Food Stamps and You

If you need them, you can endure the crushing bureaucracy and embarrassment

(Nov. 26, 2009)  Shocking, totally shocking. According to a Saturday, Nov. 21, Times-Standard story by Donna Tam, “More than half of the residents in Humboldt County eligible for the federal food stamps program don’t access it.”

What? In these ever-more-harsh times of unemployment, school budget slashes, incremental closures of state parks, threats to shut down the Healthy Families program, this federal program helping ensure folks can eat is underutilized? I’m amazed.

Or at least I was until considering the two reasons people fail to apply: 1) lack of awareness about the program (technically, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, aka “SNAP”); and, 2) embarrassment. Both are understandable, especially when one factors in the potentially soul-crushing experience of hours spent in the Koster Street building answering nosy questions including whether or not you’re harboring a felon in your home. (Always check “No.”) If needing help hasn’t sunk your self-confidence, sitting around in a waiting room with a “motivational” poster threatening, “You’re either riding the wave — or crushed underneath it!” while surrounded by your fellow citizens who clearly have been caught in the impact zone for years just might.

I haven’t been there for a while, so the posters might have changed, but I doubt the sense of world weariness has been scrubbed from the walls. Once, about eight years ago, the décor included several umbrellas hung from the ceiling — upside-down. “What is that about?” I remember wondering. “What does it say that I’m sitting here in a place that is supposed to act as a safety net and the dominate theme is that of a perfectly useful instrument of protection inverted into meaninglessness?” (That may not be a literal quote. More likely I thought something more like, “Huh. Weird. Some metaphor there. Jeez, I hope they get me out of here before the kids are out of school. Dang, my pen’s out of ink. Do I have all my receipts? Why didn’t I remember to bring a book?”) Yes, take a book. The wait can be long — but the benefits are worth the hours, the forms, the nagging feeling that only a total loser would be here doing this.

You’re not a loser for opting to take advantage of a program that helps you. That’s all that food stamps are: a program that expands your ability to feed yourself and your family. Ensuring people can eat is exactly what a wealthy, evolved, society should do; the facts that our society’s wealth is unbalanced and we’re not as evolved as we could be shouldn’t preclude you from calling 441-1001 or visiting myfoodstamps.org (Note to T-S: In a story about people underutilizing the local food stamp program, you might want to include information on how to find out more.) Be warned: The form-filling parts — the demands for proof of income, residence, expenses, children, citizenship, gender, car type, blood type, day you misplaced your virginity — might offend your natural sense of independence and propel you to chuck it all into the recycling. Get over it. Get through it. The first part is the worst — it’s almost like they don’t want people to get their share of public resources — but the monthly reports are not so bad. (Unless you’re late sending it in or they lose the one you’ve sent. Which, um, never happens.)

Listen, the program’s come a long way. When I first delved into the world of governmental assistance — after my husband was laid off, we lost our health insurance and had three young children to feed — food stamps still came in the form of pseudo-dollars attached to a booklet. You couldn’t tear them out until actually paying for the food, which meant you’d hold up the line while trying to separate the appropriate tens, fives and ones without ripping them. No subtlety whatsoever. Now you get a debit-like card that makes everything move much more smoothly. (The only drawback is you used to be able to get real coin change from the singles, which you could then hoard as a gas or Tampon fund.)

Not that you should be embarrassed about using food stamps! I just hate being the person holding up the line. Food stamps, price check, flour spilling out the bulk goods bag, whatever. But using food stamps makes you an economic engine! To lift from Tam’s story again, ” .. when people use foods stamps, local economic activity also improves. In Humboldt, residents who have enrolled in food stamps have generated more than $33 million in the last year.” See, $33 million! Tell that to your economy-over-community naysayers. You and your food stamps are worth millions!

So, unless you’re really bilking the system, making a hundred grand in unreported income and using food stamps you don’t need, don’t worry about anyone giving you snarky looks when the cashier asks, “Debit or credit?” and you reply, “EBT.” People are doing far worse things than trying to get by.

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FIVE Comments

Comment / By Doug Brunell / Nov. 28, 2009, 11:23 p.m.

Fact checking should be essential. There are a few wrong things, a few misleading ones, and a general air of “just not getting it.”

