2012-01-26 "California’s state of hunger; Voices from the frontlines of the battle against food scarcity in California" by Sasha Abramsky
[http://www.newsreview.com/sacramento/californias-state-of-hunger/content?oid=4978550]
A
decade ago, Tammy Jaime lost everything to drugs. She her husband spent
through their savings, lost their home and car, and ended up in the
mountainous, rural far north of California, begging for food for their
children.
But that’s not why Jaime struggles to feed her kids today. These days,
Jaime, 39, is sober, enrolled in college, and working part-time for
Cisco Headstart where she earns $12 an hour. It’s the most money she has
ever made, far above the minimum wage. But routinely, as the month
draws to a close, she and her husband run out of funds, not least
because when somebody in the family falls sick, they end up with high
medical bills.
“We live from paycheck to paycheck,” said Jaime. “Once in a while we see
a movie. We don’t eat out very much. We don’t have TV. … Yes, next week
is payday. But then, you know what, my check is gone the next day,
because it’s all lined up for bills.”
For Billye and George McPherson, an octogenarian couple with 14
great-grandkids, who have long run the Siskiyou County food pantry that
Jaime used to frequent, hunger is now a permanent companion for many
friends and neighbors.
“When we were younger,” explained George McPherson, “and we had moved up
here from the Bay Area, we had some really hard times raising our
family. … So we understand what it is to be hungry.”
These days, the families who come to the McPherson’s pantry number about
350 out of a total local population of a couple thousand.
“One of the things that I’ll never forget is this [50-year-old] lady
came in. … She needed food,” said McPherson. “When we gave her her box,
she looked in it, and she saw toilet paper. And she said, ‘Oh, toilet
paper,’ and she broke into tears. That just shows you how grateful these
people are for everything you can do for them.”
Many of these men and women have jobs, but the jobs pay low wages—many
far lower than the hourly rate paid to Jaime—and competition for them is
fierce in the current economic climate. For these Californians, said
Billye McPherson sadly, all too often “the month is longer than the
money.” A week or two out from the next paycheck, they turn up on pantry
lines, looking for boxes of food to tide them over until they have
money in their bank accounts once more.
Hunger’s numbers -
Four-plus years into the worst financial, housing and unemployment
crisis to hit the country since the Great Depression, America’s hunger
numbers continue to climb. Forty-six million people are enrolled in
food-stamp programs; they receive benefits that average $133.80 per
month per individual, and $283.65 for a household. Millions more, based
on their income numbers, ought to be so enrolled, but for many reasons
aren’t. Additional millions don’t qualify for food stamps, but the
part-time, low-wage work that they can find in practice doesn’t pay
enough to cover all their bills. Like Tammy Jaime, they juggle expenses,
and, in the process, frequently end up with insufficient money to buy
enough food for themselves and their children.
While California doesn’t have the highest rate of poverty or hunger in
the country, its raw hunger and food insecurity numbers are stunning
simply by virtue of its size. Yes, the state with the largest population
in the country has the second highest number of food-stamp enrollees
(Texas holds the dubious distinction of having the highest), with more
than 3.8 million residents on its CalFresh program. Of these, 1.39
million are children.
California would, however, have far more
food-stamp recipients if it did even a remotely decent job at reaching
out to those poor enough to qualify for the federally funded program. As
it is, while some states successfully enroll upwards of 90 percent of
food-insecure households, more than half of all Californians who should
be covered by food stamps remain outside of that part of the safety net.
That translates to nearly 4 million hungry Californians going without
basic food assistance from the government. To survive, these men, women
and children are reliant either on the largesse of local charities,
churches and food pantries, or they are simply missing meals to stretch
their meager food dollars as long as possible.
“California’s about the bottom of the barrel,” said California Food
Policy Advocates executive director Ken Hecht, of the low
food-stamp-enrollment rate. Hecht’s organization published a report in
2010, titled Lost Dollars, Empty Plates, which concluded that
approximately 3.6 million Californians who qualify for food stamps are
nevertheless not enrolled—thus sacrificing federally funded benefits
worth a total of more than $4.8 billion annually. Since food-stamp
expenditures circulate rapidly through the economy, the CFPA researchers
calculated that the total cost to the California economy of these
unclaimed benefits was a staggering $8.68 billion.
