logo
‘You open the fridge – nothing': renewed threat of US hunger as Trump seeks to cut food aid

‘You open the fridge – nothing': renewed threat of US hunger as Trump seeks to cut food aid

Yahoo2 days ago

Jade Johnson has a word to describe the experience of going hungry in one of the world's richest countries. 'Humbling.'
The last time she endured the misery of skipping meals was about 18 months ago. She was working two jobs as a home health aide and in childcare, but after paying the rent and bills she still didn't have enough to feed herself and her young daughter Janai.
She would always make sure Janai had all she needed and then, when the money ran out, trim her own eating habits accordingly. Three meals a day became one, solids would be replaced with copious amounts of water to dull the hunger pangs.
'It's like you get humbled,' Johnson, 25, says in the apartment where she is raising Janai, six, in Germantown, Maryland. 'You open the fridge, close it, open it again but nothing's gonna change – there's nothing in there.'
Those lean times were in the days before Johnson was accepted on to Snap, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly known as food stamps, that provides low-income families with help to buy nutritious groceries. Johnson had applied several times, but had been knocked back.
She was finally approved, with the help of an adviser whom she met at a parents' evening at Janai's kindergarten. For more than a year now she has received $520 every month to buy good food – equivalent to $8.50 for her and Janai each day, or under $3 a meal.
That may not sound much, but it has been transformative. 'Snap has been a blessing for me,' she says. 'I can provide for Janai when I come home, cook dinner for myself. It's improved my relationship with my kid, my friends, my clients.'
Now Johnson is bracing herself for a return to those grim days of food insecurity. Donald Trump's multi-trillion dollar domestic policy legislation, his 'big, beautiful bill' which is currently battling through Congress, would slash up to $300bn from the Snap program in order to fund extended tax breaks for the wealthiest Americans.
The cuts amount to the largest in the program's history. They come at a time when food insecurity is already on the rise in all 50 states.
Voting is meant to begin soon in the US Senate, an attempt to clear the bill through the upper chamber in time to meet Trump's ambition to sign it into law by 4 July. Senate Republican leaders are mindful that any revisions they write into the bill must avoid causing further acrimony when the legislation moves back for final approval to the House of Representatives, where the package was passed this spring by an agonising single vote.
Under the House version of the bill, parents of children seven and above would become liable for stringent work requirements from which they are currently exempted until their child is 18. Johnson would be affected by the new restriction, as Janai turns seven in November.
If that seven-year cutoff remains in the final bill (the Senate is proposing that parents must meet work requirements once their child reaches 14), Johnson will have to prove from Janai's next birthday that she is working at least 20 hours a week. Otherwise she would lose her Snap benefits.
That would be a tough burden to meet, given that her hours fluctuate week by week as clients' needs change. She has very little slack in her calendar to work further hours, because on top of her two jobs she is studying part-time at night to become a dialysis technician.
So Johnson is nervously following the passage of the bill, and preparing for the worst. Should her food assistance be pulled, it will be back to 'grind mode' and a renewed state of humbling.
•••
Johnson is one of millions of struggling Americans who are threatened with losing their Snap benefits under Trump's bill. Most of the political attention in Congress has focused on Medicaid, the health insurance scheme for low-income families which faces even greater cuts of at least $800bn under the House version of the bill.
Anti-hunger advocates fear that the potential devastation of Snap cuts is being overlooked. 'I just don't think it's getting the sort of press and general public attention it demands,' said Stephanie Ettinger de Cuba, executive director of Children's HealthWatch.
She described the proposed cuts as a 'catastrophic attack that will change the structure of Snap, damage children's and parents' health, and have ripple effects that will devastate local economies'.
Since it was founded as a permanent program by Lyndon Johnson in 1964, Snap has grown into America's most effective weapon against hunger. It currently helps put food on the table for over 40 million people, almost half of whom are children.
Poverty experts have been stunned by the scale of Trump's proposed cuts. They say they would deliver a terrible blow to one of the country's core values – that all Americans should have enough to eat.
'It's like we are throwing in the towel, and saying hunger won,' said Salaam Bhatti, Snap director at the Food Research & Action Center (Frac). 'It's upsetting that one of the wealthiest countries in the world is on the brink of increasing hunger for millions of people.'
The proposed cuts fall under several headings. The one that Johnson will feel most immediately is the expanded work requirements that will put about 8 million people at risk of losing some or all of their Snap benefits.
