Current:Home > MarketsIowa proposes summer grocery boxes as alternative to direct cash payments for low-income families -Wealth Evolution Experts
Iowa proposes summer grocery boxes as alternative to direct cash payments for low-income families
View
Date:2025-04-14 03:34:01
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa on Thursday proposed an alternative program to address child hunger during next year’s summer break, a plan that the state says can leverage existing community-driven infrastructure and prioritize nutrition, but critics say takes resources and agency away from low-income families.
Iowa and other states opted out of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s summer EBT program in 2024, which offered $120 per school-aged child to low-income families for grocery purchases over the summer months.
More than 244,000 children were provided the pandemic summer EBT cards in 2023, according to the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services, amounting to over $29 million in federal funds.
Iowa instead devoted $900,000 in competitive grants that led to 61 new sites for other federal nutrition programs that facilitate schools and nonprofit organizations in low-income areas serving summer meals and snacks to kids.
Next year, Iowa wants to again forgo the EBT option and instead offer grocery boxes each of the three summer months. Kelly Garcia, director of the state’s health and human services agency, said the proposal allows Iowa to buy in bulk to stretch program dollars, offset inflation costs for families, choose nutritional foods to fill boxes and increase the number of families that are eligible.
“The complex issues of food insecurity and obesity cannot be solved with cash benefits that don’t actively promote health, nutrition-dense food, or reach all Iowa children in need,” said Kelly Garcia, director of Iowa’s health and human services agency.
But the new approach hasn’t done much to convince critics, especially Democrats, who have long lambasted Reynolds for rejecting such a large sum of money intended to feed Iowa kids. That includes state Sen. Sarah Trone-Garriott, who works with the Des Moines Area Religious Council Food Pantry Network and assisted with their grocery boxes program during the pandemic.
Trone-Garriott said the proposal would require a cumbersome volunteer-based effort that would be less efficient than offering families the funds to use at their local grocery stores, which they go to anyway. The federal program is effective at alleviating the intense need, which she said has shifted this summer to record high demand at local food pantries.
“It’s not as accessible,” she said. “It’s this idea that we can’t trust people who are struggling financially to make good choices.”
Garcia told USDA administrators in a letter Thursday that Iowa did not participate in the 2024 EBT program because of its “operational redundancy with existing programs, high administrative costs for states, and lack of nutritional focus.”
States that participate in the program are required to cover half of the administrative costs, which would have cost an estimated $2.2 million in Iowa, the state said last year.
Officials did not specify Thursday how much the new program would cost, or how much federal funding they expect.
Iowa is proposing that low-income families could pick up their summer grocery boxes, or those with transportation challenges could get them delivered. The state said delivery is a convenience not offered with the existing EBT program but offered no details on how many families would be able to opt in to that option, or how delivery would be facilitated across the state.
veryGood! (93)
Related
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Why Diddy is facing 'apocalyptic' legal challenges amid 6 new sexual assault civil suits
- Zendaya's Stylist Law Roach Reacts to 2025 Met Gala Theme
- How 'Georgie & Mandy's First Marriage' mirrors real-life wedding, baby for its stars
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- The son of a South Carolina inmate urges the governor to save his father from execution
- Feds: Cyber masterminds targeted FBI, CNN, Hulu, Netflix, Microsoft, X in global plot
- Concerns for Ryan Day, Georgia and Alabama entering Week 7. College Football Fix discusses
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- A full-scale replica of Anne Frank’s hidden annex is heading to New York for an exhibition
Ranking
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- RFK Jr. suggests he’ll have a significant role on agriculture and health policy if Trump is elected
- After hurricanes, the business of rebuilding lives means navigating the insurance claims process
- Victoria's Secret Fashion Show: See Gigi Hadid, Irina Shayk and More Models Hit the Runway
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Maui wildfire survivors will get an additional year of housing help from FEMA
- Alabama Coal Plant Tops US Greenhouse Gas Polluter List for 9th Straight Year
- Breanna Stewart condemns 'homophobic death threats' sent to wife after WNBA Finals loss
Recommendation
Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
Emily Osment Reveals Role Brother Haley Joel Osment Had at Her Wedding
See Kelli Giddish's Sweet Law & Order: SVU Reunion With Mariska Hargitay—Plus, What Rollins' Future Holds
GHCOIN Trading Center: Future Prospects and Global Expansion Plans
Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
Liam Payne's family mourns One Direction star's death at 31: 'Heartbroken'
Are chickpeas healthy? How they and other legumes can boost your health.
Mexico’s former public security chief set to be sentenced in US drug case