Spade & Spoon: Localizing the Way Westerners Eat

Food Stampede: Politicos Eat on $3 a Day for Hunger Awareness


By Kisha Lewellyn Schlegel, 6-19-07

 
  No longer paper, food stamps now come in cards (like debit cards). Don't loose yours though. It costs $2 for a replacement card in Montana, and that can really bite into a $3 a day food budget.

Recently, a few politicians have been living on food stamps.

In April, Oregon’s Governor Theodore R. Kulongoski put away the preferred local salmon and Cascade mountain mushrooms. They were too expensive for his $3 a day food budget.

For a short stint, the Governor joined Oregon’s Food Stamp Challenge to reiterate that hunger remains a major issue even while the 2007 Farm Bill, which includes funding for food assistance and hunger programs, threatens to cut food assistance programs.

According to the New York Times, the Bush administration has proposed reducing funds to the food stamp program, including taking stamps from 185,000 people who receive other non-cash government assistance. The proposed Department of Agriculture budget also aims to eliminate programs that give boxes to half a million elderly people each month. Although the proposed Farm Bill includes new exclusions for retirement savings from income limits and encouraging purchases of more fresh produce, many legislators around the country remain concerned at the disparity between the money that food stamps provide, and what that money can actually buy.

Kulongoski’s participation in the Oregon Food Stamp Challenge proved a catalyst for others and led to a national Congressional Food Stamp Challenge where California Congresswoman Barbara Lee blogged her efforts. Other participants included Representative Tim Ryan, D-Ohio, and Eric Gioia, a city councilman in Queens, who (also according to the NYTimes) felt downright exhausted after a few meals of white bread and top ramen.

Most political participants resorted to cheap, fast food alternatives to make their food dollar go further. They gave up coffee. They bought all white tortillas rather than whole wheat because of the cost. They made daily decisions to eat things that were cheaper and bad for their health…

…just like the 26 million Americans who depend on food stamps do every day.

Of his three-week experience, Sen. Jonathan Harris of Connecticut said that he felt a deeper, even spiritual, connection to his food when he ate on food stamps rather than, “shoveling things in.”

But for the people who live this challenge every day, it is less spiritual than tangible. And while 26 million use food stamps in America, around 35 million experience hunger. And it isn’t something that they go on the Colbert Report to discuss. (Rep. Jan Schakowsky went on the Colbert Report in June to follow up on her Food Stamp Challenge experience.)

As Kulongoski said, his experiences eating on $3 a day will pass as most news stories do. What remains is the number of people who are still hungry in America, in part because we don’t give them enough to buy the food that is best. It is his hope that with expanded support of Food Stamps in the 2007 Farm Bill, we will begin to think about how much it costs to eat (and eat well) in this country.

And in fact, this month the Nutrition Title cleared the House Agriculture Subcommittee on Oversight, Nutrition and Forestry, providing a $5.4 billion, five-year investment into the Food Stamp Program (which will be renamed as the “Secure Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program"). While this number seems large, the Nutrition Title is considered by many Hunger Agencies (such as Food Banks) a modest effort to address the inadequacy of food stamp allotments because the monthly benefit remains too low.

Subsequently, the Food Stamp Challenge turned Food Stampede has given momentum to the McGovern/Emerson Bill (H.R. 2129), which is now cosponsored by 95 members. The McGovern/Emerson ”Feeding America’s Families Act,” (opens pdf) would increase food stamp benefits and other initiatives with $20 billion in new five-year funding.

Regardless of the outcome, other organizations around the country continue working to expand access and amount of food stamps. In tandem, some farmers’ markets have allowed the use of food stamps in order to expand access to fresh, local food while keeping more dollars in the community. Again, Oregon led the way with this initiative and now has 21 farmers’ markets that will take food stamps. They have also completed cost analysis studies of food stamps at the farmers’ markets, including barriers for customers and vendors alike.

Soon the 2007 Farm Bill will set the standards for food stamps in this country for the next five years and perhaps the Feeding America’s Families Act will pass. Perhaps next year, politicians taking the Food Stamp Challenge and hungry Americans taking the daily Food Stamp Challenge will be able to eat on as much as $5 or even $10 a day ... amounts that still seem extraordinarily low, particularly as food costs rise in a country led by a president who once, in reference to North Korean leader Kim Jong Il and U.S. food donations, said, “I have no heart for somebody who starves his folks.”



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By bearbait, 6-19-07
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