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Research Topic: Inequality in the Food System

Nutrition Assistance Programs: The past, present and future of the Farm Bill

This panel discussion was recorded on June 26, 2023 as part of the Duke in DC Office’s Beyond Talking Points series. The goal of the conversation is to contribute to the Farm Bill reauthorization proceedings by raising the visibility of key issues related to nutrition assistance programs.

Interview Summary

Jeff Harris: Good afternoon, everybody and thanks so much for joining us here at Duke and DC’s Briefing on the Farm Bill and Nutritional Assistance Programs. This is our second briefing in this Beyond Talking Point series focused on the Farm Bill. The first conversation looked at the intersection of agriculture and climate within the context of the Farm Bill. Today I’m joined by three outstanding faculty to talk about nutritional assistance programs. We have Norbert Wilson, Director of the World Food Policy Center at the Sanford School, and Professor of Food Economics and Community at the Duke Divinity School. Joined by his co-author Alfonso Flores-Lagunes, Professor of Economics from Syracuse University’s Maxwell School, and Senior Research Associate in the Center for Policy Research. And finally, Carolyn Barnes, Assistant Professor in the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke.

The structure of today’s conversation will be a half hour conversation amongst the panelists and then a half hour for Q&A with the audience. For now, I’d like to turn the conversation over to our faculty to begin the conversation. We know in recent weeks there’s been lots of focus on nutritional assistance programs in light of the recently passed debt ceiling deal. But we’ve also lived through a somewhat natural experiment of the last three plus years during the COVID-19 pandemic and some changes to the programs made then. Professor Wilson, may we start with you a little bit about some of the research you’ve been looking at considering some of the policies and regulations passed in this debt ceiling deal, and then looking ahead to how that’s going to influence the upcoming Farm Bill.

Norbert Wilson: Sure, thank you so much for this opportunity to share with you all. It’s been an important period thinking about what’s happening with SNAP, especially as we run up to the Farm Bill that is being discussed. Reauthorization will need to take place later this fall, or at least that’s when the current Farm Bill expires, and a new Farm Bill would need to be implemented.

It was an interesting experience and exchange with my co-author Alfonso here. He and I began a series of conversations around food security and there had been a lingering question for me. When you look at the data that comes out of USDA, you see that individuals who are food insecure are different, that there are differences along racial and ethnic lines. One of the things that really bothered me was seeing higher rates of food insecurity amongst African American households relative to others. In conversations with folks, some would say, ‘well, if you took into account things like income, educational attainment, who’s the head of the household, other factors that those differences would disappear or at least would mitigate that gap that we see in the data.’ But that explanation never really sat well with me. And so engaging Alfonso, we worked with some other colleagues, Hugo Jales and also Judith Lu, who’s now at Oklahoma. We began a study that started a few years ago looking back at the recession pre, during and after the recession and trying to understand why we see differences in food insecurity among biracial and ethnic groups and also immigrant status.

One of the things that was important in looking at that is we looked at the difference and not just whether or not someone is food insecure or rather a household is food insecure. We also looked at the severity. So, once you are food insecure, how food insecure are you? We saw some really striking differences. What we were able to find is that if you considered all those typical household characteristics that might influence whether a person is or a household is food insecure such as age and number of children and education and what have you, we still saw a gap that existed. That gap still existed when you considered SNAP, which in some ways is surprising, but in other ways it’s not. If you think about what the SNAP program does, it provides benefits to all people who are eligible who choose to participate. There are no differences in whether household characteristics like race matter, as you might imagine. But one of the things that that led us to believe is that even though SNAP lowers food insecurity across households, and this is important, I want us to be very clear – SNAP is a critical program to help address food insecurity in the United States. However, what SNAP doesn’t do is it doesn’t squeeze out that disparity that we saw between Hispanic and white households and Black or African American households and white households.

So that led to this study that we recently published that looked at what if we change aspects of the SNAP program? Could there be ways of reducing the disparity if we must adopt a slightly different approach. Instead of thinking about food security, we looked at that food resource gap. How much additional money is needed for a household to meet its food needs, which is not the same thing as food security or food insecurity, but it approximates that. By using simulations, what this project was able to do was we were able to look at SNAP as in sort of three components: So, an eligibility component first – so whether you’re eligible or not. A participation component – whether you participate if you’re eligible. Then a generosity component – which is how much additional revenue do you receive from SNAP if you are able to participate or if you choose to participate. Looking across those three different components, what we were able to see is that it’s important that participation plays a critical role. That participation can help reduce some of the disparity that we saw between Black and Hispanic households relative to the white household counterparts. While generosity is an important thing, and participation also can have some differential effects, it was really about eligibility. Of course, as we are thinking about the current moment, we’re in, thinking about the current conversations around the debt ceiling and then what’s going to roll into the Farm Bill in the coming months, this issue of eligibility is going to be an important conversation about who actually gets to participate and what are the rules that may shape this.

Now again, I want to make the point that SNAP plays an important role in reducing food insecurity. It helps families meet their resource food gaps. How this program is implemented is something that I know Carolyn’s going to talk a good bit about, and it is an important way of thinking about it. Sort of how people are able to participate is a critical part, but also how people are able to participate is going to depend on the rules that are in place around SNAP, who’s eligible and whether or not there, once they’re eligible, if they choose to participate, and importantly how long they stay participating in the program. I’ll stop there with initial comments, and I will hand it over to Alfonso to talk about one of the areas of eligibility, I think is really important that this play an important role in the conversations of the debt ceiling. I think could potentially show up again in the Farm Bill negotiations.

Alfonso Flores-Lagunes: Thank you very much to the organizers for the opportunity to participate in this panel. It is really such a joy and honor. I will go ahead and tell you a little bit about some thoughts grounded in a couple of studies. So, my plan for the next few minutes will be to touch upon some of the recent research related to SNAP, and I will be underscoring some relevant general aspects related to the Farm Bill. For reasons of time, I will just concentrate on two recent influential studies. Both of these studies have the characteristics of using very high-quality data, and by that I mean primarily administrative data and also a credible research design that gives us overall more confidence in the results.

The first study is by Professors Martha Bailey, Hillary Hoines, Maya Rosin-Slater, and Reid Walker. The two relevant general aspects of this paper that I want to mention here are that it underscores two points. One of them is that SNAP is a fundamentally good investment by the government, particularly when that investment is made for children. The second general point is that the benefits are reaped over time. It’s not an immediate bang for the buck that we see, but rather when the benefits really start showing up and largely outweigh the cost is in the medium to long-term. Which has a very important implication in that policy makers need to maintain a long-term investment perspective in the SNAP program. To focus ideas on this first study, it finds that young children between the ages of 0 to 5 who receive SNAP have significantly better outcomes as adults. This is the long-term perspective, right? The fact that these children are receiving the benefits when they are very young from in utero to five years old. But then the researchers can link the information of these people many years after about 35, 40 years after to see their outcomes as adults. Among other things that they document is that children in this age range who receive SNAP – they attain higher levels of education, they have higher economic self-sufficiency and that includes claiming fewer public benefits. They also have a higher life expectancy, and they have a smaller likelihood of being incarcerated. They are also more likely to live in better neighborhoods. There are a range of positive effects that speak to the long-term high returns of SNAP as an investment. In fact, the authors go ahead, and they calculate the ratio of the benefit of SNAP to the net cost to the government. They find that this ratio is 62, implying that each net dollar invested in SNAP on young children yields about $62 over the long term. A pretty good investment. It is therefore highly cost effective. These calculations by the way, only include benefits from increases in labor income from the exposure to SNAP when they are children, life expectancy increases and lower incarceration rates. The externalities of higher taxes because of the higher earnings and so on are, are not part of this calculation. And yet it has an outstanding return on the investment.

Let me just turn briefly to the second study. This study is by professors Jason Cook and Chloe East. There are again two relevant aspects that I would like to highlight from this paper that uses, again, administrative data from one state that is linked to unemployment insurance benefits databases that have the earnings of these individuals. The two general aspects are as follows. The first one is that SNAP case workers are a fundamental resource for take-up of benefits by poor families. What does that mean? It means that the impact that case workers have underscores the barriers to access embedded in the current application process of the program.

The second point is that in general, SNAP does not create strong disincentives to work. Moreover, in the medium term, these authors document that SNAP appears to help adults find better jobs, better quality jobs. Let me tell you a little bit about the findings. The first one is about the case workers. They analyze the impact of different case workers in this state of study on the program receipt of first-time applicants to the SNAP program. They find that those individuals that are assigned to a more helpful case worker increase their likelihood of them receiving a SNAP by 3%. This is a non-negligible impact on the successful takeoff of the program from individuals that initially they already had the intention to apply for the program. Also, as I was saying, this study delivers credible estimates on the impact of SNAP on labor supply. And there are again two main results about this, the effects on labor supply. The first one is that if we look at the whole pool of applicants of SNAP, there is no adverse effect of SNAP benefits on their labor supply. Why is that? Well, it might not be surprising because by and large, most of the applicants, 79% of them, did not work in the year prior to receiving SNAP. This is a consequence of the type of population that are applicants to the program. The vast majority are individuals that for one reason or another are not attached to the labor market. So not surprisingly receiving a SNAP does not create a disincentive to work for this individual. Now you might be thinking, what about that 21% of individuals that were working prior to receiving a SNAP? The findings of this paper are interesting. They find on the one hand that these individuals indeed show a decrease in labor supply when receiving the SNAP. However, this decrease in labor supply only lasts for one quarter after the receipt of SNAP, after which the authors document their labor earnings rebound and turn positive. Higher than before receiving a SNAP.

So, what can explain this pattern? The authors go into an endeavor of trying to document potential reasons for this finding. They do document evidence suggesting that the job quality of these recipients increases after the first quarter. So, what does this mean? Well, what it means is that according to this evidence, SNAP might be permitting workers to be more patient and conduct a better search for jobs that results in better quality jobs as judged by higher earnings and employment in industries that pay more than other industries. This is a very interesting finding that puts a twist a little bit on the question of whether SNAP has effects on labor supply.

In summary, just to wrap up here, these studies that I mentioned underscore the following points in my mind. The first one is that by and large, SNAP is a public investment that generates large returns, particularly in the medium and long term. Point number two that the disincentives to work generated by the program are in general at most very small and likely non-existent. Third, policymakers should strive for SNAP to reach as many eligible households as possible given the high returns that the program has. What that implies is also perhaps taking a closer look at the application process and trying to facilitate that eligible households do indeed are successful in collecting these benefits that have these high positive returns. And lastly, and it might be a point that is often overlooked, is that good policy making should keep a long-term investment perspective when considering funding programs such as SNAP in this case. I will stop here, and I look forward to the subsequent discussion. Thank you.

