘Restaurants want a piece of food stamp pie,’ read the headline of a recent USA Today story that said fast food restaurants ‘are lobbying for a piece of the action’ as the number of businesses approved to accept food stamps grew by a third from 2005 to 2010. The article correctly notes that since the 1970s, states have had the option of creating what the federal government calls a ‘Restaurant Meal Program’ for food stamp recipients. But few states actually have created them. One of the reasons is because eligibility is restricted to the homeless, disabled or elderly who get food stamps. The programs are not open to everyone – a crucial fact that was missed when the story went viral. The point of the restaurant meal program is to help those food stamp recipients who may not be able to cook for themselves or don’t even have a place to cook, explains Aaron Lavallee, a spokesman for the U.S Department of Agriculture. Otherwise, these folks have few options for using their food stamps…”
Tag: Electronic benefit transfers (EBT)
Restrictions on Food Aid and Cash Assistance – Michigan
- House OKs tighter rules on food aid for criminals, By Karen Bouffard, September 8, 2011, Detroit News: “The state House tightened rules for Bridge Card users Wednesday, giving Michigan State Police powers to help root criminals from the welfare system. The legislation passed Wednesday would set up an automated program to compare lists of public assistance recipients with lists of people with outstanding warrants and bar anyone with a warrant from getting public assistance. It also prohibits people who are jailed from receiving food stamps or other assistance, bans dispensing cash from Bridge Cards at ATMs in casinos and bars the cards from being used to buy alcohol, tobacco or lottery tickets…”
- State House passes new restrictions on Bridge Cards; bills go to Senate, By Kathleen Gray, September 8, 2011, Detroit Free Press: “New restrictions on the use of Michigan’s Bridge Cards, which operate like a debit card for food and cash assistance to low-income residents, were passed without debate Wednesday in the House. Jail inmates would no longer be able to use the cards, nor could they be used to get cash from ATM machines in casinos or to buy alcohol, lottery tickets or tobacco products. Approximately 1.3 million bridge cards are in circulation in the state. The amounts the state loads onto the cards are determined by the level of income and family size of recipients…”
SNAP and Food Retailers
- Vendors multiply for food stamps, By Jonathan Ellis and Megan Luther, August 27, 2011, Argus Leader: “The number of people on food stamps in South Dakota has jumped 75 percent in the past five years, meaning one of every eight South Dakotans now is in the program. In 2009, the latest year numbers were available, food stamp participants in this state spent $111.2 million. For companies that sell food, those statistics represent opportunity. And that’s why from 2005 to 2010, the number of vendors certified by the United States Department of Agriculture to take food stamps in South Dakota rose 19 percent to 622 vendors, according to an Argus Leader analysis of USDA data…”
- Fast-food restaurants lobby for slice of food stamp sales, By Jonathan Ellis and Megan Luther, August 27, 2011, Argus Leader: “The main goal of the nation’s food stamp program has been to supplement the buying power of low-income residents when they shop for unprepared foods at grocery stores. But a major restaurant company is lobbying the federal government on the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, federal lobbying records show. Louisville, Ky.-based Yum! Brands has allies among advocates for the hungry who hope to give restaurants a greater role in SNAP…”
- Michigan restaurants hungry to accept Bridge Cards, By Jaclyn Trop, September 1, 2011, Detroit News: “Michigan has experienced an explosion in the number of restaurants participating in a program that allows some residents who receive food assistance to redeem their benefits for a hot meal. In the past year and a half, the number of restaurants approved to use Michigan’s Bridge Cards – debit-style cards – to serve food to recipients who are blind, homeless or 60 years and older has grown to 105 restaurants from eight, said Christina Fecher, spokeswoman for the Michigan Department of Human Services, which oversees the program. That is a jump of 1,200 percent. Prior to this, the program that started around 1996 had only three restaurants participating, she said. The reason behind the surge of interest among local eateries isn’t clear to state and restaurant industry officials. But it has coincided with the growth of Michigan’s overall food assistance program – including a 57 percent increase in the state’s recipients from 2006 to 2010 and a 127 percent jump in its funding to $2.8 billion during the same time, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture…”