Just for the record, there are no “monthly reports,” car “types” don’t matter, nor does blood type. (I know that last one was for humor’s sake, but I thought I’d use it, too.)

There’s more I could say, but I’m tired and have other things to do.

Comment / By Jennifer Savage / Nov. 29, 2009, 8:22 p.m.

When I was on food stamps, monthly reports were the norm – as was inquiries into what you owned (car or anything else of value) – if that’s changed, glad to hear it.

Comment / By Dayna / Nov. 30, 2009, 12:58 a.m.

I am surprised that someone who wrote & got published in a widely read local publication a rather scathing piece on the Food Stamps program & process, who seemed to be by the end of the article advocating the utilization of this public assistance program, would not take the time to research the current process & criteria by which eligibility is determined. For members of the public whose first introduction to the existence of said program is this rather biased piece of journalism, I would like to clarify some things: 1. You will not spend hours in the Koster office if you are only applying for Food Stamps. In general, you probably can get thru the process in about 1.5 hrs from beginning to end. 2. FNS (Food & Nutrition Services) decided that you can molest a child, rape, murder, etc., but you CANNOT have a felony DRUG conviction & expect Food Stamp assistance. Don’t expect it to make sense. And by the way, even if you have a felony drug conviction, you may still be eligible.
You’d be wise to answer the question honestly, so as not to commit FRAUD. 3. There are forms, yes. It’s a bureaucracy. Mostly, you’re checking the occasional box, signing & dating. Veterans who have actually PROTECTED this country have to go thru the same process as the never employed 20-something who is passing thru town on his way to Reggae on the River (or whatever they’re calling it these days). An ex-con goes thru the same process as the 87 yr old woman who worked all her life, paid into the system & is now expected to live on $900/mo in Social Security (if she’s lucky).
4. Rest assured that the “nosy” questions being asked are all pertinent to establishing a case: proof of income, resources & identity of individuals requesting aid.
5. All vehicles are exempt, including those boats & off road bikes so popular here in Shangri La that, if sold, could be used to buy food.
Households with a child under the age of 18 MAY have the resource limit waived if there are excess resources & eligibility may still exist. 6. Food Stamps are a SUPPLEMENT meant to help you stay nourished…not feed your vehicle (which, contrary to popular belief, is NOT a necessity) or attend to your feminine needs. It sucks but anyone paying attention can figure out that this country isn’t concerned with truly caring for its citizens or the Deficit Reduction Act would have never happened.

I was relieved when towards the end of this article, it seemed that Mrs Savage was actually encouraging use of the program contrary to what the first half suggested. There is NO shame in doing what needs to be done to get one’s needs met. But if you’re holding your hand out to the government, expect certain aspects of your life to be a little less private. Lastly, don’t believe every negative & bitter story you hear or read about applying for public assistance. Take time to research it. A simple call can answer a lot of questions about the process anonymously.

Comment / By Doug Brunell / Nov. 30, 2009, 10:37 p.m.

Ms. Savage: Really, the more I think about it, the less happy I am. Again, fact check. Second: Do not encourage your readers to commit perjury. I’ve written for publications all over the world (including the one you wrote this piece for), and I always try to get my facts straight. If it’s been eight to ten years, you should check it out to see if it’s the same. What next? A piece on that new fangled Internet?

I, like the previous poster, was happy to see the encouragement, and you do bring up some valid points, but the lack of accuracy weakens the entire piece and some of what you wrote could actually cause people to get into hot water.

Food for thought, and no waiting in line for that one.

Comment / By Fred Mangels / Dec. 10, 2009, 7:56 a.m.

I’m not on food stamps now, but I was for a while starting around four or five years ago. She is correct, as best as I can recall, in regards reporting requirements. I’ll have to admit I don’t remember if you had to send in the eligibility report every month, or every three months. If you’re also receiving MediCal you file the same reports, too, so it’s hard to tell which is for which but the same application can be- or is- used for both MediCal and food stamps.

And, yes, they do want to know what property you own. I know we regularly have to report on what vehicles own although I’m not sure if that mattered with food stamps. I know it does for MediCal. If you have too many cars, or cars they don’t think you need, they can disqualify you. Either that, or sell the car(s).

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