Carolyn Barnes: I think Jeff has introduced us and talked about COVID being a natural experiment to address some of the issues that Alfonso raises about implementation and the importance of having a helpful worker and given the long run positive effects. Given the long run positive effects of SNAP on kids and ultimately adults, we should think about ways of simplifying the application and recertification process. In other words, we should reduce the administrative burden in accessing nutrition assistance programs. I am a researcher who studies administrative burden across three programs: WIC, SNAP, and Medicaid.

In the last couple of years have really focused on what’s happened in the nutrition assistance space during the pandemic. The pandemic offered an opportunity to see what happens when we essentially eliminate the barriers to accessing these programs and we make programs more generous, and we make programs more flexible. All of the things that we have spent a lot of time documenting as barriers to accessing nutrition assistance programs. I’m doing some work in partnership with Jamila Michener at Cornell. We did a large-scale qualitative study that includes North Carolina and a couple of other states on how workers responded to COVID policy waivers, which essentially reduced administrative burden and SNAP and other programs and how, and whether beneficiaries or applicants benefited from this reduction in administrative burden. The answer to those questions is super complex in part because I think the missing sort of piece to the puzzle is understanding administrative capacity and what’s necessary for effective implementation on the ground. One of the things that doesn’t get talked about much is the increased demand for benefits initially, especially initially at the beginning of the pandemic and bureaucratic and administrative constraints. What we don’t know from a lot of the great sort of quantitative studies that have been done or how many folks have been excluded who would otherwise be eligible for SNAP during sort of the initial six months of the pandemic, how many folks who tried to reach a helpful caseworker couldn’t get ahold of them? How many folks tried to recertify or tried to engage workers around the recertification process because during the pandemic recertification periods were extended. How many folks got ahold of a worker? How many folks experienced effective policy implementation?

And then do beneficiaries know that there have been these major changes in the programs they’re using and are they taking advantage of those changes? We worked to track those experiences throughout the pandemic. The answer is folks didn’t really know, and beneficiaries especially didn’t know all that was available and all that was happening at the federal level that was impacting their access to these programs. A lot of folks were not aware of their extended recertification deadline, and we were informing people of that during the study. A lot of folks couldn’t get a caseworker, they couldn’t get ahold of a caseworker because of increased demand and case workers just being strapped for time. There are folks that were excluded from the program who probably would’ve been eligible had they been able to engage in the process. We also learned that folks were not aware of the different, the different ways that redemption challenges are using benefits in stores or online, how that had shifted to reduce burden. We did some comparisons with WIC. A lot of folks didn’t know that there were these new food flexibilities for WIC that reduced the redemption costs of using benefits in stores. A lot of participants, SNAP participants, weren’t aware of the online shopping option, which would’ve given them a ton of flexibility in how they use benefits, especially during the initial few months of the pandemic when there were obviously health concerns.

I guess the bottom line, or the takeaway is that there were a lot of amazing sea-changing watershed moments in federal policy that once trickled down through state and local implementation didn’t necessarily have the bite or the impact for those who really struggled to access programs. We know that for those who were able to receive SNAP and who were able to engage, nutrition assistance programs and Medicaid and the like, they benefited significantly, SNAP was an essential buffer to economic hardship. We know that it was crucial for folks that were weathering potential food insecurity, but for the folks that couldn’t get access or for the more complicated, the complicated question of whether these burden reducing strategies really the impact had they could have had, that’s sort of something we need to think through.

How do we make implementation, how do we prioritize implementation and bureaucratic capacity in the same way that we prioritize these major policy changes Because bureaucrats, even if they want to be helpful, are still adapting to unprecedented demand and unprecedented policy change. That means that there are going to be some families that are lost in the shuffle.

Norbert Wilson: Thank you both for those comments. Carolyn, one of the things that really struck me in hearing about some of the work that you were doing on administrative burden is understanding that everyone didn’t have the same experience when trying to engage their case worker. One of the things that was very surprising for me, in looking at the data out of USDA about food insecurity, was the food insecurity rate stayed flat during the early part of the pandemic. A lot of people were anticipating that there was going to be this major spike in food insecurity at the national level, and we saw it held constant. I’m wondering, and there was a second part to that story, is that if you looked at it by race, you saw that African American households and Hispanic households, so there’s pretty significant jump up in food insecurity in the early part of the pandemic. They saw a decline, but not even to the pre-pandemic era, but they did see a decline. I’m wondering if some of the work that you’ve done helps us understand some of that, because I will say a lot of folks were mystified by the flatness of the rate, but then also the diversity that happened.

Carolyn Barnes: So, you’re saying the food insecurity rate nationally was flat, but for African Americans it dropped. Norbert Wilson: It increased it. Carolyn Barnes: It increased.

Norbert Wilson: It increased.

Carolyn Barnes: So, in our sample in North Carolina, we over sample African Americans. So, 67% of our sample are African-American folks across a range of counties. I do think it’s an administrative exclusion story, like what happens when you try, even if you are eligible, and you just can’t engage the bureaucracy in a way that leads to benefits. I do think that that is, that could be a plausible alternative explanation for why we see that. Yes, I always say, I’ve always been thinking through cost sharing agreements. I think you’ve heard me say this over and repeatedly Norbert, but it’s like the cost sharing agreements for administering these programs. We really should think about that. You know, if states are on the hook for half of the administrative budget for these programs for SNAP, then we need to think through what that means when you’re in a lower resource state or region where there’s an underinvestment in administration. It doesn’t matter if you waive interview requirements or if you do it on self-income or self-attestation for income. I’m not having to fill out all these forms and document all these different things. It doesn’t matter if you cannot get ahold of the person who would process your application, or it doesn’t matter if you don’t get a response from the agency once you’ve hit submit, or once you’ve dropped off your application, it just doesn’t matter right? I’m sort of thinking through, critically, how do we support states that are where there’s clearly variation in their administrative capacity. We know what this variation looks like in terms of the generosity of benefits, especially in the cash assistance space and certainly in Medicaid. We know that southeastern states and southern states in general and ideologically conservative states tend to be the least generous, most punitive, and have programs that are the most difficult to access on the rules and benefits side. But what about the administrative capacity side, right? How big are their offices? How many workers do they have? What’s the investment in professional development and training? What’s the investment in software? I talk to caseworkers all the time and they mentioned the challenges of keying in an application. What does it take to successfully process an application or successfully process a recertification and thinking through ways to support workers and support bureaucracies that are trying to process or trying to accommodate, I should say, this new demand, this new level of demand.

So, to answer your question, I do think that this is an implementation story that needs to be told.

Norbert Wilson: Yes, thanks Carolyn. I really do appreciate it. It was clear from the work that Alfonso and I did that just if you could just help folks with eligibility, one that the eligibility and then where that rolls into participation can be an important aspect of what happens to meeting resource gaps. But Alfonso, one of the things that I know we’ve been dealing with, we as in a society, have been dealing with is the debt limit, debt ceiling debates, and what came out was an effort to raise the age of people who were going to be considered ABAWDs, Able Bodied Working Adults Without Children or Without Dependents. It moved from 50 to 54. I’m just wondering, given the work that you were talking about, this idea of SNAP, trying to make sure SNAP allowed for or doesn’t discourage unemployment. I know that a lot of the work that you were reading was saying that no SNAP doesn’t harm employment. I’m just wondering if you have some insights about what that means in terms of the raising of that age limit.

Alfonso Flores-Lagunes: Yes, absolutely. I think that in the larger scheme of things, given that this is a very specific population that is affected by the race in this age from 49 to 54. It’s again, looking at the whole average is tiny the effect that this is going to have in terms of increasing the labor supply of SNAP participants. Of course, and I remark that this is in general because still there are 700,000 people that fall into this category, which is about 2% of people receiving SNAP. But they are going to be adversely affected by not receiving or having the work requirements. But in general, economically is not a significant increase in labor force participation or availability of workers to make things better in the labor market. I believe that by and large this is something more political than meaningfully economically.

Norbert Wilson: I will say, having done some interviews with individuals, especially older adults, and not necessarily in that narrow range, but as folks age, employment opportunities, skills, the ability to find new opportunities, it becomes challenging and realizing that these are also individuals who may be taking on other kinds of family responsibilities. It raises several questions for what will happen to some of those folks. But I will also add that debt ceiling negotiation also changed the dynamic in terms of veterans, children who, adults who came out of the foster care up to the age of 25 and homeless individuals or people who are unhoused, where those by restrictions were removed is an interesting result. That looks like when you looked at the CBO scoring, it seems like there might be more people who participate in the SNAP program given those exemptions. It’s going to be an interesting outcome to see what happens because of these changes.

Jeff Harris: Thank you all so much. We are already starting to get a handful of wonderful questions coming in. We are by no means running close and need to do rapid fire, but we will try and get through as many of these as we can in the time allotted here. So, the first question is unclear who has the answer, but it’s a question about emergency SNAP and any increased demand that may have created on supermarkets or other food sources that folks are going to. So unclear if any of you have an answer for this or if someone would like to jump in with a response.

Norbert Wilson: I’ll just say if I understand the question correctly, the idea of the emergency SNAP benefits that came through the pandemic did allow for people, who would’ve had difficulty accessing or purchasing food, greater purchasing power to go to the grocery store to purchase food. Now what the sort of broader economic effect of that it is not a hundred percent clear to me in terms of inflationary effects, but I mean it did grant some benefits to local economies and SNAP is shown to have economic multiplier effects that is dollars that are spent on SNAP do benefit some local economies. So, it might have been helpful in that respect, not just for the recipients obviously, but for those communities where individuals reside to get that extra benefit. I hope that’s answering the person’s question.

Alfonso Flores-Lagunes: Just to quickly weigh in. If the question is getting at any inflationary pressures, I think that we also need to take into consideration the extraordinary circumstances in terms of the world economy with the conflict in Ukraine and so on that limited the availability of grains and other products throughout the world, not only in the United States. In general, I wouldn’t be overly concerned about inflationary pressures that having these additional SNAP resources for nourishing is going to create in the larger economy through inflation.

Jeff Harris: Our next question here is about that wonderful acronym ABAWD, Norbert, I’m hoping you can just define folks very briefly as we get into this question. But, can anyone speak about the possible administrative burden from ABAWD exemptions on SNAP offices and on SNAP beneficiaries?

