Monday, August 19, 2024

ANNALS OF DeSANTISTAN: Florida opts out of summer food assistance for kids, once again. (Gabriella Paul, WUSF, August 16, 2024)

IT'S ALL ABOUT THE CRUELTY. So much for "Family Values" and "Conservatives."  Reminds me of the 3-2 vote in the St. Johns County Commission to reject the possibility of federal funds for affordable housing by declining to explore creation of a Public Housing Authority (Commissioners Henry Dean and Sarah Arnold, dissenting, with Commissioners Krita Joseph, Christian Whitehurst and Roy Alaimo, Jr. voting against a PHA, making SJC one of only four of 67 counties without one.  From NPR affiliate WUSF: 


Florida opts out of summer food assistance for kids, once again

WUSF | By Gabriella Paul
Published August 16, 2024 at 5:00 AM EDT

Anais Rice, No Kid Hungry Florida
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Courtesy
Grab-and-go lunches are being prepped at a Summer BreakSpot location in July. The meal sites, which are backed by Florida's Department of Agriculture, ramped up services in rural communities this summer after receiving additional funding from No Kid Hungry, according to a spokesperson. 

Florida missed the Aug. 15 deadline to opt into the Sun Bucks program for 2025. The state opted out of the federal program in 2024, too.

Florida is opting out of a federal summer food assistance program for the second year in a row.

The Summer Electronic Benefit Transfer Program for Children (Summer EBT), also known as Sun Bucks, is designed to help parents cover grocery bills in the summer, when school-provided free and reduced meals are less available.

Parents can receive pre-loaded cards with $40 a month, per eligible child, based on income guidelines.

To participate in the program, states must notify the U.S. Department of Agriculture food and nutrition office, which funds the program. States must also be willing to incur a share of the administrative costs to run the program.

Florida declined to participate in the program in 2024, turning down over $250 million in nutritional aid, according to the Florida Policy Institute.

Florida missed the Thursday deadline to opt into the program for 2025 as well.

Sky Beard, the director of No Kid Hungry Florida, said the state is leaving money on the table at a time when food insecurity is on the rise.

“We've got one in five kids right now living in homes where that next meal is not a guarantee, and to pass up an opportunity since such as Sun Bucks, is unfortunate,” she said.

A parent and child wait in line to be helped at a folding table at a summer meal site.
Anais Rice, No Kid Hungry Florida 
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Courtesy
Summer BreakSpot sites offered grab-and-go options during the summer months to Florida families in rural communities, who face additional barriers to consistent, nutritious meals.

In a survey published by No Kid Hungry in April, 72% of Floridians reported that it was harder to afford groceries compared to a year ago.

Many respondents also said they are resorting to shopping at multiple store locations, traveling farther for less expensive options and foregoing fresh food, like produce, when shopping.

She said Florida’s decision to decline additional food assistance for families in recent years is forcing nonprofits to pick up more of the costs to serve parents and kids.

Earlier this year, spokesperson Mallory McManus for the Florida Department of Children and Families, which administers SNAP benefits in the state, said the decision to decline additional food assistance is inconsequential for Florida families.

“We anticipate that our state’s full approach to serving children will continue to be successful this year without any additional federal programs that inherently always come with some federal strings attached,” McManus said.

Beard said she wishes that were true. 

“I wish nothing more … that we could say … we’ve got everything we need, families are fully taken care of and we have no hunger for children,” she said.

In Florida, Beard said that's not yet the case. 

Gabriella Paul covers the stories of people living paycheck to paycheck in the greater Tampa Bay region for WUSF. She's also a Report for America corps member. Here’s how you can share your story with her.

I tell stories about living paycheck to paycheck for public radio at WUSF News. I’m also a corps member of Report For America, a national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms.


1 comment:

Sally said...

DeSantis wants people to pay top dollar at Publix in hopes that Publix donates to Republican candidates so they can keep the grift going. At the end of the day, it's all about the rights, freedoms, and liberties of the wealthy. Not too many other people matter. They'll proudly profess their belief in "trickle down economics."