In addition to the expanded work requirements for parents of children aged seven to 18, older adults aged 55 to 64 would also now have to meet heavy work stipulations. That cohort includes Johnson's mother, Jámene, who currently receives Snap but might be thrown off it as she is 55 and would be subject to the expanded demands.
Jámene currently receives $52 a month in Snap benefits. Again, that might sound minimal, but without it she would be unable to buy fresh vegetables and meat and she would be hard pressed to offer any help to her daughter and granddaughter when reserves are running low.
The bill also transfers some of the costs of benefits, for the first time in the program's 61-year history, from the federal government to individual states. Under the House bill, states would be liable for up to 15% of the benefit costs, while the portion of administrative costs they already bear would rise from 50% to 75%.
A state like Virginia would have to fork out an extra $500m a year. In Bhatti's estimation, many states are simply going to be unable or unwilling to foot that bill – and will pass on the pain to their poorer citizens.
'States don't have that type of money, and so they would either reduce costs by removing families from the program, or by pulling out of the program entirely.'
Were Virginia to bail out of Snap, that would put over 800,000 people at immediate risk of food insecurity, including over 300,000 children.
Paradoxically, many of the states that would be most impacted, and by extension a large proportion of the families that could be left struggling to feed themselves, are in the rural Republican heartlands that voted heavily for Trump. One of the hardest hit would be Louisiana, which has 44% of its population on Snap or Medicaid or both.
The stakes are almost as high in deep red Arkansas (38%) and Mississippi (37%). 'I don't understand why policymakers are pursuing this bill when this will obviously hurt a large majority of their own constituents for whom Snap is a lifeline,' said Lelaine Bigelow of the Georgetown Center for Poverty and Inequality.
West Virginia, with 38% of its population in receipt of Snap or Medicaid, is an especially poignant example. This was the state where the food assistance program was born: John F Kennedy opened a pilot program there following his tour of the economically stricken Appalachian coal country.
'I don't know whether the cuts will give rise to what Kennedy saw – hungry children with bloated bellies,' said Tracy Roof, a political scientist at the University of Richmond who is writing a book on the history of food stamps. 'But I do know that in a country as wealthy as the US, it's unforgivable that you should have people going hungry to bed.'
Trump's hydra-headed cuts would also make it harder for low-income families to claim benefits in areas with high unemployment rates. The basket of food against which Snap is calculated would also be frozen, so that over the next 10 years the value of the benefit would decline in real terms from the current average of $6 a day, which many experts already consider inadequate.
As a further threat, food assistance will be removed from up to 250,000 refugees and other people granted humanitarian protections in the US.
In some ways, the Senate iteration of the bill is even more extreme than the House one. It targets millions of people in special groups, forcing them to meet tough work requirements to which they had been exempted. That includes military veterans, people experiencing homelessness, and young people in foster care.
Research by the Georgetown Center exposes the staggering disparity that underpins Trump's plan. Under the House bill, over $1tn would be withdrawn in Snap and Medicaid cuts from 31% of the American people who earn on average $30,000 a year.
The money would then be handed over, in the form of tax cuts, to the top 2% of the population, with average incomes of $1.5m a year.
The transfer of resources would not only exacerbate America's gaping inequality, it would also have a calamitous effect on the local economies in poorer parts of the country. Disrupting the flow of Snap food deliveries could send shock waves through the entire food supply chain, from farmer to truck driver to grocery store.
Numerous studies have also revealed the damage done to the health and prospects of children when they endure food insecurity at a young age. A child's developmental arc for language, hearing, vision and other critical faculties all peak by four, which means that if they receive insufficient nourishment in the early years it can have crushing long-term consequences.
'Small deprivations have outsized impacts,' Ettinger de Cuba said. 'Kids who are food insecure are more likely to be at risk of poor health, hospitalizations, and developmental delays.'
In Johnson's case, she knows Janai will be protected from such a disaster because as a parent she will do everything she can to provide for her daughter. Even if that means giving up her dream of getting on in life, or going hungry herself.
What puzzles Johnson about the difficult future she is now facing, courtesy of the 'big, beautiful bill', is that it feels like she is being punished for doing everything she can to be a good American. She's raised her daughter right, works two jobs to pay the bills, studies at night at her own cost to improve herself and find more stable work.
'I'm just trying to be a decent, functioning human being,' she says. 'Can't they let me get my life together first, before they start snatching stuff away from me?'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