Carolyn Barnes: I guess the most, I wouldn’t say obvious, that sounds like not the best word to use, but it expands burden to a population that did not experience burden before. There’s a whole new set of learning costs. Learning what’s required of me now that I’m no longer eligible in the way that I was prior to this change. What’s required of me now and then compliance costs, how do I have to document my work efforts? Then the psychological cost of having to meet with the SNAP worker potentially in whatever stigma or stress or complexity that might present itself that I otherwise would’ve foregone in the previous sort of iteration of the federal policy. There’s a potential there that in some states a person who didn’t experience these burdens is now going to have to experience these burdens. From the case worker perspective, it’s again, learning new policy and adapting to new policy. I don’t know what that’s going to do for demand. This might have a chilling effect for older adults, who are not yet retired in whether they want to even pursue SNAP. I don’t know what this is going to do for demand per se from that slice of the population, but I do think there’s going to be some adaptation for workers in learning new rules and that is a stressful process for workers. We’ve seen that in the work that we’ve done on workers adapting to COVID policy waivers, that’s stressful. I imagine that it will be stressful for workers. I will say that in my experience, and back to Alfonso’s earlier comments about the long run effects of SNAP, the model SNAP participant happens to be families with small children or typically families, with kids under 18. But the model SNAP participant is a household where there are children present. So, I, as a thought exercise, I think what will likely happen is most case workers won’t be impacted by these changes. Those who do handle ABAWD cases will have to do some new learning on the ground, especially if they’re not in a state that hasn’t already used its waiver to shift work requirements for that population and that those who didn’t experience burdens before now have to experience burdens.

Norbert Wilson: There’s also the case, if I’m not mistaken, that the age, the raising of the age is going to be done in pieces. I think it’s going to go from zero to, from 50 to 52, then 52 to 54. So that sort of transition period also adds complexity to it. While it allows people to step into it, it also means people need to be aware of what’s happening and take in that information and abide accordingly. I’m not so much worried about the case workers, but I’m thinking about regular citizens who are thinking, am I still eligible? I just turned 52, what happened? I think it causes some concerns and there’s going to be a need for communicating that and helping people navigate those rules.

Jeff Harris: Okay our next question here offers up the theory of the case that if we’re in a situation where spending does need to be reduced by some amount on SNAP, what would you think would be ways to look at offsetting potential impact? I know this question asks about those who need, let me avoid the notion of the judgment call, but also Carolyn, you started to talk about this, about the model SNAP recipient, and can you just talk a little bit about again, the different makeups of sort of who is in that profile of SNAP recipients and how if anyone wants to chime in then how potential changes or reductions in SNAP spending in the Farm Bill might impact different populations?

Carolyn Barnes: This is such a tricky question because to make these kinds of tradeoffs or engage this sort of thought experiment, I think you’d need to figure out what’s your ideal for the program. So relative to other programs, SNAP coverage rate is high. I think it’s about 85% of folks who are eligible receive it. There’s variation, I could be wrong on that number. Norbert and Alfonso, correct me if I’m wrong, but relative to say the WIC program which is 54% or hovering around 50%, SNAP has taken up quite well. The question is with SNAP, the issue of churn. So, who ends up falling off and having to get back on and the burdensome experience of having to do all of that stuff. I think to answer that question, we would need to think about what’s the ideal world for SNAP? Like what’s the ideal participation rate for SNAP? Who benefits most from SNAP? The tail end of the question is who really needs SNAP? I think policymakers thinking through cost benefit analysis and tradeoffs, are they going to look for the return? Who really benefits most from SNAP, and how do we design a program that works for families that benefit the most from SNAP? That would be the exercise I’d engage in. But I think anyone who’s eligible should be getting the program. I don’t want to make the tough call to begin with, I guess is my intent or my heart is that I don’t want to make that call to begin with because I think, you know, we shouldn’t have food insecurity rates or poverty rates. We’re at an all-time low in terms of poverty, but in general, relative to other developed countries, our safety net isn’t where it should be. I think we could be far more generous, but that’s where I would start. I don’t know of an option that would cause the least impacts on those who really need SNAP, in part because we don’t know what’s the ideal SNAP world. Do we want a hundred percent coverage rate? What are we okay with in terms of what would reflect an effective program?

Jeff Harris: Has there been any work looking at the racial makeup of SNAP participants relative to agency, staff, and how that might impact participation rates?

Norbert Wilson: I can say I don’t know if there’s work, and I’ll lean to my colleagues here about the concordance. So, I assume the question is asking if I’m African American, does it matter if my case worker’s African American and does it matter or if there’s not concordance? I know in medical literature, there’s a lot of discussion about this and that literature’s diverse in terms of what the findings are. But I would say, I don’t know if anything specific, but I’ll leave it to my colleagues here to speak if they know about their studies.

Carolyn Barnes: So, there isn’t anything on SNAP. I don’t know if there’s anything on, so the idea of representative bureaucracy, like do you have folks in the bureaucracy that look like you. There’s been a lot of work on representative bureaucracy across the range of agencies. I’m not sure if there’s anything new about SNAP. I will say that there is some rich, amazing qualitative work on case workers during welfare reform and the role that racial identity played or being a race mate with your client played in how case workers made decisions and how clients experienced programs. It turns out policy matters most. So, policy pressures shaped workers’ behaviors. There wasn’t any significant difference between having a Hispanic worker or a Black worker or an Asian worker or any sort of demographic identity of the worker. It didn’t have the sort of effects that we’d assume it would have in the quality of that experience. It was really the extent to which the worker felt pressured by policy and workers themselves developed their own unique identities in response to policies and organizational pressures. It’s not necessarily true that if I had a black case worker, I would be treated better than if I had a white case worker. I’m doing some work now about what race means in the quality of bureaucratic encounters in the role south. That could be context dependent. I know her work was in Massachusetts; my work is in North Carolina and other states. It could be that for that case, policy matters more, but in other contexts, race, the racial identity of the worker might matter more. That’s just a comment there. Nothing on SNAP specifically that I know of, but other work shows that it’s a little more complicated than what we would anticipate.

Alfonso Flores-Lagunes: Just quickly, I agree with my panelists and co-panelists, there is evidence from other countries about other safety type of safety net programs that seem to show that there is some impact. But what I submit to you is that if the race or ethnicity or ability of a case worker matters for takeoff, then I wouldn’t say that it is a problem of a mismatch of race and ethnicity or groups. It’s more a problem of the application process and the intricacies of the rules rather than, you know, whether you’re lucky in finding a case worker of your same social demographic group or race and ethnicities. I would be in favor of just focusing on simplifying some of these rules that, you know, the focus on work requirements really describes from the aspect of hunger, which is the main purpose of this program.

Jeff Harris: Next question. Does PEN have any recommendations, or I’ll add any references to sources of information on how to support nonprofit workers, who process SNAP applications and help people enroll in SNAP? Questions specifically from a staff person whose member has heard in their own home district that nonprofit workers have insufficient capacity to enroll everyone in need of SNAP?

Carolyn Barnes: I don’t want to add a new task, but I think outreach is critical and reducing some of those costs in advance of submitting the application would both increase the likelihood that someone has a successful claim for SNAP and would also reduce the burden of the worker that’s trying to help someone enroll. What I mean is getting outside of the organization and doing more grassroots things that are grassroots strategies, taking on grassroot strategies to connect with SNAP participants or those who might be eligible, I’ve always been a big proponent of targeting childcare centers and churches, especially in the south, where a lot of low-income families would have those interactions, and providing an advance information about what’s needed. So, what kinds of documents might I need, especially as the public health emergency order has now been lifted, like what kinds of documents might I need going into the application in the work that I’ve done. A lot of people ask them like how did they learn about the program and how did they apply? They report relying on their social networks, not a formal case worker or even a formal nonprofit. Is there a way to kind of shift gears and engage in sort of a grassroots communication strategy about what’s necessary to have a successful SNAP application? I think that could be a way to support workers.

Norbert Wilson: I’ve been in conversation with a person who’s involved in a local nonprofit and this person has raised the challenge of navigating the rules and being able to help applicants through the process. Because of the differences by state, there’s some variation that can occur that it’s critical for nonprofits who are trying to help individuals to have a detailed understanding of what the rules are and to help people navigate that. It becomes even more difficult because they’re not able to go in and if you put the information in, there are some challenges electronically even just to apply. I think there are some spaces for groups to help understand that process and to help people navigate that process.

Carolyn Barnes: One more thing. I know that Don Moynihan and Pam Heard have been doing some work with Code for America, which helps folks in California, I think, and some other states apply for SNAP, but I think they have some either papers out or papers that are coming that speak to that. So, what can third parties do to boost SNAP participation? That might be something to think through how does civic technology affect this as a third party and I think they address some of those concerns about like different systems and logistically helping people.

Jeff Harris: We still have a handful of questions here and nine minutes to go. So I’m going to ask our panelists if we shift into a rapid fire format here if that’s all right. I know we’ve talked a little bit about the debt ceiling deals impact already. Are there any final thoughts on just ways that might impact the upcoming Farm Bill, either in total dollar amount or in some of the changes that are going to be implemented as a result?

Norbert Wilson: I think we knew the answer to that. Well because of those ABAWD rules and the exemptions, I would hope that that’s been worked out so that we don’t have to see that debate occur again in the Farm Bill. Hopefully because those rules that came out of debt ceiling go into 2030, if I remember correctly, and therefore it should cover the Farm Bill. Hopefully they can avoid that fight. I think we’ll only see once the sort of first rounds of Farm Bill legislation come through for that conversation to be made real.

Jeff Harris: All right. Moving on. Increasing working hours and getting promotion may negatively impact SNAP beneficiaries as we know more commonly the SNAP benefits cliff. Has anyone done research on the SNAP benefits cliff, and could you provide any brief insights into policy solutions to address that?

Norbert Wilson: I know that Goodwill Industries is working on this, and they’re working in collaboration with the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, and I think Atlanta. There’s a researcher out of, I think, the Federal Reserve Bank in Atlanta that has some work in this space. It is an interesting thing and I know the Goodwill industry folks; they are looking at trying to come up with a code or a reference book to help employers help their employees through these issues of the benefits cliff.

