Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Juxtaposition: Crackdown on food stamp fraud vs. "God's work" being allowed to proceed

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Juxtaposition: Crackdown on food stamp fraud vs. "God's work" being allowed to proceed

    one cent out of every food stamp dollar possibly involved in fraud.

    Yes, food stamp spending was a total of $64.7 billion in 2010, but contrast this with almost any other category you'd like: TBTF bailouts, Fannie/Freddie ongoing support, Defense spending, etc etc.

    http://colorlines.com/archives/2011/...ite_house.html

    This week, the White House announced a new plan to save a few federal dollars: a crack down on food stamp fraud. Over 46 million people rely on the federal food assistance program to eat, according to Agriculture Department statistics. For many families, it’s the only assistance they’re eligible for in the recession’s long slump. As with anything where money’s involved, it’s also vulnerable to fraud and rule-bending.

    But food stamp fraud of the kind described by the administration is actually a very tricky tangle that can’t be reduced to good and bad recipients. And it’s a perfect example of how poor people get squeezed when Democrats and Republicans compete to slay the government-waste boogeyman.

    The president and vice president on Monday rolled out a plan to “ensure program integrity …[to] make sure the program is targeted towards those families who need it the most.” The White House statement, which was released as part of the Obama administration’s “Campaign to Cut Waste,” noted that “fraud occurs relatively infrequently”—about a penny on every dollar of food assistance is used fraudulently—but that to protect taxpayers it is nonetheless important to go after misuse.

    According to the Washington Post, the administration plans to target two types of food stamp fraud—retailer fraud and fraud committed by beneficiaries. On the retailer side this means penalizing grocery stores and bodegas from stealing people’s benefits by keeping their PIN numbers after beneficiaries use their government issued debit card to buy food. On the beneficiary side, the plan is to go after people who turn their benefits into cash. The Post describes this scenario:
    … beneficiaries who receive monthly deposits of food aid on to plastic cards similar to bank cards intentionally use SNAP benefits to purchase water or other beverages with bottle deposits, dump the liquid and then obtain cash for bottle deposits.
    The premise is that food assistance should only go to those who actually qualify, and that those who get it should only use it for their families and nobody should be making a profit off the federal program.

    That all seems right, but it’s complicated.

    A couple years ago, when the recession was still news, I wrote a Colorlines investigation on single moms struggling to make it. Mothers who’d been kicked off of cash assistance because of harsh welfare reform rules told me they now sell their food assistance at the corner bodega for 70 cents on the dollar, just to cover basics like utility bills and clothes for their kids.

    One mom I met, a 28-year-old with two young girls who could not find a job and had been booted off cash assistance, had a choice each month when the benefits came in: trade the stamps for cash to pay rent or use the benefits solely for food and risk becoming homeless with her kids. That wasn’t much of a choice, but since she felt she could scrape by getting cans of food from soup kitchens and from friends, she decided she needed the cash and the roof over her head.

    It’s hard to see how she and her family should be the target of an anti-fraud campaign.

    The practices of retailers is a little more clear cut. Food stamp beneficiaries walk into a corner bodega, hand over their card and the bodega hands back about 70 cents on the dollar in cash. The stores make a profit and there’s little doubt that the practice is exploitative and fraudulent.

    The food stamp program has expanded rapidly in the recession and in many way’s it’s been a huge success, putting food on the tables of tens of millions in the deepest recession most of us have ever lived through. It’s rarely noted though that for many families food stamps are often the only real assistance program left. With the welfare program in many states barely responding to growing recessionary need and unemployment insurance running out or never kicking in for many poor families, food assistance is all there is. Some recipients decide they have to use the benefits illegally to fill in the gaps left by our nation’s political choices.

    According to the White House, last year, “investigations of individuals and retailers resulted in over 44,000 persons being disqualified from SNAP and 931 retailers being permanently barred from accepting benefits.” Going after exploitative retailer fraud may make some sense, but beneficiary fraud of the kind the White House is concerned with may be less a matter of fraud than it is an exercise in creative survival on the part of those doing the surviving.

