Thursday, September 5, 2013
LANSING, Mich. - In 2012, some 48.9 million Americans lived in households struggling against hunger, and more than 13 percent of Michiganders faced some kind of food insecurity, according to information released this week. The annual U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Household Food Security report showed that Michigan residents are somewhat less likely to have problems affording food than the rest of the country (the national average was 14.7 percent).
However, Terri Stangl, executive director, Center for Civil Justice, said Michigan has seen a sharper increase in food assistance than other states.
"Our trend has been for it to increase a little bit more, but that's not surprising given the high level of unemployment and insecure employment in the state," Stangl said.
Food stamp (now called SNAP) benefits are expected to go down in November, when benefit increases approved as part of the economic recovery act will expire. According to the Food Research and Action Center (FRAC), Republicans in Congress are expected to introduce a bill that would strip $40 billion in funding from SNAP, which could throw millions of people out of the program. A national survey found that seven in 10 voters do not support cuts to food stamps as a way to reduce government spending.
Stangl said the use of programs such as food stamps is closely tied to unemployment and under-employment.
"When people are looking for work, when they can't find work, when all they can find are temporary, low-wage jobs, they need help from programs like this," Stangl explained.
Food assistance programs like SNAP are not only life savers but money savers, Stangl added.
"Not having access to a reliable and healthy diet has consequences for learning, for working and for health for our families. In the long run, those are much more expensive problems than providing a few extra dollars in the family budget to buy good food," she warned.
Jim Weill, president of the Food Research and Action Center, pointed out that there is no single demographic not effected by food insecurity.
"It's really an across-the-board problem - for seniors, for working-age adults without kids, and particularly for families with children," Weill said.
The report is available at http://ers.usda.gov.
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