Carolyn Barnes: Yes, I was going to say yes to the Atlanta Fed having incredible resources that document benefit cliffs across states and what it would take to reduce benefit cliffs. The number one thing that I hear from SNAP participants at cycle on and off the program is the income guidelines are too low. They don’t consider my expenses. There’s a lot of complaints, not necessarily about administrative burden, but literally the guidelines of the program and like the contours of eligibility, it’s not generous enough, and it’s not targeting a wide enough pool of families and that’s, you know, that’s something that must shift legislatively. Like we would have to change legislation to make it so that more low-income working families were benefiting from the program. That’s a hard thing to do.

Jeff Harris: Next question, but has there been any progress or recent changes in removing the ban for those who have felonies from the ability to receive SNAP benefits?

Norbert Wilson: Well, I know in the 2018 Farm Bill they kept out. There was some conversation around expanding that. It’s on a state-by-state basis. South Carolina, I think, is the only state that has a really very strict ban. North Carolina has a ban. I don’t know if it’s going to come up in this Farm Bill. I hope not. I would love to see; I should be careful. I think it’s critical for us to have a thoughtful approach to what we’re doing with those kinds of restrictions. I was interviewing someone who had a felony drug conviction in another state, moved to North Carolina and this is an individual who was struggling because they were not able to access SNAP from something that happened in their youth, and yet it still was a burden for them. I think there’s some real costs. There was a study out of Florida that looked at how costly it is these policies, not only for the individual but also for the state. I would say these kinds of restrictions are really… can be problematic for folks.

Jeff Harris: Okay. I think we are getting close to time here. We’ll try and squeeze in one or two more. Could you all speak each of you about any parts of the application process or anything else within individual’s interaction with the SNAP benefit that would be either most complicated or burdensome that might be able to benefit from policy changes. So again, is there anything in the application process or otherwise where policy changes might be able to help address the complications or burden? Carolyn, I see you just came back, but just to reiterate the last question we’re going through here. Could you speak about which parts of the application process are most complicated or burdensome?

Carolyn Barnes: For both workers and participants, it’s documenting employment. Documenting employment workers have a hard time. It is what’s most burdensome for participants and actually ends up being most burdensome for workers, who are implementing the program. And that’s gathering and confirming information. Documenting employment and earnings tends to be the trickiest thing, especially if folks have intermittent employment or if folks have non-standard work hours or precarious work hours, it becomes tricky for applicants to correctly document that and make sure that they’re getting the level of benefits that they need. It’s hard for workers to track that information down. The second thing would be like household composition, which can be tricky for low-income families that might be doubling up or temporarily staying with folks as they deal with their own housing insecurity issues. So, the gathering information part, documenting pay, and documenting household composition tends to be the most difficult.

Jeff Harris: And in closing here, just to give Norbert, Alfonso both you a chance, since administrative burden really is Carolyn’s area of expertise, is there anything else within this discussion that you’d like to leave staff with a notion of some areas of possible policy change or improvement that would be worth exploring in the upcoming Farm Bill reauthorization?

Alfonso Flores-Lagunes: Well one aspect that comes to mind is the Thrifty Food plan, which is sort of the basis for the level of generosity of the benefits. And particularly right now with inflation, there is only one update a year of these Thrifty Food Plan and that will create, I mean this just discreteness will create some hardship for individuals as they try to make those benefits last longer throughout the cycle.

Norbert Wilson: I’ll add to that Thrifty Food Plan. There was a readjustment in 2021, that allowed for a higher benefit level. It was a critical one and I think it was in the 2018 Farm Bill where the idea was that it was going to happen regularly beforehand. It wasn’t happening that regularly. So, adjustment of that Thrifty Food Plan which sets the maximum benefit level, that then influences the benefit levels that everyone receives is a critical factor in helping make sure the farm, excuse me, helping make sure that the SNAP program really meets the food needs of families. I would say the other part is, is anything that we can do that allows people to understand their ability to access the program and their ability to get the benefits. I want to pick up on what Carolyn was talking about: who’s in the household, and it becomes a little bit trickier when you talk about older adults, when you have individuals who may be coming in and out of the household, maybe as children, maybe it’s your grandchildren and being able to document that well and knowing that households can change over the course of a month, if not over a year. So being able to really capture that could be important for some families.

 

 

 

Webinar: Beyond Talking Points – Nutrition Assistance Programs and the Farm Bill

Webinar: Beyond Talking Points – Nutrition Assistance Programs and the Farm Bill

Farm Bill Event
Recorded: Jun 28, 2023 12:00 PM  EDT (US and Canada)
Last reauthorized in 2018, the Farm Bill remains one of the most significant and comprehensive pieces of legislation affecting American agriculture and rural communities. This event is the second in a two-part virtual series, “Beyond Talking Points: The Past, Present and Future of the Farm Bill,” which aims to provide relevant perspectives on the Farm Bill reauthorization debate.
Originally signed into law in 1933, the legislation was meant to provide a safety net for farmers, ensure a reliable food supply and protect against soil loss in the wake of the Dust Bowl. Today the Farm Bill also includes nutrition assistance programs, rural development, agricultural research and many other initiatives. The discussion will provide an overview of the key issues at stake and offer insights into potential policy solutions that could help address the challenges facing American agriculture and rural communities.

Panelists Include: 

Carolyn Barnes | Assistant Professor, Duke University Sanford School of Public Policy

Norbert Wilson | Professor of Food, Economics, and Community and Director of the Duke University Sanford World Food Policy Center

Alfonso Flores-Lagunes | Professor of Economics, Syracuse University Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs

Essay: A Hunger for Justice: Food Insecurity and God’s Abundance

raise the morsel of bread, the host. Looking into the expectant eyes, I state: “The body of Christ, broken for you.” Laying the crumby bread into the bowl-shaped hands, I smile. For a brief moment our hands touch. Then, almost reflexively, the recipient scoops the morsel into their mouth to receive the bread of life. We share in the charity of Christ.

Even before I was an ordained deacon in the Episcopal Church, I had borne the body of Christ, this sacred bite, to hungry folks many times before. As the paten is an empty vessel to carry the spiritual meal, we who serve God in this meal or any food ministry are here as a vessel for God’s abundance.

Serving Holy Communion, the Eucharist, informs my notions of food ministry, and growing up in a Black Baptist church founded my understanding of ministering through food. Repasses after funerals, breakfasts after Easter sunrise services, potlucks after big Sunday services — all were expressions of love to one another and foretastes of the Great Banquet. We delighted in God’s abundance collectively, even if some did not have much individually. Leftovers in foil-tented plates may have helped a member, especially a “senior saint,” stretch the dwindling food stores until the next month’s check or charity. These communal meals were important ways to support one another and others beyond the church in accessing food.

CONNECTING CHURCH FOOD AND CHARITABLE FOOD
I could not have imagined that these early and sustained experiences with food in the church would inform my professional expertise. As an agricultural economist, I found few ways to connect these ideas with my secular work until Martha Henk, executive director of the Food Bank of East Alabama, asked me to join the food bank board in Auburn. Serving on the board gave me new insights into the challenges of food insecurity locally and nationally. I worked with members representing vastly different aspects of society — business, ecclesial, governmental, and civil society leaders — to support the food bank and meet the needs of as many folks as possible. We were not naïve enough to think that the food bank’s work alone would eliminate food insecurity. I wonder, though, if the busyness had us so focused on the immediate need that we did not consider the larger issues faced by families in our community. Nevertheless, my participation on the board sparked a new focus of research and engagement.

Today, when I teach my Charitable Foods course at Duke Divinity, we push each other — instructor and learners — to think critically about the good work of giving food to people in need. We interrogate established institutions and individual actions with an eye toward constructive and practical ways to address the charity and justice gap in the emergency food sector (food banks, food pantries, soup kitchens, and the like).

Deeply embedded in many religious traditions is a call to care for the poor, offering charity to those in need. That charity is frequently the work of justice, addressing the misalignment of our ideals of a free society with the everyday experiences of those in need. Further, many of us in the Christian tradition feel compelled to serve the Lord unawares (see Hebrews 13:2) by feeding the hungry, caring for the stranger, and visiting the prisoner. Thus, a duty to serve is integral to the identity of the Christian. But those involved in charity work must think through what we are doing and our motivation for doing it.

When week after week, or month after month, we see the same people cycling through our food pantry, or those individuals tend not to look like our community, in whatever way defined, we should ask ourselves why this is happening. Janet Poppendieck argues in her book Sweet Charity that early creators of the charitable food sector saw it as emergency relief. But what happens when the emergency is not temporary but is a chronic problem? The food we are giving is not solving the root problem that keeps certain folks returning. Is our notion of caring for people who experience food insecurity too limited, meeting an immediate need at best? Are we perpetuating an injustice?

Reducing the solution of food insecurity to financial or charitable transactions fails to acknowledge the complexity of the food system and the human and ecological systems that support it.

FOOD INSECURITY AS A JUSTICE ISSUE
The paradoxical solution to food insecurity in the U.S. is not food. Rather, families with concerns or limited access to food need financial resources and economic opportunities to provide for themselves. Consider two of the 10 statements that the U.S. government uses to evaluate food insecurity:

1. “(I/We) worried whether (my/our) food would run out before (I/we) got money to buy more.”
2. “The food that (I/we) bought just didn’t last, and (I/we) didn’t have money to get more.”

These statements focus on concerns about accessing food because of financial resources and assert that food access would not be a problem if people had enough money. Without a doubt, folks without financial means cannot support their family’s food needs. Through economic opportunities or social support, individuals can access resources to obtain food.

Federally, we provide this social support through programs such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formally the Food Stamp Program) and the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC). But is not our ability to feed ourselves more than just our capacity to purchase foods? Our families, social location, culture, and identity shape our foodways. Resources such as time, health, and capacity are necessary to feed ourselves. Reducing the solution of food insecurity to financial or charitable transactions fails to acknowledge the complexity of the food system and the human and ecological systems that support it. While from a technocratic viewpoint food insecurity can be considered a matter of inefficiency, fundamentally food insecurity and, more broadly, challenges in the food system are justice concerns. As a result, we need a food justice lens.

In Cultivating Food Justice, Alison Hope Alkon and Julian Agyeman describe food justice as a broad construct that scholars and activists use to describe an ideal food system. Some voices argue for food justice where everyone can access the foods they need that are culturally relevant and environmentally sustainable. Others point to exacerbating racial and class inequalities in the food system. Others demand a de-corporatization of the food system with an orientation toward local foods. While some long for agrarianism that supports small producers using traditional techniques, others believe that a technologically advanced and efficient food system will yield a sufficient food supply for the most people possible. The distinctions and categorizations suggested here are imperfect; we can find people who propose different assortments of these ideas (and others) to define what true food justice should be. The larger point is that there are different conceptions of food justice, and we need a well-informed public discussion of these ideas of justice for the food system.