15 Wonderful Ways Parenting Gets Easier as Your Child Ages
15 Wonderful Ways Parenting Gets Easier as Your Child Ages

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

15 Wonderful Ways Parenting Gets Easier as Your Child Ages

Yes, parenting does get easier. Sometimes it feels natural to share the tough parts of parenting — or rather, those parts just come spilling out in trying moments. But countless things get easier and more enjoyable in parenting as your child ages. Keep these things in mind when you're deep in the trenches of newborn days or pre-teen hormones. Breathe a sigh of relief; those hard newborn days are behind you. Though you may miss the sweet baby snuggles, there's so much about toddlerhood that actually makes parenting easier. Nothing strengthens you quite like those early newborn days when sleep is an elusive unicorn. As your little bundle of joy reaches their first birthday and toddlerhood, you'll find those sleepless nights are no longer quite as endless as they feel. You may not ever experience that magic moment when parenting is suddenly easy. Rather, as you look back over time, you'll see how many parts of the journey have decreased in difficulty. Having a cuddly little baby around Christmas can be fun. But it can also be overshadowed by constant feedings and utter exhaustion. As your little one's personality blooms in toddlerhood, watching them behold the wonder of every holiday becomes a true gift parents can cherish. Is there anything as anxiety-inducing as a new mom as trying to decipher your newborn's cries? Is she hungry? Is he overtired? Many of those questions start to fade as toddlerhood approaches. Partly because you are a seasoned parent tuned in to each sound your child makes, and partly because your little one can now use some words, hand signals, or gestures to communicate their needs and wants. Bye-bye terrible twos and three-nagers, it's time for school. Whether you choose a traditional school setting or a home education, you might be surprised by how much of your life you get back when your child starts school. When you're dreaming of toddlerland in those early baby days, nothing sounds as relaxing as casual pretend play. But after a few rounds of playing bakery, you realize how exhausting pretend play is for an adult. The good news is that as your child starts school and makes friends, they'll have plenty of friends to play games with. If you're missing those playful times of toddlerhood, try looking forward to other ways you can spend quality time together, like family game nights or sporting events. By the time your little one steps through the door into their first day of kindergarten, they'll be confident and practiced when it comes to going potty. All the hard work you put into potty training your toddler, from chasing them around to helping wash their hands, will pay off when you can officially point them to the bathroom and let them, well ... go. Whether you chose to breastfeed or use formula, feeding babies was a full-time job. That transitions into quite a bit of snack-making in the toddler years. But once your child is of school age, you can be much more hands-off during meal times. At this stage, you'll be in charge of three square meals a day. But you won't have to do the feeding and clean-up will be minimal. Even snack time is easier when they can open the pantry and grab the Gold Fish crackers themselves. Once you're past the toddler stage, loading the kids up for an outing is significantly easier. You no longer have to think about diaper bags, car seats, potty stops, or potential blowouts — and we don't mean tires. Your kids can grab their own coats, buckle up, and enjoy the ride. Between the amount of space sacrificed for baby items and the instant messes toddlers make, it might feel like your home is never clean. Once your kids reach school age, though, cleaning gets a little easier. Not only do you have more time to devote to the task, but your children are more than capable of helping out or keeping your family's rules about being tidy. As kids get older, they will start to accumulate lots of things, from collections or special toys to sports equipment and art projects. At this age, though, you can try having discussions and working together when deciding what to declutter. Hello, independence! Seeing your little one grow into a (mostly) self-sufficient teen might bring up some mixed emotions. But you can count on some of your parenting responsibilities easing up as you step into this new season as a family. Sure, your teen may come to you with trigonometry questions from time to time. But the days of spending hours at the dinner table working through a math problem together are typically gone. At this point, your teen can call up a friend or approach a teacher on their own to ask for help with academics. Short of renting a car, your teen can do most things by themselves now. You don't have to make their lunch, wash their clothes, or even drive them to soccer practice. It might be bittersweet, but it's a parenting moment you have more than earned. Want a date night? Well, that works since your teen is already out for the evening. Longing for a weekend away? Your tween will have a blast sleeping over at a friend's house for a few days. Once your kid grows into a mostly self-sufficient teen, your child care costs go way down and eventually disappear altogether. There's going to be some nervousness — on your part and theirs — when they finally pass their driving test. Sure, this milestone comes with unique stressors like safety concerns, insurance expenses, and finding that perfect first car. But, it's a milestone you greatly benefit from. Once your teen is driving, you can kick back while they take themselves to school, pick up a few groceries for you, and help with shuttling their siblings to extracurriculars. By now, you've put in the long days and all the hard work. You now have an adult child with their own life and unique contributions to society. These are some of the things that feel easier once you're past the teen years and acting more as a life coach to your adult children. They're grown up, out of the house, and no longer relying on you for every need. It's a rewarding, though difficult, moment for any parent. It might feel strange at first, but this hands-off approach to parenting is going to grow on you. You'll have days of missing the baby snuggles or the early morning conversations with your pre-schooler. But you'll trade those for moments of sitting back and watching all your hard work pay off in your child's adulthood. This season also brings moments when your adult child will make some decisions differently than you hoped. Even though it's difficult, try to see this as an opportunity to embrace your child's individuality or to help them learn a tough lesson that will serve them later on in life. Empty nest? More like a reason to redecorate! The playroom, the teen hangout, and your son's bathroom that never felt entirely clean make way for the home you've always wanted. Don't worry, your kids will come back to visit and compliment your new style. You raised a whole human being. That's a pretty big accomplishment. Now that your child is an adult, you get to trade those hard days of discipline and reinforcement for sitting back and basking in the pride of bringing up a wonderful person. They say the best part of having children is getting grandchildren. There's a reason parents seem to morph into entirely different people once their first grandchild comes into the picture: grandchildren change everything. They'll be one of your greatest parenting rewards and help you relive some of those precious moments you shared with your own babies. Once your child has children of their own, you get to teach them everything you've learned as a parent. Keep in mind that they may want to do a lot of things differently, though, and that's okay. Try to respect and support their parenting choices even if they're different from yours. There's a whole new dynamic at play when your kids become adults. There's a world of space for parents to recognize some of their parenting mistakes — and kids might see the ways their behavior might have been less-than-desirable as teens. While every parent and adult-child relationship has unique challenges, as you grow closer to your kids, learn who they are becoming as adults, and engage in genuine (sometimes vulnerable) conversations, your adult kids might also become some of your best friends. This parenting gig is never truly over. Our kids won't be kids forever, but we'll be parents for the rest of our lives. Seeing kids grow up might be bittersweet, but make no mistake: your children will always need you.