Last year, hunger advocates from around the state convened in Sacramento
to highlight the urgency of the problem. Members of Hunger Action Los
Angeles showed up at the Capitol carrying cardboard cut-out figures, on
each of which was glued a paper plate on which was printed out hunger
data, generated by the California Health Interview Survey, from
individual counties. Whichever part of the state one chose to focus on,
the numbers were dismal.
In Los Angeles County, there were nearly 1.13 million “food insecure”
adults in 2009, the most recent year for which such CHIS data exists,
most of them insecure because they were not enrolled in the food stamp
program. In Riverside County, the number was close to 250,000. San Diego
had 210,000, Sacramento 126,000, Santa Clara 96,000. In Alameda, there
were 169,000 adults in this category. Even in eminently middle-class
counties, the numbers were high: Sonoma came in with 51,000
food-insecure adults; Yolo with 16,000.
Cumulatively, the survey found that statewide, even after the expansion
in food-stamp usage since the start of the recession, 3.7 million
Californian adults were struggling to put food on the table in 2009, up
from 2.8 million just two years previously.
California, meet your hungry -
Hunger in 21st-century America transcends stereotypes: It might be
portrayed by a food line snaking through a dirt-poor neighborhood in a
dilapidated inner city, an image redolent of Great Depression-era
photographs by chroniclers such as Dorothea Lange. But at this point,
it’s just as likely to be embodied by somebody like Marcy Glickman, who
for most of her life was upper-middle class, a denizen of L.A.’s
fashionable west side, but who has recently been brought low by medical
bills following her husband’s illness and death, and her own disability.
“I’ve had [a Mercedes-Benz car], we could travel, we could buy nice
things, jewelry. … We lived a great life. Great medical coverage.
Children in private schools. Then, all of a sudden, it changed, because
of illness. … My husband had cancer. Those bills are horrendous. It’s
the nightmare that you’d never, never want. One day, you’re high on the
hill. The next day … you’re a part of those that don’t have.”
Hunger is also the face and voice of Graciela R., who lives in the
hardscrabble L.A. suburb of Silmar. The 50-year-old mother of two used
to scrape by with jobs in laundromats, but she has been unemployed since
the start of the recession. Where she and her husband once brought in
nearly $2,000 a month, today they squeak by on the $700 a month that her
husband earns repairing windows in cars. How much money does she have?
“The $3 in my purse,” she answered in Spanish. And laughed, as if to
say, “What can you do?”
For food, the family of four lives on the food stamps that one of her
two children is eligible for, and food boxes given out by the community
group Meet Each Need With Dignity, in the nearby town of Pacoima, as
well as neighborhood churches. She and her husband sometimes miss meals
to make sure that their children have enough to eat.
Hunger is also the face of Matthew Joseph, a middle-aged steel worker
and church deacon, brought to the edge of destitution by Stockton’s
collapsed housing market combined with a long spell of unemployment in
the first years of the recession. “You realize that everything you’ve
worked for can be gone, completely gone,” said Joseph, as he recounts
his struggle to keep his home and to put food on the table for his wife
and himself. “I had to start looking for things in my lifestyle where I
could say, ‘We can’t do this any longer.’ I was always looking to say,
‘What can I get out of this meal? What can I make that will last me not
just a meal but two meals?’ I need to be able to thin everything; thin
what we’re doing in life, what we’re doing for our house. Where do I
come up with money for food, PG&E, garbage and everything else?”
At his church, Joseph was struck “by the amount of people at Christmas
or Thanksgiving not looking for presents, but just looking for food. I
hear these stories at the cathedral day in and day out.”
This
changing face of hunger became particularly noticeable in 2008, recalls
Blake Young, executive director of the Sacramento Food Bank, as he
details demographic shifts in his clientele in recent years. Throughout
2009 and most of 2010 the total numbers of food bank clients—men, women
and children who can be seen lining city blocks on mornings that the
banks and pantries distribute free food—continued to grow. And even
after the total numbers stabilized, the number of “ex-middle-income,
first-time visitors has gone through the roof,” Young noted. “And it’s
growing every day.”
There must be food -
Yet, for all of the “food insecurity” in California, actual hunger would
be far more extensive without government programs in place to tackle
the problem; or were those programs replaced by block grants, as an
increasing number of Republican politicians are advocating.