In my research and teaching, I hope to engage students, faculty, community members, businesses, and policymakers in productive conversations to develop a fuller and better understanding of a just food system. Admittedly, some of these ideas of justice are in conflict. In reality, ideas of food justice highlight political and cultural perceptions of justice and rights on which we have not achieved consensus. Navigating these challenges means that a just food system, like food insecurity, is not simply about food. I am not the first to argue that food is political and also cultural. Conceptions of food and the food system reflect and refract our deepest values and ideals. Thus, we need multiple voices to have meaningful conversations on food in our society.

In reality, ideas of food justice highlight political and cultural perceptions of justice and rights on which we have not achieved consensus. Navigating these challenges means that a just food system, like food insecurity, is not simply about food.

THEOLOGY AND FOOD JUSTICE AT DUKE
Working at Duke Divinity School has broadened my perspectives on food issues. At Duke Divinity, great colleagues like Norman Wirzba and Ellen Davis have thought critically about food in both society and Scripture. We also have amazing students who extend our conversations, especially those in the Food, Faith, and Environmental Justice certificate. Beyond the Divinity School, the engagement of the World Food Policy Center and the Sanford School of Public Policy, along with other units at Duke and throughout the Triangle region, create opportunities to see food and the food system more fully. We can move beyond discussion to create solutions to the injustices of the food system. Duke Divinity School is a wonderful place to participate in these efforts. What does this mean, however, for people beyond this place?

First, we must welcome the broader community into these conversations and seek the restoration of the food system through traditional and new modalities. Food is too big to discuss in an ivory tower alone. These conversations and solutions must have roots grounded in the reality of everyday life and needs. Thus, I hope that we can find ways to learn from each other and co-create knowledge. Second, I want to see the exchanges of ideas and praxis that I described earlier happen in settings beyond the academy. Third, I am concerned that our work and conversation about food systems frequently occur in silos with little exposure to larger and more diverse audiences. I would like to see conversations in houses of worship, businesses, community centers, and homes where people of differing views and life experiences begin to address food concerns and partner to take on problems in their local food system. Duke Divinity theology professor Luke Bretherton might provide insights into participating in these conversations and organizing in constructive and generative ways in his Listen, Organize, Act model.

THE GARDEN OF ABUNDANCE

Growing up, my parents always had a garden. I hated cutting okra. I remember the green hue of my fingers after shelling peas. Crookneck squash, which I thought was the only squash that existed, and tomatoes (for frying when green or eating directly once red) were abundant and flavorful. I always loved the collard, mustard, and turnip greens, a different trinity that this garden produced over the year and that my momma cooked to perfection. Even now, deep into their retirements, my parents maintain this garden. The mix of foods has changed, but staples are still there.

My parents have always shared the garden’s bounty with family and neighbors. The example of my parents and their garden, the take-out meals after church repasses, and the morsel of the bread of Communion are manifestations of the grace of the Holy Parent sharing creation’s wealth with all of creation. Despite the real scarcity that we create, like food insecurity, we have these experiences that show that abundance exists if only we can see it, if only we remove obstacles so that all can share in this abundance. The work for food justice that I hope occurs here at Duke Divinity and in your community will move us to experience God’s grace. As we taste and see this abundance, we will know that it is too good for ourselves alone, and like my parents and their garden, we will share in the abundance of truly just food.

This essay by Norbert Wilson was originally published on the Duke University Divinity School Medium channel.

Wilson and Zuckerman to speak at 2023 Rural Food Forum

The 2023 Rural Food Forum will engage stakeholders from across North Carolina in an in-depth conversation about access to healthy foods and the importance of healthy foods to individuals and community health. Participants will also share their experiences and engage with key leaders to help inform future priorities regarding healthy food. The annual forum is sponsored by the Green Rural Redevelopment Organization and the Eva Clayton Rural Food Institute.

Jen Zuckerman will speak in Session C – Equity and Racism in Food Systems, focused on the role and influence racism plays on health and food systems, barriers, and the work being done to overcome these issues.

Moderator:  Dr. Mariah Murrell, VP of Equity, Diversity & Inclusion at Food Bank of Central & Eastern NC

Speakers:

  • Shorlette Ammons, Program Director, Farm Aid
  • Sharon Berrun, American Indian Studies Coordinator and Teacher, Haliwa Saponi Tribal School
  • Rosa Saavedra, Project Coordinator, Rural Coalition
  • Jen Zuckerman, Director of Strategic Initiatives at World Food Policy Center, Sanford School of Public Policy, Duke University

Norbert Wilson will speak during the “Food For Thought” A Panel Conversation with Thought Leaders. His panel of diverse voices in the food system space will discuss the role public policy plays in helping move the needle as it relates to food.

Moderator:  Bob Etheridge, State Executive Director, USDA Farm Service Agency (FSA) in NC

Speakers:

  • ​Michael Carter, The Carter Farms
  • The Honorable Eva Clayton, Former U.S. Congresswoman
  • Scott Marlow, Deputy Administrator for Farm Programs, USDA Farm Service Agency (FSA)
  • Mikki Sager, The Boss of Me!
  • Dr. Norbert Wilson, Director of the Duke World Food Policy Center, and a Professor of Food, Economics, and Community at Duke Divinity School

Reflections on the 2022 White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition and Health

By Denise Rebeil

On Wednesday September 28, 2022 I had the tremendous privilege of participating in the historic White House Conference on Food, Nutrition, and Health. The last time this conference was held was in 1969, and it helped create life changing programs like school lunches, the Supplemental Feeding Program for Women Infants and Children (WIC), and changes to how we label foods.

This year’s conference convened elected officials, advocates, activists, leaders of business, and philanthropist from all over the country as well as President Biden. Biden’s opening remarks made a bold goal: “…to end hunger in America and increase healthy eating and physical activity by 2030 so fewer Americans experience diet related diseases.” While this seemed an impossible idea, being in the room with such driven, powerful, and firm believers that hunger should not exist and in fact should be illegal made me hopeful!

President Biden
President Biden

Members of Congress from across the political spectrum came together for this White House Conference, including U.S. Representatives James P. McGovern, U.S. Senators Cory Booker, and Mike Braun (who were the bipartisan sponsors of the conference). Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley and llhan Omar, amongst others, were also in attendance (I internally squealed when I saw them but a few yards away during the opening remarks.)

Booker
Senator Cory Booker, Senator Mike Braun, Ambassador Susan Rice, Chariman Jim McGovern

 

Being able to attend this conference and represent the Duke World Food Policy Center and my food policy research with El Departamento de la Comida (El Depa)—a food sovereignty and mutual aid organization based out of Puerto Rico—was an immense honor. Puerto Rico has again suffered the consequences from climate change via another hurricane (Fiona) and is facing not only ongoing infrastructure issues but also food insecurity. While I do not have lived experience as a Puerto Rican because I identify as Chicana/Mexican American, during my limited time on the island I familiarized myself with their food systems, lack of resources, and identified gaps by working directly within the community and with El Depa.

Denise Rebeil - White House Conference
Denise Rebeil

As U.S. citizens we should all be advocating on behalf Puerto Rico; many people are still without power and dealing with the aftermath of Maria and now Fiona. I was ecstatic, though, to see some Puerto Ricans at the conference who were advocating for action for the island and was able to connect with them! More light needs be shined on all the work being done by locals in Puerto Rico. Please donate to El Depa if you are able too.

I attended two panels out of the ten occurring throughout the day. Each panel focused on one of the five pillars involving the Biden-Harris Administration National Strategy on Hunger, Nutrition, and Health (you can find the complete strategy plan here). The panelists were all led by people directly serving and/or advocating for communities in a range of areas which made me very happy. One particular panel I enjoyed was called, “Pillar 5B – Advancing Equitable Research: Developing Innovative Inclusive Policy Solutions.”

As an MPP (Masters in Public Policy) student, I was interested in how directly impacted individuals are informing (or not) research in this particular area. In other words, I’m interested in how research informs policy action but is not always inclusive to those directly impacted. One ongoing theme throughout the panel and the conference was the underrepresentation of diverse individuals in the health world and in research. I found myself asking: how many at this conference have actually experienced hunger? How many people in government elected positions understand what it is like to not know where your next meal is coming? As someone whose family used food stamps and faced some food insecurity, I evaluated how that impacted my development and my growth as well as how my lived experience can better inform food policy.

The following were some quotes that stood out to me from the panelists and the Conference talks:

Mia Ives-Rublee discussed how often disabled people are left out of the conversation of food insecurity. They brought up how disabled people suffer hunger three times more than able-bodied people but are often ignored or not included in research or policy. As she says, “I hate the term voiceless communities, no community is voiceless, you are just not listening to that community.” – Mia Ives-Rublee, Director of the Disability Justice Initiative, Center for American Progress

“Remember when we discuss data, we are talking about people.”– Jimmieka Mills, Co-Founder, Equitable Spaces

“The good ideas come from the community…Food is medicine.” – Chairwoman Debbie Stabenow

Mayor Eric Adams began presenting pre-diabetic symptoms, and once he changed his eating habits his health completely changed and offset his diabetes altogether. He expressed the following, “Going to bed with a full stomach but it is unhealthy, is feeding the American crisis…Our food is destroying our planet, our families, and children.” – Mayor Eric Adams

“Through the power of food, we unite communities…To often charity is to the benefit of the giver, instead of the liberation of the receiver.” – Chef Jose Andres

Towards the end of the conference, they held small group working sessions related to our pillar interests. Our topic was on how research can inform action in policy. In this group, I met two researchers (Harvard and Yale scholars), a representative from Feeding America, and a businessperson assisting community Co-op’s. We collaborated and helped identify actions people can take individually and collectively to help achieve the end of hunger and reduce diet-related disease within our topic focus. Towards the end our conversation, the second gentleman made an appearance (!!) at our discussion table with their aid. I was given the opportunity to bring forward my thoughts regarding this topic. I told him people with lived experiences should be informing research and be encouraged to become researchers themselves because they know their communities best. I also added that if research is happening on behalf of a community, it needs to be collaborative research where they help guide and inform needs and issues. He voiced that my recommendations had been coming up a lot within all the discussion groups he had visited. After small group conversations, it was affirming to hear the second gentleman bring up our discussions with the larger conference attendees.

