Opinion

ANDY PETESCH & CINDY SINK: Urge Congress to #protectSNAP and help vulnerable North Carolinians

Monday, Feb. 12, 2018 -- SNAP (formerly food stamps) is part of the federal Farm Bill, up for renewal in 2018. President Trump's budget proposes cutting SNAP by $193 million. Some members of Congress want to further slash benefits and add work requirements (most SNAP recipients who are able to work, already do). What they fail to understand is that SNAP in its current form is effective and efficient.

Posted Updated
SNAP Logo
EDITOR'S NOTE: Andy Petesch is president of the Capital Area Food Network and Cindy Sink, is the network's food access and security circle lead.

Every day brings new reports that Congress is interested in further whittling away at the programs comprising the social safety net for low-income households, the disabled, and the elderly. One of the programs at risk is SNAP, formerly food stamps, a program that helps 1.5 million low-income North Carolinians buy essential groceries each month for themselves and their families.

SNAP and other nutrition programs are part of the Farm Bill, up for renewal in 2018. President Donald Trump’s budget proposes cutting SNAP by $193 million.  Some members of Congress are now seeking to further slash benefits, change the structure, and add work requirements to this important program (most SNAP recipients who are able to work, already do).

What they fail to understand, however, is that SNAP in its current form is effective and efficient.

SNAP provides nutrition assistance for our state’s most vulnerable people. In North Carolina, SNAP predominantly aids households with children, seniors, and people with disabilities. These benefits pay long-term dividends -- in addition to reducing hunger, those who receive SNAP benefits in early childhood have lower risks of obesity, high blood pressure, heart disease, and diabetes as adults.

SNAP is also associated with higher use of preventive care, which can contribute to lower healthcare costs overall. Furthermore, SNAP pumped $2.2 billion into North Carolina’s economy last year alone. The program is also responsible for lifting hundreds of thousands of North Carolinians out of poverty.

Not only does SNAP work – for those most in need and for the state’s economy at large – but its current structure allows the program to expand in times of greater need, such as the 2008 recession, and contract in times of economic prosperity.

In the 4th Congressional District, thousands of households depend on SNAP benefits to help make ends meet. Even in Wake County, one of the wealthiest counties in the state, 18% of our children are food insecure. SNAP benefits are essential for helping our kids face each day ready to thrive.  Families and individuals need SNAP to meet basic nutritional needs.

Eleven food policy councils across North Carolina, including Capital Area Food Network in Wake County as well as councils in Durham and Orange counties, have joined with over 120 cross-sector organizations to urge Congress to #protectSNAP.

The towns of Hillsborough, Carrboro, and Chapel Hill passed resolutions urging our representatives to keep this program – so critical to our local residents in need - intact. This month, food councils and other participating organizations will ask U.S. Sens. Richard Burr, Thom Tillis, and U.S. Rep. David Price to reject any proposals in the 2018 Farm Bill that cut funding to SNAP and other federal nutrition programs; shift costs to the states; or otherwise reduce benefits affecting low-income families, workers, children, the unemployed, or the elderly.

Contact your representatives in Washington and Raleigh and ask them to do the same.

Related Topics

Copyright 2023 by Capitol Broadcasting Company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.