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Monday, 29 May 2017
Food stamps: a lifeline for America's poor that Trump wants to cut
Residents of the Congress Heights section of Washington DC tell of
the devastating impact the president’s plan to cut food stamps would
have on their families
Kozette Green, center, and her twins Jerzey and Josh, nine. ‘My kids
probably wouldn’t get as much as they do now. I think it’s horrible.’
Photograph: Jason Hornick for the Guardian
Wendell
Britt does not know where he will sleep tonight. It might be a park
bench, a pavement, a shelter – “You go to a shelter and they take your
fucking phone” – or, if he’s lucky, a friend’s house. “Wherever I lay my
head,” he says, wearing a Chicago Bulls cap.
The 55-year-old also does not know where his next meal is coming from
either – but he does have a lifeline. “Food stamps help me get food in
my stomach,” he said this week. “They help a lot of people.”
This is Congress Heights in Washington DC, a predominantly black
neighborhood just five miles southeast of the White House, where last
week Donald Trump’s administration unveiled a budget proposal that would slash the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (Snap), as food stamps are officially known.
Losing food stamps altogether would be devastating to Britt, who
spent 17 years in prison for robbery and drug-related offenses and is
trying to go back to work as a barber. “If I’ve got no food, nothing to
eat, I’m just out here. I might go to the trash can when I need
something to eat; I might get sick in my stomach but it’s a chance I
have to take. I might steal something because I’m going to be hungry.”
In February, about 42 million Americans received assistance via the
Snap program, which cost $70.9bn in 2016. Most recipients, about 72%,
live in households with children, and more than a quarter live in
households with seniors or people with disabilities. The federal scheme
has been widely applauded by economists and academics as a
cost-efficient method of helping the most needy.
“In recent memory, in the late 1960s and early 70s, we had a problem
of severe malnutrition in this country. Not everywhere, but in poor
communities around the country we had problems with severe hunger,” said
Stacy Dean, the vice-president for food assistance policy at the
nonpartisan thinktank the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Snap “largely solved that problem”.
Dean said she found the budget cut proposal worrying. Abdicating
responsibility for ending hunger as a national issue is “a proposal to
take us back to a dark time in our history”, she said.
Daimond and Georgia Gibson have a six-year-old son and
receive food stamps worth $350 a month. Daimond said: ‘I voted for
Trump: what a mistake.’ Photograph: Jason Hornick for the Guardian
The District of Columbia in comparison with US states
has one of the highest proportions of the population to be on food
stamps. For instance, 21.97% of residents were on them in 2014, a report
from the US Department of Agriculture’s (USDA’s) nutrition service
reported in 2015.
Many
residents of Congress Heights, a disadvantaged area that’s a 20-minute
drive from the executive mansion, depend on food stamps and would soon
feel the pain of cutbacks.
Last week, Kozette Green, a 44-year-old single mother, dropped into a
convenience store on Alabama Avenue with her nine-year-old twins Jerzey
and John; she also has a daughter, Nija, 18. Green has been on food
stamps since Nija’s birth in 1998 prompted her to leave her job in
childcare. “They made a big difference because I don’t really make a lot
so it helped me bring food for my kids.”
Green receives $273 a month for herself and her children. If that was
taken away? “Oh my god, I don’t know,” she replied. “My kids probably
wouldn’t get as much as they do now. I think it’s horrible. It’s going
to be harder on the people who don’t have jobs trying to eat and provide
for their families.”
Walking by the store, Reginald Porter-Bey, 59, who used to
work as a printer at the Pentagon, started using food stamps a decade
ago when he was homeless and jobless. “They’re very important to get
through the month. You’ve got to know how to find bargains.”
Porter-Bey, who has five children, added: “It would have a hell of an
impact. That’s taking food out of my mouth and other people’s mouths
who’ve got kids. That’s not fair. People voted for Trump and he slapped
them in the face. There are people in West Virginia who are poor just
like here. He doesn’t care because he’s all right.
“We’ve had people robbing from another just to survive. No man is not going to allow his kids to eat, not if he’s a man.”
His friend Donald Greenfield, 36, a cook, added: “It’s gonna hurt a
lot of people. A person’s got to survive. For him to take the Snap and
not put something in its place is totally wrong. You’re taking money out
of kids’ mouths who are hardly making it.”
Conservative
media outlets such as Fox News have previously referred to food stamp
users as “moochers”, “parasites” and “takers” instead of “makers”. Last
week Trump’s budget director Mick Mulvaney said: “If you’re on food
stamps and you’re able-bodied, we need you to go to work.”
But according to the government’s own figures, most families on Snap –
55% of them – do have a family member working. The issue is that they
do not make enough money to feed their families. “This budget is not an
evidence-based exercise in policy-making. It’s oriented at cutting
government spending in order to lavish tax cuts on the wealthy,” said
Dean.
Daimond and Georgia Gibson have a six-year-old son and receive food
stamps worth $350 a month. Daimond, 44, suffered a slipped disc in his
back and lost his job as a manager about 18 months ago. He said: “I
voted for Trump: what a mistake. He’s a businessman, and I thought he’s
going to run the country like a business. I can’t see it.”
If the family lost food stamps, he said, “it would be a major blow.
We’d have to come down from three meals a day to maybe one or
one-and-a-half. We’re in the nation’s capital and prices are high. We
feed the third world countries; why not feed us?” Georgia, 25, who
could not vote because of a past felony, described the proposal to slash
food stamps as “ridiculous”. She said: “If he doesn’t look after poor
people now, he’s going to see a lot more poverty.”
She said of Trump: “He’s tearing our country apart. There’s so much
hate. He’s dividing our people. There has always been racism and we knew
it was a problem but we clearly see it now.”
Others in the neighborhood – which includes fast-food outlets,
convenience stores with bulletproof glass, police cars on regular patrol
and Martin Luther King Jr Elementary School – warned that they might
turn to desperate measures without food stamps.
Rodney Crowder, 51, is diabetic, has mental health problems, spent
three years in prison for robbery and is homeless, forcing him to sleep
in a car. “Trump is a good guy, but he’d better not take any food
stamps. He can’t do that shit. People need help. It would make me want
to rob again. What the hell do you think? I ain’t got no food stamps,
I’m gonna steal. I gotta eat.”
Ralik Turner, 52, a community developer and social worker, offered a
different perspective on the proposal. “It will just be the direction
the country has been going for years. Bill Clinton started the cuts and I
like Clinton. Like any underground network, people are going to find a
way because they have no choice.
“Food stamps is a subsidy. It’s not making the bread of any household
in this country. In no way does it take the credit for the situation of
freedom in the black community. Most of the elderly get $6 to $14 a
month on food stamps; no one can live on them; it means nothing. This
lie proposed that food stamps is an industry making poor people rich is
bullshit.”
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