There are not enough words or time to capture all of the inspiring people who spoke and I met at this conference. It was truly awakening and charged me up to press on and do more within food policy. I left reinvigorated and wanting to know more about all the different areas of food policy in existence. Some of the most interesting talks happened outside of formal panels in hallways, getting lost finding a panel room, or at lunch that I had taken with me. Below are some key takeaways from my experience.

Key Takeaways:

  1. We need diverse individuals in the health industry and in food policy research to best serve the needs of those being disproportionately impacted by food insecurity.
  2. Hunger should be made illegal.
  3. Providing food is not enough, we need to provide nutritional food to all communities.
  4. This is a nonpartisan issue: lets unite forces and pass the legislature needed to ensure food insecurity is a thing of the past.

You can find the Biden-Harris Administration National Strategy on Hunger, Nutrition, and Health here.

Duke responds to UN Special Rapporteur call for input on the impact of COVID-19 on the right to food

Our responses are now public record on the UN Human Rights, Office of the High Commissioner’s Call for Input – Impact of COVID-19 on the right to food.

Duke/WhyHunger Submission Content

Responses to the UN survey were informed by our recent report – Survey Analysis: The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on U.S. Hunger Relief Organizations (August-November 2020). The authors of the memo are co-authors of the study and report.

The study is a detailed and nuanced story about COVID-19’s impact on food insecurity in the U.S. through the experiences of private, charitable non-profit organizations. These Hunger Relief Organizations (HROs), such as Food Banks, food pantries, and anti-hunger Advocacy Organizations, were on the front lines of food assistance, ensuring people who were in need got access to food during the most worrisome months of the pandemic. This research sampled the experiences and activities of these HROs across the U.S. from June through September 2020.

The study demonstrated that the U.S. is witnessing an emergency food system pushed to its limits, exposing the true extent of the root causes of food insecurity. The experiences and sentiments captured in this midyear 2020 study highlight and amplify existing issues around food insecurity in the U.S. The pandemic arguably creates a crossroads moment for addressing food security in the U.S. The results of this survey, when placed alongside what we all witnessed and experienced during the COVID-19 pandemic, spotlight fault lines in the emergency food system and the broader food system. This crossroads also presents clear opportunities for guaranteeing the health and well-being of people residing in the U.S., including the need for grassroots-led organizing efforts to hold the U.S. accountable as duty bearers in ensuring the right to food.

Survey Responses

  1. At what points over the past two years, and how, has the food system in your country been impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic? Have there been any specific sectors and locations that were more impacted?

During 2020, the COVID-19 virus became a global pandemic causing an unprecedented crisis for the hunger relief sector in the United States. Prior to the onset of COVID-19, over 35 million people in the U.S. regularly struggled to put adequate food on the table for their families, and 4 out of 5 U.S. workers lived paycheck to paycheck (USDA ERS 2022). In the midst of the pandemic, the number of people experiencing food insecurity was estimated to be over 60 million, and unemployment tripled from 3.6% to 13.0% of the population (Feeding America 2020). However, by the end of 2020, according to the USDA-ERS Household Food Security Report 2020, released in September 2021, the rate of food insecurity had returned to 10.5% of U.S. households (38.3 million people living in food insecurity, including 6.1 million children and 9.4 million adults living in households with very low food security). Pre-pandemic – in 2019 – marked the first time that the rate of food insecurity (10%) fell significantly below the previous low point recorded in 2007, prior to the Great Recession (USDA ERS 2021). A national food insecurity rate that has not dipped below 10% even in more prosperous times is a reminder that hunger is consistently a pressing paradoxical social challenge in one of the wealthiest countries in the world. And the fact that it swelled to more than double that at the height of the pandemic demonstrates the precarity many U.S. households face in making ends meet.

  1. What were the challenges in overcoming reduced access to adequate food and nutrition and interrelated impacts on other human rights during the crisis?

The following challenges were those experienced by U.S.-based hunger relief organizations (HROs) at the height of the pandemic:

Increase in demand for services
The majority (79%) of HROs that responded to our survey reported a significant increase in demand for services and, notably, an increase in first-time clients, unemployed clients, individuals experiencing homelessness or housing issues, and individuals from outside the organization’s usual service area. Further, the experience of HROs in this survey indicating that the number of first-time clients was significant is consistent with reports outside this study indicating that Food Banks and Frontline Organizations were a necessary supplement to federal safety net programs that were critical but insufficient. Feeding America, which served 4.2 billion meals from March through October 2020
reported a 60% average increase in food bank users during the pandemic with 4 out of 10 being first-timers.

Reduction or suspension of services and programming
HROs suspended some of their programs during the pandemic, primarily in-person programs. The rationale for the changes was keeping clients, volunteers, and staff safe from the COVID virus. Examples of suspended programs included culinary training, cooking classes, gardening programs, nutrition education classes, after-school programs, and weekend backpack programs. Non-food social service support, such as clothing donations, job training, etc., were also among programs some organizations suspended.

Since indoor dining posed a big risk for contracting and transmitting the COVID-19 virus (and in many locations was prohibited by local authorities instituting lockdown rules), HROs suspended many in-person meal service programs such as congregate meals and soup kitchens with on-site seating. This might have contributed to feelings of isolation and loneliness among those who regularly used these services, as reported by some of the respondents.

Loss of Volunteers
Overall the biggest challenge for HROs was loss of their volunteer base due to COVID risk. Over 80% of Food Banks and over 60% of Frontline and Advocacy Organizations operated with fewer volunteers compared to pre-pandemic times. Unsurprisingly, all HROs identified dependence on volunteer staff as a critical weakness in the emergency food system. The issue of whether HRO workers are paid staff or volunteers speaks to the precarity of these organizations as they respond to community needs.

Reduction in Provision of Fresh Foods due to Logistical and Infrastructure Challenges
Lack of refrigerated and shelf-stable food storage, and delivery options impacted HROs ability to provide fresh foods throughout the pandemic. During the survey period, HROs struggled to handle the volume of both perishable and shelf stable food moving through their facilities. Around 60% of HROs rated a lack of refrigeration space for perishable food and space for shelf-stable food as critical limitations and barriers. In addition, over 60% of Food Banks and Frontline Organizations reported concerns about lack of transportation options to bring food to an increased number of homebound clients.

Poorly coordinated and insufficient government response
HROs struggled with the lack of coordination, consistency, and predictability of the government’s response to the pandemic. Forty-five percent of Advocacy Organizations and about a third of Food Banks and Frontline Organizations indicated insufficient or delayed government response as a barrier encountered during the pandemic. Similarly, they also perceived a lack of coordinated response from the government as problematic.

Through a program called the Farmers to Families Food Box Program, the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) purchased food products from U.S.-based producers and donated them to Food Banks and other charitable organizations for distribution to households in need (USDA AMS 2021). Several written responses to our survey specifically addressed the ways in which this program missed the mark.

Quote from Food Bank respondent: “Farmers to Families box program highlighted that government does not truly understand the food banking system; raw product from farmers/suppliers would have been preferred over costly pre-boxed foods.”

Quote from an Advocacy Organization respondent: “There was a lack of client choice in the Farmers to Families Food Bank program.”

Quote from a Food Bank respondent: “Why doesn’t the USDA work with organizations that are providing on the ground services before creating programs designed to help. They aren’t being designed well and therefore are not always helpful.”

Quote from a Food Bank Respondent: “Support more coordination and collaboration to eliminate duplication of services and the start of new services when existing programs already fill the need but just need the support to keep going.”

  1. Which segments of the population – e.g. migrants, agriculture workers, Indigenous peoples – have been more vulnerable and constrained in accessing adequate, nutritious and healthy food throughout the different phases of the pandemic? What were their main sources of procuring food? Which new risks and vulnerabilities in food access have you observed to emerge during the pandemic?

Widening racialized gap in food insecurity
A close examination of the 2020 Household Food Insecurity Report, supplemented by the U.S. Census Bureau’s real time data collection throughout 2020, revealed that Black, Indigenous and Latinx households’ experience of food insecurity remained the same or became worse when disaggregated and compared to white households.

Hispanic households experienced roughly double the rates of food insecurity compared to white households — something that was also true before the pandemic. The experience of Black households when compared to white households demonstrates a widening gap as a result of the pandemic.

Black households now experience roughly triple the rate of food insecurity compared to white households – this was not true before the pandemic (Feeding America). Many news stories and reports from Indigenous or tribal organizations revealed the depth of food insecurity experienced by Native peoples in the U.S. during the pandemic. However, federal data collection efforts that inform the response to food insecurity, do not delineate Native American populations, rather collectively categorizing into one group all Asians, Alaskan Native, Native Hawaiians, and Pacific Islanders. Information collected from non-governmental sources generally places the rate of Native American food insecurity (1 in 4) above the national average and double that of white households. A 2019 study co-designed and conducted by UC Berkeley and four Native American tribes living within the Klamath River region (spanning parts of California and Oregon) showed that 92% of Native American households in the study suffered from food insecurity.

Households’ experience with food insecurity during the pandemic continues to underscore the tenacity of racial inequities. A recent analysis by Northwestern University’s Institute for Policy Research, of data gathered by the Census Bureau tracking food insecurity in real time during the pandemic in 2020 found that around 29% of Black households with children and 24% of Latino households, compared to 14% of white households, reported not having enough to eat “sometimes or often” over the course of the pandemic in 2020. And even as the pandemic began to slow its spread in late 2020 and the food insecurity rate began to fall back to pre-pandemic levels, the rates for Black households fell more slowly.

A quote from a Frontline Organization survey respondent: “We have been seeing more immigrants who in [the] past had several low wage jobs supporting the household. Now most have lost their jobs and are concerned about the negative effects of applying for common financial supports that others in [the] community access – Like SNAP and unemployment.“

  1. What beneficial or counter-productive measures have been deployed nationally and locally (laws, policies, fiscal measures, or social security/social safety nets) in the aftermath of the pandemic? What impact have they had on ensuring access to adequate food and nutrition? What was the role of workers, small-scale food producers, and the agri-food industry in the development and implementation of these measures?

Increase in private charitable and state-sponsored funding
Across the board, HRO respondents saw substantial increases in funding as individual donors, government agencies, foundations and corporations sought to help address the escalating need for emergency food assistance. The increase in funding reported by the respondents is consistent with the general trend of a rapid and steep growth in charitable giving as a result of the pandemic. A report by the Center for Disaster Philanthropy (CDP) and Candid published in August 2020 found that during the first half of 2020, the $11.9 billion given in response to the COVID-19 pandemic far exceeded philanthropic contributions for previous disasters. The report, Philanthropy and COVID-19 in the First Half of 2020, reveals that foundations and individual donors stepped up to meet immediate needs and services arising from the pandemic.