SLO's oldest home, La Loma Adobe, has a long, rich history that began in 1782
SLO's oldest home, La Loma Adobe, has a long, rich history that began in 1782

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

SLO's oldest home, La Loma Adobe, has a long, rich history that began in 1782

Adobe buildings are living structures. The adobe keeps strength by wicking moisture from the ground. Cut off from water, they crumble to dust. Too much water, and they melt. Sun-dried adobe bricks are formed from soil, sand and straw, and when well cared for, adobes are the oldest surviving buildings in California. Often the majority of the labor to create the bricks came from Native Americans, and adobe was the building material most available and affordable in the 1700s and early 1800s. The county has a mixed record of preserving adobe history. Mission San Luis Obispo has been restored from fire, Mission San Miguel from earthquake. Many others have suffered from neglect and melted in the rain. The city of San Luis Obispo owns three of these precious buildings. On May 29, 2005, reporter Leslie Griffy wrote a comprehensive story about their history and status. She quoted city engineer Mike McGuire, who said, 'These buildings were the homes of the founders of San Luis Obispo. ... They provide an important link to our past.' They were threatened then and unfortunately little has changed in 20 years. The exterior of the Rodriguez Adobe in the Arbors neighborhood was restored, but the interior is still rough. The Rosa Butrón de Canet Adobe on Dana Street needed serious work two decades ago after suffering damage from the San Simeon Earthquake. Recently a plan has been floated to build a tiny home village on the Dana Street property around the adobe, and that could be a funding driver to help restore the historic structure. Critics argue that the property was donated to the city to be preserved not developed. But time weighs heavily on unused buildings. The saddest story is of the oldest residence in the county. The two-story La Loma Adobe — also called the Bowden Adobe — is on Lizzie Street uphill from the San Luis Coastal Unified School District offices. The hillside home has been witness to weddings and dances, governors and generals. It was still an active residence as late as the mid-20th century. Now fenced off and fading, it was estimated in 2005 that La Loma needed as much as $2 million to be restored. Though some grants have been found for interim repairs, restoration remains elusive. In 1947 Telegram-Tribune reporter Cecilia Jensen wrote a series of stories about local historic adobes and landmarks as the state geared up for a centennial observance of the Gold Rush. This story about the La Loma Adobe was published on Dec. 10, 1947. On the brow of a hill at the end of Lizzie street, overlooking the city of San Luis Obispo, stands La Loma, believed to be the oldest adobe residence still standing in San Luis Obispo county. The most accurate records available indicate that the adobe was built in 1782, only 10 years after the Old Mission was established and in the year after George Washington accepted the surrender of Cornwallis to end the Revolutionary War. For the past 35 years the house has been occupied by the family of Mrs. Isabel Bowden. To the casual observer, it's ancient origin is not immediately apparent. A siding of lumber has been put over the adobe at some distant time and vines grow over much of the structure. Beneath this relatively modern exterior however, are the well preserved 'dobe walls, two feet thick and plastered white. What a story these old walls could tell. Knew Fremont Once the house quartered Gen. John C. Fremont during the winter encampment of 1846, when his battalion feasted on the cactus pears growing nearby in abundance. Its floors have also felt the steps of Pio Pico, last Mexican governor of Alta California; of Gen. Jose Castro, one of his predecessors; of Señorita Ramona Pacheco Wilson, mother of Romaldo Pacheco, governor of California in 1870, and her husband Captain John Wilson. District Judge Pablo De la Guerra of Santa Barbara, later a