Oatmeal yes, eggs no: Gaps emerge in U.S. anti-hunger push for children
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[March 29, 2021]
By Andy Sullivan
CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. (Reuters) - When the
coronavirus pandemic forced the closure of U.S. schools a year ago,
Congress took action to ensure that low-income families whose children
received free meals at school would have money to buy food on their own.
But nobody told AmberLee McCann.
The single mother, who cares for foster children along with her two
sons, quickly ran through her savings after she quit her jobs at a
veterinary practice and a real estate firm because she has underlying
health issues and feared catching COVID-19, and money was running low.
Trips to the grocery store became an exercise in triage: yes to oatmeal,
no to fresh fruit and eggs. One gallon of milk every two weeks, rather
than every four days.
"I felt like a complete failure," said McCann, who lives in the
Tennessee city of Clarksville, near the border with Kentucky. "I
definitely had a lot of depression last year."
McCann, 39, found out about the Pandemic Electronic Benefit Transfer
program in October, after it had expired. She ultimately was able to
secure about $750 in benefits, roughly half of what she calculated she
was eligible to receive.
Congress over the past year approved nearly $6 trillion in spending to
battle a pandemic that has killed roughly 550,000 Americans and thrown
millions of people out of work. It included hundreds of billions of
dollars in unemployment aid, welfare spending and direct payments to
help people weather the crisis.
Lawmakers loosened guidelines to make it easier for people to qualify
for assistance, allowing states to screen applicants over the phone or
internet, rather than in person.
Still, the ranks of the hungry in the United States have grown. Roughly
12% of households with children reported not having enough to eat in
February, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, up from 8% before
COVID-19 emerged.
UNEVEN PARTICIPATION
Advocates said the pandemic made clear that welfare programs too often
set up barriers for those who need help the most.
"It was frustrating, it was burdensome, and it made an already difficult
situation even more difficult for many people," said Pamela Herd, a
professor of public policy at Georgetown University.
Much federal aid is filtered through state governments, and caseloads
have varied considerably from state to state.
Kentucky boosted the number of participants in the Women, Infants and
Children food assistance program by 21% between February and November,
while participation dropped by 17% in Arkansas, government figures show.
Likewise, participation in Temporary Assistance for Needy Families
program rose by 74% in Indiana between February and September and
dropped by 37% in Mississippi.
While those programs have been in place for decades, Congress created
the Pandemic Electronic Benefit Transfer (P-EBT) program in March 2020.
With most school buildings shut, lawmakers opted to give roughly 30
million low-income students debit cards worth up to $400 to cover the
cost of the free meals they had been getting at school.
While total participation figures are not available, U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) figures show the P-EBT paid out $21.9 billion between
March and November and served a peak of 12.8 million students in June.
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AmberLee McCann, 39-year-old single mother struggling to secure food
assistance, stands with her foster son James Napier, 19, and son
Alex Downs, 20, outside her home in Clarksville, Tennessee, U.S.,
March 25, 2021. REUTERS/Andy Sullivan
The Brookings Institution think tank estimates the initiative
reduced child hunger by roughly a third during the spring and
summer, and experts view it as a surprising success.
"The bottom line is P-EBT works and it works well," said Dottie
Rosenbaum of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities think tank.
But as with other programs, success varied considerably by state.
Some, like Michigan and Indiana, were able to get benefits to
eligible children within weeks, USDA figures show. Others took
months.
Tennessee, like 20 other states, required families who were not
already enrolled in other welfare programs to fill out an
application. That proved to be a major barrier for many families who
lacked internet access or, like McCann, did not know the benefit was
available.
As the program was due to expire at the end of September, 240,000
children - a third of those eligible - still had not gotten benefit
cards. The state mailed those cards to schools for families to pick
up, but 60,000 of them were sent back unclaimed.
"It's frustrating just knowing there's support there and it's taking
so long for families to receive it," said Signe Anderson of the
Tennessee Justice Center, a nonprofit group that serves low-income
families.
Tennessee Department of Human Services spokesman Sky Arnold said the
applications were necessary because the state was not able to get
student information when schools were closed. The program ultimately
reached 765,000 students, Arnold said, more than it initially
thought would be eligible.
No applications were needed for a second round of benefits in the
fall that reached 368,000 students.
Congress renewed the program in October, but then-President Donald
Trump's administration did not provide clear guidelines on who
should qualify, as some schools had returned to in-person learning.
Lawmakers provided clearer guidance in December, but as of this
month only 29 states had been approved to distribute benefits that
should have gone out months ago.
In Tennessee, officials are saying the new round of benefit cards
will go out soon. This time, those qualified will not have to fill
out an application.
McCann said she would welcome the aid when it arrives, but it will
not make up for the belt-tightening months last year when she
struggled to put food on the table.
"I hurt for the kids," McCann said, "because it wasn't for me - it
was for them."
(Reporting by Andy Sullivan; Editing by Scott Malone and Will
Dunham)
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