Federal Farmers to Families Food Box Program
The Farmers to Families Food Box Program, administered by the US Department of Agriculture, was a program designed to solve two co-existing crises: a spike in food insecurity due to COVID-19 and supply chain disruption issues. The $3 billion program was heavily criticized in the beginning for awarding contracts to companies that had no track record in procuring food from farmers or distributing food to those in need. An evaluation conducted by the Food Law and Policy Clinic and the National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition (NSAC) praised the intentions of the unique program but pointed out ways in which the program did not equitably reach the intended beneficiaries — small to mid-sized farmers, and especially BIPOC- and women-owned farms. In addition, the evaluation found that food distribution to families in need was undignified in many cases and also inequitable across the nation for many food insecure populations.

Families First Coronavirus Response Act
The Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA) was signed into law March 18, 2020, as the second major legislative initiative designed to address COVID-19. The FFCRA, effective April 1 through Dec. 31, 2020, provided expanded nutrition assistance, paid sick leave, enhanced unemployment insurance coverage, free coronavirus testing, and increased federal Medicaid funding. Phase 2 of Expanded food assistance included almost a billion dollars for the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children Program (WIC). The bill also allocated $400 million for emergency food assistance, help for those with children eligible for free or reduced-price school lunches whose school is closed, and emergency Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits, including a temporary suspension of the SNAP three-month time limit on funding adults under age 50 with no children.

Phase 3 provided $450 million for the Emergency Food Assistance Program, to supply food banks and provide operational assistance. An additional $200 million went to food assistance for Puerto Rico and other U.S. territories, plus $100 million for food distribution at American Indian reservations. Nearly $16 billion was added to SNAP, and another $8.8 billion was made available to Child Nutrition Programs.

Families participating in SNAP saw average assistance increase by roughly three-quarters since the start of the pandemic, thanks to a combination of emergency supplementary benefits and a 15%, across-the-board boost due to expire in September. The new permanent benefit increase went into effect in October 2021.

Under a new program called Pandemic EBT, more than 8.4 million families also received extra aid to cover the meals their children would usually eat in school cafeterias. The Biden administration upped those payments in January 2021, from $5.86 per child per day to almost $7. That program will remain available for the duration of the public health emergency, extending into summer 2022.

  1. What kind of food price variations, trade restrictions, and supply chain disruptions
    have had the most impact on main foodstuffs, nationally and locally?

72% of HROs identified unpredictable food supply chains and increased reliance on shelf-stable items as opposed to fresh foods as weaknesses in responding to emergencies. 65% of HROs cited lack of government support and solutions to address the root causes of hunger as problematic. More than 75% of HROs see inequitable access to healthy, fresh food as a food system weakness and more than 59% see an overabundance of processed foods as a problem. More than 62% of HROs see the cost of food as a significant problem, as well as the precarity of food supply chains (more than 66%).

  1. What longer-term measures, if any, have been considered, nationally and locally, to address harmful impacts of the continued pandemic, as well as of future shocks? What lessons could be drawn from the pandemic about how to make your food systems more equitable, resilient and sustainable? In which way should the food system of your country be reformed in order to ensure better access to adequate food to everyone?

Permanently Strengthen the Social Safety Net
Throughout the responses to many open-ended questions, HROs advocated for local, statewide or federal officials to do more in order to strengthen the social safety net. HROs advocate for local, statewide or federal officials to increase funding for Pandemic-EBT, TEFAP, unemployment, and to implement universal free school meals across the nation. In their responses to the survey, HROs advocated for increased support for programs that intersect with issues of food security such as mental health, childcare and virtual school programs. HROs also advocated for SNAP changes such as more flexibility, broader access, fewer eligibility requirements, and a simpler application.

The contribution of Food Banks, food pantries, soup kitchens and other hunger relief organizations makes up a relatively small percentage of the overall charitable response to hunger in the United States. SNAP, under the auspices of the USDA, delivers roughly nine times more food to people than the 200 Food Banks who make up the entire Feeding America network (Feeding America 2019).

The importance of the federal nutrition programs to support families who are facing food hardship is critical, and many HROs are cognizant of the private charitable food system’s limitations in ending food insecurity. Feeding America is a strong advocate for strengthening SNAP as a primary means of supporting hungry families and encourages its network of 200 Food Banks to advocate on the state-level: “SNAP is the first line of defense against hunger in our communities. SNAP benefits give families more dignity when meeting their food needs and help shorten the lines of families waiting for food assistance at Food Banks.” (Feeding America). And, according to Food Bank News: “SNAP outreach emerged as the most common [advocacy activity] by far, available at 73 of the largest 100 Food Banks.” And, yet, SNAP which is designed “to provide nutrition benefits to supplement the food budget of needy families so they can purchase healthy food and move towards self-sufficiency” in no way eradicates the underlying reasons for food insecurity: persistent poverty due to insufficient income (i.e., a federal minimum wage that has not kept pace with inflation).

The United States Census Bureau reported that during the pandemic more than three-quarters of families relying on nutritional assistance (i.e. SNAP) had at least one person working and about one-third included two or more workers. Employment in the U.S. does not guarantee self-sufficiency (US Census Bureau 2020). Chronically low wages means workers cannot cover the basic costs of living. Food is one of a handful of non-fixed expenses that families can – and often do – reduce compared to other items such as medication, childcare or housing.

The United States’ social safety net — comprising a variety of programs designed to protect low income people from poverty and hardship — includes programs such as Social Security, Unemployment Insurance, Medicare and SNAP. However, some argue the programs are troubled with inadequacies and inequities, particularly with regards to race. In addition, a recent analysis from the Center for American Progress revealed state-level differences in how benefits are distributed. In particular, the analysis showed that U.S. regions with larger populations of color have weaker safety nets and anti-poverty policies, and that regions with weaker safety nets have higher rates of hardship
and worse economic outcomes overall.

The average level of benefits in the six programs that provide cash or near-cash assistance varies substantially across programs and states. None of these programs provide adequate benefits because levels of assistance are set substantially below the poverty threshold. And, while the social safety net has successfully enabled low-income families to survive, it has on the whole been insufficient in helping families escape poverty altogether. As Political journalist Adam Millsap wrote in an article published by Forbes in 2021: “The goal of a safety net should be to reduce the number of people who need it at any given time, not out of callousness, but because a life spent receiving public assistance is not the life most people want. Whether as an employee or employer, a lifetime of creating value for others and participating in a society based on mutual benefit and voluntary exchange is more fulfilling than a lifetime spent getting by on public aid.”.

The pandemic was particularly instructive about the insufficiency of the U.S. social safety in normal times but especially during times of unanticipated catastrophes that affected people in all regions of the U.S. – not just the chronically poor and food insecure. Some of the weaknesses revealed that resulted in additional strain to HROs as they filled in the gaps included: delays and administrative strains in unemployment insurance, the slow pace of adjustments to the amount of SNAP dollars available, and certain states did not expand Medicaid. The general conclusion is that, in order to be better prepared for future unexpected emergencies that lead to sudden economic crises, the U.S. government should enact policies that would automatically increase the levels of aid provided through the social safety net at the onset of such an emergency situation.

There are multiple ways HROs propose improving the social safety net in the US:

  • Increase funding permanently for: Pandemic-EBT, TEFAP, Unemployment benefits, Universal free meals in schools
  • Extend the CFAP Program, provide flexibilities to the existing programs, and lower eligibility requirements for the existing programs
  • Increase availability of support services, such as for mental health, childcare and
    virtual school.
  • Implement the following in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP): increase SNAP funding, create more flexibility and broader access to SNAP benefits, lessen eligibility requirements, waive SNAP interview requirements, and remove barriers from online applications.

Quote from a Frontline Organization Respondent: “People need living incomes, ones that make it possible to provide both food and shelter. During times of crisis, people need additional income support. Emergency food networks should not be used to prop up an inadequate system of income support. Public benefits like TANF and disability programs are woefully under-funded and leave their participants with no options during a crisis. There also needs to be a way to assist people who are ineligible for programs due to their immigration status or other statuses which disqualify them for assistance.”

Quote from a Frontline Organization Respondent: “There should be a nimble way to get
income support to all people who need it during a crisis and that support should be sustained throughout the duration of the crisis.”

HROs perceive precarity of food supply chains, food accessibility and affordability as major issues, and call for a strengthening of local and regional food systems as a solution. They also called for nation-wide policy changes to support small-scale agriculture and local food systems as an emerging solution to the precarity of existing food supply chains. HROs themselves plan to make programmatic changes to support local and small-scale food systems. The majority of HROs in the study pointed to the fact that the current food system struggles to provide healthy and affordable food to consumers in a predictable manner. The number one food system weakness selected by the HROs was inequitable access to fresh, healthy food. Over 60% of HROs also perceived overabundance of processed foods leading to diet-related diseases to be a weakness. Food affordability was another issue perceived as a weakness in the food system by 62-75% of HROs.

Address Racial Inequities in Food Security
Households’ experience with food insecurity during the pandemic continues to underscore the tenacity of racial inequities. A recent analysis by Northwestern University’s Institute for Policy Research of data gathered by the Census Bureau tracking food insecurity in real time during the pandemic in 2020 found that around 29% of Black households with children and 24% of Latino households, compared to 14% of white households, reported not having enough to eat “sometimes or often” over the course of the pandemic in 2020. And even as the pandemic began to slow its spread in late 2020 and the food insecurity rate began to fall back to pre-pandemic levels, the rates for Black households fell more slowly.

Address Food Insecurity at its Roots
We also asked HROs what changes should be made at the local and/or national policy level that may lead to a more resilient food system. One in three respondents brought up several desired policy changes that we categorized as root-cause related, which was the highest number among the response categories, followed by improving direct food access programs (30%) and support for local food systems and small-scale agriculture (29%).