senator from that district, was among the prominent visitors at the adobe, which is believed to have been erected by Indian servants working under a Spanish landlord. Once the adobe was a trading post where furs and gold dust were bartered for supplies; again it was a tavern where infrequent travelers found food and lodging. Mexican grant Don Francisco Estevan Quintana was the first recorded owner of the property on which La Loma stands. He acquired La Vena rancho, comprising more than 6,000 acres in 1842 by a land grant from Gov. Manuel Micheltorena, next to the last of the Mexican governors of Alta California. In the same year, Señorita Mari Concepcion Boronda was granted the Potrero rancho of more than 3,500 acres, drained by Chorro creek. She traded part of Potrero rancho to Don Quintana for part of La Vena rancho including the site of La Loma. While Señorita Boronda was living in Monterey, which her family had helped to settle, she met Captain Oliver Deleissegus, a French reserve Navy captain. He had come to explore the Pacific coast, had been shipwrecked in Monterey Bay and had saved his life by swimming to shore. Oliver and 'Chonita' as she was reportedly nicknamed, fell in love, were married, and had five children before he died. The young widow then married Don Jose Maria Munoz, a native of Mexico, and a scholarly man. Early day judge Together they came to La Loma to live, where four children were born to them. Along with other enterprises, Munoz served as county judge for San Luis Obispo County for four years. To correct a flaw in the land title of Don Quintana, Judge Munoz homesteaded the quarter section surrounding La Loma and received a government patent from the United States on Sept. 15. 1870. Their children and Oliver's children grew up within the two-feet-thick white plastered walls, with their small windows and cool rooms. They climbed the outside stairway to the upstairs rooms, shaped exactly like the rooms beneath, where they slept. When they reached the proper age there were dances in the small ballroom upstairs. Romance flourished and beginning in 1871, Father Rouselle of the Old Mission began officiating in a series of weddings that took place in the almost century-old house. Here Miss Adela Deleissegues wed Michal Henderson, Miss Rebecca Haines became the bride of Albert Deleissegues; Miss Manuela Munoz married Fred Dana; Miss Carmen Hames plighted her troth to Guadalupe Munoz, who later moved to Ballard, Santa Barbara County; and Miss Eugino Durazo was married to Alexander Deleissegues. Another son, Ben Munoz, was a watchman for San Luis Obispo, and comprised the entire police department at that time. Judge Munoz was proud of his home and beautified the grounds with orange and fig trees and kept a wonderful garden. They looked down from their hillside vantage point onto the cotton field, which bordered their property, grown by Old Mission priests. Beyond was the olive orchard and the Old Mission itself. More houses were beginning to thicken the town. A new neighbor, Pierre Dallidet, had built an adobe down by the creek. In 1874 tragedy struck again in Maria Concepcion's life when Judge Munoz was drowned in a shipwreck while enroute to Mexico on a business trip. Her son, Alexander, assisted in operating the rancho. He subdivided the property, opened up Johnson Avenue and named Lizzie Street for a small niece of whom he was extremely fond. But widowed again, in 1887 Señora Maria Concepcion Boronda de Munoz sold the property to John Corbett of Corbett canyon, who was a great uncle to James J. Corbett, famous San Francisco boxer. On Sept. 22, 1898, the property passed to Caroline E. Noyes, who sold it to Charles Bowden on Feb. 24, 1914, his widow, Isabel, inheriting it on Sept. 5, 1930. In this tradition-drenched home that has seen more than a century of existence and still holds the atmosphere of its beginning, the Bowden family has grown up, still walking on floors in the upstairs rooms that were laid 165 years ago. The downstairs floors were packed dirt when the house was first erected.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store