#Targeting SNAP With Work Requirements Misses the Point #Usa #Miami #Nyc #Houston #Uk #Es

#Targeting SNAP With Work Requirements Misses the Point #Usa #Miami #Nyc #Houston #Uk #Es

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“The focus on cutting life-saving programs like SNAP as a method to reduce the government debt is disingenuous, at best, and self-serving and cynical at worst. Taxing the rich would be a far more effective way to address the debt.”

William Alatriste/NYC Council Press Office

Editor’s Note: City Limits, in error, initially published an outdated version of this piece; it has since been updated to include the passage of McCarthy’s plan in the House on Wednesday.

As tensions around the debt ceiling continue to rise, we find ourselves in all too familiar territory where policymakers demonize the poor while claiming to prioritize tackling the issue.

Recently, in a letter to the president and subsequent speech to the New York Stock Exchange, House of Representatives Speaker Kevin McCarthy outlined a plan to address the debt by “limiting spending, saving tax payer money, and growing the economy.” His plan, which passed the house on Wednesday, includes the imposition of new work requirements for participants to access critical programs, such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly food stamps).

SNAP eligibility rules currently have additional work requirements for those aged 18-49 who are ‘able-bodied’ and do not have children. The bill proposes that those same work requirements apply to individuals aged 18-55, having the potential to take critical food assistance from thousands of New Yorkers. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that expanding the work requirements would cause about 275,000 people each month to lose SNAP benefits on average. 





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