Food stamps are the one part of the social safety net that, for those
enrolled, still works really well. The program keeps users from hunger,
being available to all legal residents who are at or below 130 percent
of the federal poverty line—though individual states can determine what
value of assets, such as cars, applicants are allowed to hang on to. It
is counter-cyclical—the availability and usage of food-stamp benefits
increasing during recessions, with the federal government currently
bankrolling the program to the tune of approximately $65 billion per
year—and can help to keep local economies afloat during downtimes, and
it is flexible enough to deal with the needs of individuals and families
in a multitude of ways. The benefits are given to clients via the EBT
card, which means that once the messiness of enrolment is over, the
delivery of services is actually pretty efficient. And, unlike the old
paper vouchers, modern EBT benefits are hard to sell, thus eliminating,
or at least much reducing, black markets around their usage, and making
sure the benefits get spent properly on food—especially food for
children.
That’s one reason that the GOP attacks against food stamps in recent
months, by Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum on the presidential campaign
trail, and by Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.)—who proposed replacing food stamps
with capped block grants to the states—haven’t resonated all that well.
People in America don’t like welfare programs in the abstract, but when
it comes to specifics, food stamps and other nutritional programs
actually enjoy pretty high levels of support. Polling data quoted by the
Food Research and Action Center shows that nearly 90 percent of
Americans believe that “those who are unable to earn enough money for
food should be helped by others”; in 2003, the Alliance to End Hunger
found that seven in 10 voters say they would be less likely to vote for a
candidate who proposed cuts to the school-lunch program and found that
63 percent of voters would be less likely to vote for a politician who
proposed cutting food stamps.
But while there are many success stories associated with the country’s
federally funded anti-hunger programs, the states responsible for
administering these benefits vary tremendously in how they enroll people
and how they access the federal dollars. And on this front, the Golden
State does very badly. Despite years of efforts, only about half of
eligible Californians receive the benefits. In many counties, that
number is actually far less than 50 percent.
In the six counties of the Sacramento region alone, more than 110,000
residents eligible for food stamps go without. The benefits lost by
these people equal more than a quarter of a billion dollars per year.
Analysts blame the low-enrollment percentage on an array of factors:
first among these was that, until a recent reform, Assembly Bill 6,
kicked in January 1, California was one of only three states to
fingerprint food-stamp applicants, placing both a stigma and a fear of
law enforcement and immigration authorities in the way of access to the
program.
That requirement was changed, in a rare display of legislative
bipartisanship in Sacramento, after years of prodding by President
Barack Obama’s United States Department of Agriculture officials
responsible for administering food stamps. Both in D.C. and at the
department’s regional offices in Oakland, USDA personnel held numerous
meetings with state officials, sent out letters to key legislators, and
otherwise made it clear that they wanted to see reform.
At the same time, A.B. 6 also set in place a timeline for ending, over
the next two years, several other bureaucratic obstacles to easy
enrollment. Currently, California mandates that recipients apply for
re-enrollment four times a year, subjecting them to a cumbersome means
test that frequently deters applicants; A.B. 6 reduces the returning
applications to twice a year. Also, the state insists that applicants
apply, in person, at food-stamp offices, which produces a strong
disincentive for the working poor to apply: after all, if applying means
turning up during work hours and thus losing hourly wages, or even
forfeiting a job, why bother to apply? A.B. 6 allows for telephone
interviews and online applications.
At the same time, the federal Affordable Care Act gives the newly
created state health insurance exchanges boards the option of setting up
systems that would automatically enroll into the food-stamp program
applicants who successfully enroll in Medicaid. California’s board is
likely to go for this option. The rationale, here, is that a dollar
spent on helping people eat well saves many dollars in health costs down
the road.
Finally, following passage of Jim Beall’s Assembly Bill
69, California will also soon allow low-income elderly residents to
access food stamps more easily when they enroll in Social Security, in
an attempt to end a pattern of extraordinarily low CalFresh
participation among this portion of the population.
Hunger advocates hope that the effect of this series of changes will be
dramatically increased enrollment levels in CalFresh over the next few
years, and a corresponding decrease in levels of food insecurity in
California.
The public-health ingredient -
In addition to the state changing the ways in which residents can access
food stamps, many localities are also getting creative on the nutrition
front. Programs such as The Veggie Voucher Program, funded by local
food networks and foundations, are pushing recipients to eat healthier
foods, leveraging their federal food stamps with matching funds for
clients to spend specifically on fruits and vegetables in select farmers
markets around the state.
