2013 u.s poverty health and nutrition campaign protect snap in the farm bill and deficit reduction

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2013 U.S Poverty Health and Nutrition Campaign Protect SNAP in the Farm Bill and Deficit Reduction

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Page 1: 2013 U.S Poverty Health and Nutrition Campaign Protect SNAP in the Farm Bill and Deficit Reduction

2013 U.S Poverty Health and Nutrition Campaign

Protect SNAP in the Farm Bill and Deficit Reduction

Page 2: 2013 U.S Poverty Health and Nutrition Campaign Protect SNAP in the Farm Bill and Deficit Reduction

2 Protecting Key Nutrition Programs

Dimensions of U.S. Hunger and Food Insecurity 14.9 percent of

households were food insecure at least some time during the year (over 50 million people).

5.7 percent with very low food security.

An increase from 5.4 percent in 2010, returning to the level observed in 2008-09.

We have not yet reached an economic recovery that delivers more food security.

USDA ERS Household Food Security report on 2011

Page 3: 2013 U.S Poverty Health and Nutrition Campaign Protect SNAP in the Farm Bill and Deficit Reduction

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Dimensions of U.S. Hunger and Food Insecurity One in seven Americans, a record 47.8 million people received SNAP in December 2012. Food banks and food pantries were able to provide only 4 to 6 percent of the total

need. 85 percent of SNAP households have income

below the poverty line.USDA's profile of SNAP

Page 4: 2013 U.S Poverty Health and Nutrition Campaign Protect SNAP in the Farm Bill and Deficit Reduction

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SNAP is highly effective and responsive to changes in the economy

Page 5: 2013 U.S Poverty Health and Nutrition Campaign Protect SNAP in the Farm Bill and Deficit Reduction

5 Protecting Key Nutrition Programs

Page 6: 2013 U.S Poverty Health and Nutrition Campaign Protect SNAP in the Farm Bill and Deficit Reduction

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SNAP Benefits the Most Vulnerable 47 percent of all

participants are 18 or younger and about half of all households receiving SNAP include at least one child.

Households with children receive 71 percent of all SNAP benefits.

USDA's profile of SNAP

Page 7: 2013 U.S Poverty Health and Nutrition Campaign Protect SNAP in the Farm Bill and Deficit Reduction

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Impacts of Hunger and Food Insecurity on Children

• More than 1 in 5 children in the U.S. (16.7 million) are food insecure.

• Effects of hungry children: – more likely to develop frequent illnesses and infections.– associated with an increased incidence of behavior

problems in adolescents.– limit a child’s ability to understand basic skills and reduce

overall learning potential. – More likely to have repeated a grade in school.

FRAC; LSU Ag Center; USDA ERS Household Food Security report on 2011

Page 8: 2013 U.S Poverty Health and Nutrition Campaign Protect SNAP in the Farm Bill and Deficit Reduction

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SNAP works!

SNAP lifted 4.7 million people, including 1.7 million children, out of poverty in 2011.

A recent study shows SNAP reduces food insecurity in children by 20 percent and poor health by 35 percent.

SNAP is good for the economy – in an economic downturn, SNAP generates $1.79 in economic activity for every $1.

SNAP is one of the most effectively run federal programs with a 96 percent accuracy rate.

Estimates are that SNAP spending will peak in 2013 and then decline.

CBPP research

Page 9: 2013 U.S Poverty Health and Nutrition Campaign Protect SNAP in the Farm Bill and Deficit Reduction

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The Senate Farm Bill (S.954) $4.1 billion in cuts to SNAP over ten yrs (“Heat and Eat” programs) Nearly 500,000 households would see benefits cut by avg $90/mo Sen. Gillibrand (D-NY) amendment to undo cuts was defeated Bill passed on June 10, 66-27

The House Farm Bill (H.R.1947) $20.5 billion in cuts to SNAP over ten years “Cat El” cut = 2 million people off plus 210,000 children lose free

school meals (impacts 40 states and DC) Heat and Eat cut = 850,000 households benefits cuts by avg $90/mo Bill defeated on June 20, 195-234 (amendments on drug testing and

work requirements were last straw)

SNAP and the Farm Bill

Page 10: 2013 U.S Poverty Health and Nutrition Campaign Protect SNAP in the Farm Bill and Deficit Reduction

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House passed new Farm Bill on July 11 Excludes SNAP and other nutrition programs

What’s Next? House passes SNAP bill with much deeper cuts and try to real a deal Senate replaces House Farm Bill with Senate bill and sends it back House uses debt ceiling and budget negotiations this fall to ransom

cuts to SNAP Important to remember: SNAP benefits will automatically decline on

November 1, 2013 when the ARRA boost ends Households would see average drop of $20-25/month

SNAP and the Farm Bill

Page 11: 2013 U.S Poverty Health and Nutrition Campaign Protect SNAP in the Farm Bill and Deficit Reduction

