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Report: More Rural Households than Urban Get Food Assistance

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Monday, August 11, 2014   

PORTLAND, Ore. – Hunger is often characterized as a big-city problem, but a new study shows that isn't the case based on who's receiving SNAP or food stamp benefits.

The Center for Rural Affairs examined Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) use for a five-year period ending in 2012, and found more than 14 percent of rural households receive food benefits, compared to less than 11 percent of urban households.

The difference doesn't surprise Annie Kirschner, development director of the Partnership for a Hunger-Free Oregon.

"The reality is that the so-called recovery has been really slow to take hold in rural Oregon, and the need has outpaced what charity alone can cover," she says.

Kirschner points out a variety of factors contribute to greater SNAP participation in rural areas, including many seasonal and low-paying jobs, plus a shortage of other food assistance options, exacerbated by high gas prices that make it harder to travel for such options.

The report says rural areas and small cities have higher percentages of households with seniors and children receiving food support.

Jon Bailey, director of rural public policy programs at the Center for Rural Affairs, says it's a significant finding.

"SNAP is providing a way for those people and those households to meet their food needs, which is important because those two population groups are probably most at risk of hunger and food insecurity," he says.

One in nine rural households has a SNAP recipient who is either under age 18, or age 60 or older.

SNAP injects almost $1.2 billion dollars a month into Oregon's economy. Kirschner says that makes the benefits as important to communities as they are to recipients. She cites Jackson County as an example, where 52,000 people receive benefits – one-third of them children.

"What we saw as a result of that is that $6.5 million were brought into the county in SNAP benefits, just in June,” she explains. “So, when you think about the impact that has in Jackson County, it is tremendous."

Statewide, 815,000 Oregonians receive SNAP benefits, which average less than $130 per person, per month.


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