“The Trump administration announced Wednesday that it
has finalized a plan to tighten punitive work requirements for food stamp
recipients, a move that would strip nutrition assistance from an estimated 750,000 low-income people by
mid-2020.
“‘Pay attention. This is what cruelty looks like,’ tweeted the Leadership
Conference on Civil and Human Rights in response to the completed rule, which
would be the first of a series of proposed food stamp cuts to take effect.
“The rule change, which was first unveiled earlier this
year, would restrict states' ability to exempt people without dependents from
the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program's work requirements. The rule is
set to take effect April 1, 2020.
“‘For able-bodied adults without dependents, U.S. law limits
SNAP benefits to three months, unless recipients are working or in training for
20 hours a week,’ the Wall Street
Journal reported Wednesday. ‘States
can waive those limits in areas where unemployment runs 20% above the national
rate, which was 3.6% in October.’
“The Trump administration's proposal to curtail states' ability
to waive work requirements sparked a flood of outrage from aid groups,
Democratic lawmakers, and ordinary people. During the rule's 60-day public comment period, tens of
thousands of people decried the measure as an immoral attack on the most
vulnerable by an administration that has worked tirelessly to fatten the
pockets of the rich.
“‘The comments make it clear that
most Americans not only oppose but are utterly repulsed by this plan to punish
the poorest among us by denying them help to feed themselves,’ Scott Faber,
senior vice president for government affairs at the Environmental Working Group
(EWG), said in a statement in April.
“According to an Urban Institute study (pdf) published last
week, the Trump administration's three proposed SNAP changes combined would
strip federal food aid from 3.7 million people.
“‘The basics of the situation are clear,’ Rolling Stone's Patrick Reis wrote Tuesday. ‘When it came
to tax cuts for corporations and the wealthy, Trump and Republicans felt the
nation's finances were firm enough to give up more than $1,500,000,000,000.
When it's time to spend a fraction of that to help poor people eat, that's when
the well has supposedly run dry’” (What Cruelty Looks Like: Trump Finalizes Plan to Strip Food Aid from 750,000 Low-Income People by 2020 by Jake Johnson, Common Dreams).
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