New Rule Will Prevent Agencies from Recruiting Food Stamp Clients

Pastora Spraus organizes her pocketbook after paying for groceries with an EBT card in West New York, N.J., Monday, Jan. 12, 2015. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

The Agriculture Department has written a new rule that will prevent government agencies from actively recruiting people for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and forbid the government from pressuring people to sign up for the benefit.

Advertisement

The rule is an outgrowth of a GOP-sponsored amendment in  the 2014 Farm Bill that sought to prevent the government from advertising on radio and TV — both in the U.S. and Mexico — urging people to sign up.

Washington Examiner:

The rule is the result of the 2014 Farm Bill, which included language saying government agents have to let people decide themselves whether to apply for food stamps under the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP. That language was included after Republicans complained that benefits were being promoted on TV and radio, and were also being promoted in Mexico under a bilateral deal that existed during the Bush administration.

“Outreach activities designed to pressure or persuade a person to apply for benefits are not allowed,” USDA said about the rule. Under the proposed language, USDA and state officials that get federal funding would be allowed to inform people about how SNAP works, and dispel misunderstandings they might have about the program.

But officials wouldn’t be able to pursue people who aren’t interested, and wouldn’t be able to promise any side benefit for people who sign up.

The law and the rule impose other restrictions that outraged Republicans.

“Furthermore, as directed by the Farm Bill, the proposed rule specifically prohibits radio, television or billboard advertising,” USDA said.

Additionally, it would prohibit anyone from getting incentives for signing up people for SNAP.

“The proposed rule would also prohibit organizations receiving funds under the Food and Nutrition Act of 2008 from tying compensation for outreach workers to the number of people who apply for SNAP benefits as a result of their efforts, also part of the Farm Bill,” USDA said.

The rule states that officials can provide information about food stamps over social media, like Twitter and Facebook, as long as the content is informational and isn’t aimed at persuading or pressuring people to sign up.

This week, USDA announced that 2 million fewer people are using food stamps compared to two years ago. However, there are still 19 million more people enrolled in SNAP today than the year before the Great Recession.

Advertisement

This is the result of seven years of the Obama administration beating the bushes to find clients to sign up for food stamps, housing assistance, government health insurance, and other benefits. And so, the government grows in power and influence by making more and more citizens dependent on it for survival.

Government jobs, government handouts, government limiting choices — the Obama agenda is an anti-freedom agenda. Instead of making a huge effort to find more people for government programs, the government of a free country should be in the business of getting people to be less dependent on government. This would be better for the taxpayer, and better for the individual as well.

The Republicans tried to cut the food stamp budget by a measly 5% and were branded as heartless monsters. The notion that all 48 million people receiving SNAP benefits are worthy and deserving is idiotic. The SNAP budget has doubled over the last seven years, indicating that there are millions of Americans who got along fine without food stamps before the Great Recession and can probably survive now.

 

Recommended

Trending on PJ Media Videos

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Advertisement
Advertisement