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House and Senate: Protect and strengthen SNAP and oppose harmful policy changes to the program in any final Farm Bill or other legislation.Senate Key Players: •Debbie Stabenow (D-MI), Senate Ag Committee Chair•Thad Cochran (R-MS), Senate Ag Cmte Ranking Member•Harry Reid (D-NV), Senate Majority Leader House Key Players:• Frank D. Lucas (R-OK-3), House Ag Committee Chair•Collin C. Peterson (D-MN-7), House Ag Cmte Ranking Member•John Boehner (R-OH-8), Speaker of the House•Eric Cantor (R-VA-7), House Majority Leader

2013 SNAP Request

Page 12: 2013 U.S Poverty Health and Nutrition Campaign Protect SNAP in the Farm Bill and Deficit Reduction

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Engage: Nearly 1 in 4 children in the U.S. (22.4 %, 16.6 million) are at risk of going to bed hungry tonight. Studies show that children who are regularly hungry struggle in school, suffer from weakened immune systems, slowed and abnormal growth, and anemia.

Problem: Unfortunately, Congress is proposing drastic cuts to SNAP (food stamps), which could force millions off the program and increase hunger in America.

EPIC Laser Talk: Protect Hungry Children and Families

Page 13: 2013 U.S Poverty Health and Nutrition Campaign Protect SNAP in the Farm Bill and Deficit Reduction

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Inform/Illustrate: The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly food stamps) is the first line of defense against hunger in America. The U.S. Census reports that SNAP lifted 4.7 million people out of poverty in 2011. SNAP is an efficient, responsive program that supports children, working parents, people with disabilities, and seniors. It also boasts once of the highest accuracy and lowest fraud rates. Why are we talking about cutting a program that is successfully helping tens of millions of low-income Americans put food on the table each month?

EPIC Laser Talk: Protect Hungry Children and Families

Page 14: 2013 U.S Poverty Health and Nutrition Campaign Protect SNAP in the Farm Bill and Deficit Reduction

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House Call to Action: Will you speak with House leadership along with House Agriculture Committee Chair Frank Lucas and Ranking Member Collin Peterson and urge them to protect and strengthen SNAP and oppose harmful policy changes to the program in any final Farm Bill or other legislation?

Senate Call to Action: Will you speak with Senate leadership along with Senate Agriculture Committee Chair Debbie Stabenow and Ranking Member Thad Cochran and urge them to protect and strengthen SNAP and oppose harmful policy changes to the program in any final Farm Bill or other legislation?

EPIC Laser Talk: Protect Hungry Children and Families

Page 15: 2013 U.S Poverty Health and Nutrition Campaign Protect SNAP in the Farm Bill and Deficit Reduction

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WIC Helps Moms, Infants, and Toddlers Get a Strong Start on Life

A preventive program providing low-income pregnant women, new mothers, infants and children with:o nutritious foodso nutrition educationo improved access to health

care

In 2011, more than 9 million women, infants and children relied on the WIC program every month: 4.8 million children, 2.1 million infants, and 2.1 million women.

Page 16: 2013 U.S Poverty Health and Nutrition Campaign Protect SNAP in the Farm Bill and Deficit Reduction

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WIC Under Fire WIC is a discretionary program and subject to sequestration

5 percent cut in 2013

Estimated 600,000 mothers and children will lose access to WIC services in 2013

House Appropriations Committee approved its Agriculture Appropriations bill in June

Cuts WIC by $415 million

202,000 women and children would lose services

Senate Ag Approps Subcommittee has not marked up bill yet

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Nutrition Resources• RESULTS: www.results.org• Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, Charts on SNAP:

http://www.cbpp.org/cms/?fa=view&id=3744# • Find SNAP state fact sheets: http://www.cbpp.org/cms/?fa=view&id=3886• Bread for the World’s fact sheet:http://www.bread.org/ol/2012/domestic-nutrition/pdf/domestic-nutrition-q-and-a.pdf • USDA’s “Building a Healthy America: a profile of SNAP:http://www.fns.usda.gov/ora/MENU/Published/SNAP/FILES/Other/BuildingHealthyAmerica.pdf • USDA’s Economic Research Service “Household Food Security in the United States in 2011”:http://www.ers.usda.gov/publications/err-economic-research-report/err141.aspx#.UcCyTtgsay1 • Feeding America “Hunger and Poverty Statistics”:http://feedingamerica.org/hunger-in-america/hunger-facts/hunger-and-poverty-statistics.aspx• Food Research and Action Center “SNAP/Food Stamp Eligibility”:http://frac.org/federal-foodnutrition-programs/snapfood-stamps/eligibility/

Page 18: 2013 U.S Poverty Health and Nutrition Campaign Protect SNAP in the Farm Bill and Deficit Reduction

RESULTS/RESULTS Educational Fund 1730 Rhode Island Ave NW, Ste 400

Washington DC 20036

RESULTS Economic Opportunity Campaign Contacts:Meredith Dodson, [email protected], (202) 782-7100, x116

Jos Linn, [email protected], (515) 288-3622

www.results.org