Listed below are the policy change recommendations that emerged out of the study that would create a more resilient food system in the future. At the heart of these recommendations is a recognition that hunger and food insecurity are not standalone issues and need to be addressed through intersectional strategies:

  • Living wages/raising minimum wage
  • Universal basic income
  • Affordable housing
  • Protections/hazard pay for low-wage essential workers
  • Better benefits for essential workers, farmworkers
  • Improved working conditions of essential workers
  • Less emphasis on emergency food response, more on root causes of food insecurity

This survey also demonstrated that some HROs have already dipped a toe into understanding and addressing the root causes of hunger. And many have been influenced by their experiences during the pandemic to engage more deeply in root cause work. An emerging network of HROs that came together to expand hunger relief efforts beyond food distribution towards strategies that promote ending hunger by addressing the root causes, Closing the Hunger Gap (described in greater detail in the Introduction of the survey analysis) organizes and convenes at the flexion of this tension between feeding the line and ending the line. In 2022 CTHG will be launching a narrative change campaign called Next Shift. The intended audience for the first phase of this campaign is HROs. The campaign is asking HROs to engage with the question: To what extent and in what ways do HROs “normalize” food insecurity in our society and even perpetuate it. The goal of the campaign is to enlist HROs to first commit to providing thriving wages and safe working conditions for their own staff and volunteers, and center racial equity in their own organizational structures. Ultimately the goal is to enlist HROs to challenge and change the dominant and false narrative that hunger will always be with us and instead assert that nutritious food is a human right.

  1. What multilateral support and resources are needed to transform food systems in terms of enhanced sustainability, equity and resilience in your country? What actions could be taken or should be avoided at the regional or global levels to strengthen and coordinate multilateral policy to address the COVID-19’s impact on food security?

Quote from a Frontline Organization respondent: “The local and state systems can implement many changes, especially ones that support small and medium size producers, all farm and food workers, etc. I prefer to focus on the big problem – our form of capitalism and the racism, sexism, and classism that upholds the food system as it is. If we don’t actively work to change our economic system, we will only piecemeal change parts of the food system and benefit a few at a time.”

The U.S. does not affirm the United Nation’s right to food as codified in the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), The U.S. has the ability to shift course and develop a legal framework for the right to nutritious food. If there’s anything we’ve learned from the COVID-19 crisis, it’s that governments, as we’ve witnessed at the state and city level, can mobilize quickly and with less bureaucracy to do the right thing. It is not only possible, but necessary to provide essential workers all along the food chain – from the fields to the processing plants to the supermarkets to the restaurants – a living wage, safe working conditions and access to health care. These are the issues and conditions at the heart of persistent poverty and food insecurity for all working families. HROs’ experience navigating the COVID-19 pandemic provides us with the insight and the impetus to reshape our society built on the foundation of equity, resilience and sustainability.

  1. Which initiatives have been autonomously implemented by small-scale food producers, food workers, women, youth, Indigenous peoples, and social groups? What support has been provided to these initiatives, and which of them do you consider having a longer-term positive impact?

HROs call for nation-wide policy changes to support small-scale agriculture and local food systems as an emerging solution to the precarity of existing food supply chains. HROs plan to make programmatic changes to support local and small-scale food systems.

75% of Food Banks, 69% of Advocacy Organizations, and 53% of Frontline Organizations recognize structural racism as a weakness of the food system. HROs intend to address racial inequities by providing equitable food access to their clients, making internal policy and programmatic changes through a racial equity lens, and advocating for broader policy changes to rectify racial inequities in society.

Quote from Frontline Organization Respondent: “This work is ongoing, but we are now buying food from BIPOC farmers and processors.”

Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Food Pantry Use and Barriers in Massachusetts during the First Year of the COVID-19 Pandemic

This study sought to describe racial disparities in food insecurity, food pantry use, and barriers to and experiences with food pantries during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic. We surveyed 2928 adults in Massachusetts regarding food access in the year before and during the first year of the pandemic. Weighted multivariable logistic regression models assessed racial differences in barriers to and experiences with pantry use during the pandemic. Black and Latino adults experienced the highest prevalence of food insecurity and pantry use. Additionally, Black and Latino adults reported more barriers to, but less stigma around, pantry use compared to White adults. Latino adults were less likely to know about pantry hours/locations and encounter staff who spoke their language. Black and Latino adults were also more likely to find pantry hours/locations inconvenient and have difficulty with transportation. The COVID-19 pandemic resulted in increased food insecurity, and food access inequities persisted. Programmatic policies to improve pantry access in communities of color could include increasing the hours/days that pantries are open, increasing bilingual staff, providing transportation or delivery, and creating multilingual public awareness campaigns on how to locate pantries.

Food Choice With Economic Scarcity and Time Abundance: A Qualitative Study

Abstract

Consumers with low income in the United States have higher vulnerability to unhealthy diets compared with the general population. Although some literature speculates that scarcity is an explanation for this disparity, empirical evidence is lacking. We conducted a qualitative study of food choice to explore whether scarcity-related phenomena, such as tunneling and bandwidth tax, may contribute to unhealthy dietary choices. We used participant-driven photo elicitation (n = 18) to investigate the food choice behaviors of individuals living in the greater Boston area who met the federal guidelines for poverty. Participants took photos at the point of food acquisition for 1 month, after which we interviewed them using a semistructured interview guide with the photos as prompts. Thematic coding was used for analysis. Respondents had relative time abundance. Two major themes emerged: participants used a set of strategies to stretch their budgets, and they highly prioritized cost and preference when making food choices. The extreme focus on obtaining food at low cost, which required time and effort, was suggestive of tunneling. We found no evidence of the bandwidth tax. Our findings raise the hypothesis of scarcity as a continuum: when individuals experience multiple resource constraints, they experience scarcity; whereas people with very limited finances and relative time abundance may instead be in a prescarcity condition, with a hyperfocus on a scarce resource that could lead to tunneling as constraints increase. Additional studies are needed to understand whether and how tunneling and bandwidth tax emerge, independently or together, as people face different levels and types of scarcity.

Putting grocery food taxes on the table: Evidence for food security policy-makers

Abstract

In the United States, grocery tax policy varies at both state and county levels, with 16 states having grocery taxes in 2020. Several states are engaged in active debates about whether to remove or impose such taxes. Although the extant literature evaluates multiple factors that may contribute to food insecurity, little is known about the relationship between grocery food sales taxes and food insecurity. We present county-level panel data on grocery taxes from 2006 through 2017 and find that jurisdictions with grocery taxes are among the most food insecure in the country. The regressiveness of grocery taxes exacerbates food insecurity, at least in theory. We link our tax data with county-level food insecurity measures and other data from the Current Population Survey. Treating grocery taxes as exogenous, we estimate that a one percentage point increase in grocery tax rates is associated with a 0.84% increase in the probability of being food insecure for low-income households. Using these estimates, we conduct policy simulations of grocery taxes that have been recently considered in six states and assess the potential impacts on food insecurity. One caveat is that our estimator may be biased towards or away from zero depending on whether increases in grocery taxes within counties over time are positively or negatively correlated with unobservables affecting food security. However, assuming the onset and removal of grocery taxes within a county are exogenous, our results show that proposed grocery taxes may exacerbate food insecurity by one to five percentage points.

Summary

This research examined the issue of whether grocery taxes impact food insecurity. Jurisdictions impose grocery taxes in 16 states as a state tax, a county tax, or both. These jurisdictions represent over one-third of U.S. counties and can cost a family hundreds of dollars per year.

Although most states and counties in the U.S. exempt grocery foods from sales tax, the seven most food-insecure states in the U.S. have or are proposing a grocery tax at or above 4% (and offer no substantial tax exemption). Examining whether a link between food insecurity and grocery taxes exists is an important topic because these taxes affect populations that may be most vulnerable to becoming food insecure. To our knowledge, no previous study has examined the implications of these taxes for food insecurity. However, over a dozen state legislatures have been debating grocery taxes in recent years. Therefore, the significant benefit of studying the consequences of grocery taxes is to inform these states of the relevance of this food policy issue.

Our main hypothesis is that households living in counties with a non zero grocery tax rate have a higher probability of being food insecure than households living in exempt counties. Households living at or near the poverty level are likely the most vulnerable to the negative repercussions of the imposition of a grocery tax. We developed our analysis from detailed household demographics, the food security status data from the CPS-FSS, and county-level grocery tax rates in the United States from 2006 through 2017. From these data, we estimated the impact of grocery tax rates on the probability of a household being food insecure with an IV probit model.

We find that a one percentage point increase in grocery tax rates relates to a 0.84% increase in the probability of a low-income household being food insecure. The result suggests that localities that tax groceries on average at 4.2% increase the probability of their low-income households food insecurity by 3.3%, with the caveat that our estimator may be biased towards or away from zero depending on whether increases in grocery taxes within counties over time are positively or negatively correlated with the unobservables. Given that 11.8% of Americans were food insecure in 2017, this result indicates that taxing food groceries contributes to food insecurity.

We also find similar but somewhat higher results than others on the impact of SNAP on food insecurity. Our results indicate that a $1 increase in SNAP benefits reduces the probability of a low-income household being food insecure by 0.17%, holding all other variables constant. Multiplying this number by the average monthly SNAP benefits received for participants ($243.83) reveals that SNAP benefits reduce food insecurity of low-income families by an average of 41.4%. In comparison, Ratcliffe, et al. (2011) and Gundersen et al. (2017a,b) found that SNAP receipt reduces food insecurity by 31.2% and 44%, respectively, using Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) panels.

Grocery taxes increase food insecurity among the poorest residents, especially ones that do not participate in SNAP. We found a larger tax impact than the price impact reported in the literature (0.84% vs. 0.407%). The discrepancy is likely because our analysis focuses on all low-income populations, and the latter is of SNAP participants only. Policymakers can lessen the prevalence of food insecurity by lessening the burden of grocery taxes on lower-income households. Providing a rebate or credit or lowering or eliminating the grocery tax could remedy the grocery tax’s effects. Nguyen and Wilson (2017) suggest that policymakers eliminate the tax on healthy foods to lessen the tax burden, mitigate the revenue loss, and encourage healthy food consumption. Such moves are worthy of consideration, especially in times such as the COVID-19 pandemic, which has significantly increased U.S. food insecurity in a short time. However, these reforms would reduce tax revenue. Government officials would need to look at alternative revenuegenerating options. Alternative revenue sources include higher taxes on tobacco product/alcohol sales, income, or property (some of which may also affect food insecurity). Still, income and property taxes are less regressive taxes than grocery taxes, and sin taxes may yield other benefits.

To conclude, we provide some future research directions related to grocery taxes. Our analysis prompts at least three research questions worth further investigation. First, it would be useful to understand better the impacts of grocery taxes on detailed food consumption. For example, how do grocery taxes impact the nutrition of households? Second, how do these taxes impact the composition of food purchased? For instance, do consumers shift to more store brands or generics in response to grocery taxes? