Posts Tagged ‘food stamps’

Huntsville Hunger Workshop report

Friday, September 3rd, 2010

Around 60 people came out to The Village Church in Huntsville Tuesday for our fourth and final Hunger and Food Security Workshop.

Rich Hartz from the North Alabama Food Bank started off the day with the presentation of some recent data on hunger and food bank usage in North Alabama.

Karen Wynne from the Alabama Sustainable Agriculture Network (ASAN) joined our community garden discussion and reported on the newly formed Food Policy Council of Huntsville.


Thanks to The Village Church and their pastor Alex Shipman for being helpful and engaged and letting us use their beautiful space. Starbucks donated food and coffee, which was greatly appreciated. Thanks also to our amazing speakers and all the participants, who shared some touching stories and valuable insights.

-Report by T.C. McLemore

What steps can you take to fight hunger in Huntsville and beyond?

  • Visit our event page to view notes from our group discussion about plans going forward
  • Connect with the Food Policy Council of North Alabama by emailing Lee McBride – their next meeting is September 8
  • Plan to attend the 2010 Alabama Food Summit in Birmingham November 12
  • September is Hunger Action month. Visit hungeractionmonth.org to learn how you can support your local food bank or food pantry.
  • Educate yourself about hunger and food security in Alabama by viewing our web resources

Posted by Robyn Hyden

Could you survive on just food stamps?

Monday, January 4th, 2010

According this article in Saturday’s New York Times, 18 percent of food stamp recipients’ – or 1 in 50 Americans – now live in a household with a reported income that consists of nothing but a food-stamp card.

Read the full report – including the personal stories of some of these Americans – here.

It reminds me how fortunate and blessed I am.

Posted by: Kristina Scott

72 percent of Perry County kids are on food stamps.

Sunday, November 29th, 2009

According to this story from the New York Times.

Posted by Kristina Scott

Half of all kids on food stamps at some point during their childhood

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

I have to admit that I was surprised when I read this editorial in the Florence Times Daily today that half of all American children receive food stamps assistance sometime during their lifetime.  Half.  Wow.

Here’s the full text of the editorial and a link to the underlying study in the Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine:

Kids in poverty

A new report shows about half of all U.S. children will be on food stamps at some point during childhood, whether it be for a month, six months or years.

Food stamps are among the welfare programs that many middle class and wealthy Americans like to bash.

But they do so at their own risk. If the person to whom they are complaining is 40 or younger, there’s about a 50 percent chance he or she survived on food stamps at one point in life.

About 49 percent of all U.S. children are on food stamps at some point during childhood, according to a study released in the November issue of Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine. That includes 37 percent of white children and 90 percent of black children.

“Your neighbor may be using some of these programs but it’s not the kind of thing people want to talk about,” said Mark Rank, lead author of the study and a sociologist at Washington University in St. Louis.

Food stamps are available for low-income people and families, covering most foods, but not prepared hot foods or alcohol. The income for a family of four cannot exceed about $22,000 to receive this help.

Yes, there are abuses, but the average monthly benefit is $222 so no one is getting rich off food stamps. And while many children benefit from the program, children are not among the abusers of food stamps.

The federal program is especially important in a poor state such as Alabama, where many adults struggle to feed their families. And during the current recession, with high employment rates, food stamps are even more critical.

So if you enjoy bashing welfare programs, be careful before you criticize this one in front of other people.

This is one of those cases in which “them” is “us.”

Posted by Kristina Scott