  • #2
    Re: Juxtaposition: Crackdown on food stamp fraud vs. "God's work" being allowed to proceed

    ...On the beneficiary side, the plan is to go after people who turn their benefits into cash...
    This is hard to do because money is fungible.
    If I wanted to turn such benefits into cash, I'd just buy some groceries for a friend and have them pay me back in cash.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Juxtaposition: Crackdown on food stamp fraud vs. "God's work" being allowed to proceed

      Originally posted by c1ue View Post
      one cent out of every food stamp dollar possibly involved in fraud.

      Yes, food stamp spending was a total of $64.7 billion in 2010, but contrast this with almost any other category you'd like: TBTF bailouts, Fannie/Freddie ongoing support, Defense spending, etc etc.

      http://colorlines.com/archives/2011/...ite_house.html
      Average monthly benefit per individual in September 2011: $135.35
      Average per household: $285.44

      It’s rarely noted though that for many families food stamps are often the only real assistance program left. With the welfare program in many states barely responding to growing recessionary need and unemployment insurance running out or never kicking in for many poor families, food assistance is all there is.


      After the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996, participation in welfare programs plummeted. Note though that even at peak levels, TANF and SSP-MOE participation was roughly 5% of the population vs. 10% for SNAP. The requirements for TANF/SSP-MOE have always been more restrictive. Today, more applications are denied than approved for welfare; for example, in June 2011: 145,598 applications approved, 183,026 denied.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Juxtaposition: Crackdown on food stamp fraud vs. "God's work" being allowed to proceed

        Originally posted by zoog
        Average monthly benefit per individual in September 2011: $135.35
        Average per household: $285.44
        Indeed. That's what happens when you have getting up to 50 million people on food stamps. That $1000 a year or so really adds up.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Juxtaposition: Crackdown on food stamp fraud vs. "God's work" being allowed to proceed

          from what eye have seen, would say that "1% fraud" = laffable.
          altho i dont begrudge the truly needy having to do whats necessary to survive, i do have a problem with those who are gaming the system and being allowed to use their EBT cards to buy things like bottled water, sugary softdrinks, prepared/ready-to-eat foods of any kind, junk/snack sh_t with zee-row nutritional value, prime cuts of meat/seafood etc etc ad infinitum - not when the basic technology being used to track our every dollar-spent in use today at supermarkets could be quite effectively utilized to prevent this widespread abuse of the intent of the SNAP program - theres also the issue of the supermarkets themselves jacking up prices with an eye to gouging of this group to 'enhance' their bottom lines, also visible to those who care to look for it...

          and i wont even get into the "welfare-baby production machines" that are allowed to reproduce/multiply at will, generation after generation, which increases their 'household earnings' almost exponentially, while they spend it on all sorts of stuff most would define as luxuries (utilizing the techniques described above), while feeding their brats ramen and hotdogs...

          almost (key word) makes a guy wanna find himself a sweet/dumb young thing and 'go into bizness'...
          Last edited by lektrode; December 09, 2011, 04:09 PM.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Juxtaposition: Crackdown on food stamp fraud vs. "God's work" being allowed to proceed

            Originally posted by c1ue View Post
            one cent out of every food stamp dollar possibly involved in fraud.

            Yes, food stamp spending was a total of $64.7 billion in 2010, but contrast this with almost any other category you'd like: TBTF bailouts, Fannie/Freddie ongoing support, Defense spending, etc etc.

            http://colorlines.com/archives/2011/...ite_house.html
            This kind of news - trumpeting food stamp fraud - pleases a large flock of the sheeple. Had lunch with an elderly couple - they're not on FS, with wealth management handling their seven figure savings - and the concern they raised. The government wants US workers to go on a 30-hour work week. That would mean 3 hour lunches, siesta breaks, etc., just like the Europeans. They were quite excited over this prospect.

            Comment

            Working...
            X