“If you are consuming your fruits and vegetables on a daily basis, it’ll
prevent you from getting sick,” explained Maribel Diaz, a CalFresh
recipient since she lost her job, and currently a part-time worker with
Hunger Action Los Angeles. “It’s very important to have access to fruits
and vegetables.”
More broadly on the public-health front, many of the state’s large food
banks are moving away from a reliance on USDA surplus and grocery-store
contributions—mainly carbohydrates and canned goods—and toward privately
donated and bought fruits and vegetables. Some, like the Sacramento
Food Bank, are also inaugurating large demonstration farms from which
their clients can harvest produce.
This is, nutritional specialists have long argued, a critical
public-health ingredient in the food equations of the moment, given the
challenges of low-income obesity, high blood pressure and diabetes; and
given, also, the large number of regions (including in south Sacramento,
Del Paso Heights and north Sacramento) that have significant shortages
in the numbers of stores offering fresh produce at affordable prices.
“Access to fresh food via either grocery store or farmers market—a large
portion of the low-income population don’t have access,” explained
Blake Young.
In addition to The Veggie Voucher Program, that piggybacks off of
CalFresh, local school districts such as Compton Unified, with endemic
poverty rates, are experimenting with Classroom Breakfast, seeking to
raise breakfast-enrollment levels to the same levels as those of
free-lunch programs. Again, the assumption is that hungry kids—who might
not be able to get to school early enough to access breakfast in the
cafeteria before classes begin—can’t learn to their full potential,
whereas well-fed kids are better able to concentrate on their academic
responsibilities, thus allowing them to use education to break cycles of
poverty.
The family of 18-year-old high-school senior Uriel R., who attends a
school in the East Los Angeles suburb of Pomona, was recently evicted
from its home. As a result, the large family—siblings, parents and
grandparents—was split up; his sisters now live elsewhere. Uriel lives
in a small apartment with his mother, who finds occasional work cleaning
homes, and who routinely struggles to feed her family. The student
said, “My mom only cooks on Monday, so I expect a hot meal on Mondays.
Sometimes it’s just eggs and cheese. From Tuesdays all the way to Sunday
we don’t have hot meals; we just eat whatever’s left in the fridge.”
A smart student, with ambitions to attend college, Uriel has slid into
depression as his family’s economic situation has worsened. He sits
outside a lot. He often cries. The American Dream, he declaims angrily,
means nothing to him anymore. “The weekends,” he said, “I just eat soup
or quesadillas. I don’t eat breakfast in the mornings.”
When Compton moved its breakfast program into the classroom to try to
tackle the kind of hunger that Uriel describes, the number of children
accessing meals increased by 250 percent—from 98,353 in September 2010,
to 238,716 a year later.
Scale of emergency -
For all the good work being done on the hunger front in California, the scale of the crisis remains daunting.
Despite her access to Veggie Vouchers and CalFresh, for Maribel Diaz and
her three sons, the sense of dislocation following the family’s slide
into poverty remains acute. “I’m hoping that there is a way out of this,
that everything starts getting better. But right now, I feel like I’m
stuck, there’s no way to go, right or left. … Poverty to me means not
having access to a normal life. Not having access to go to a movie. Not
having access when my kids need shoes or clothing. If it wasn’t for the
CalFresh program, we would have no access to food. If it wasn’t for
those programs out there helping us, I’d basically be a homeless person.
”
For Marcy Glickman, that sense of dislocation has been just as profound.
These days, with her income having been reduced from $10,000 a month to
$1,000. Glickman has lost her house to foreclosure, her car to the repo
man. She now lives in a small apartment, relying on monthly disability
checks and on a network of food charities to put enough food on her
table. “I started collecting coupons for groceries. … We ended up having
to get food stamps. At first, I felt embarrassed, but after a while, I
realized, ‘At least we’re eating.’”
These stories are unfortunately all too common these days, said Jessica
Jones of the Los Angeles Food Bank. “We get stories like that almost all
the time,” she explained. “The people who did everything right and had
the rug pulled out from under them. And the people who were already
struggling are struggling even more. When I first started [working at
the food bank] in December 2008, we served 39 million pounds of food. In
2010, we did 62 million pounds of food. The number of people we serve
has gone up by 73 percent since the recession started.”
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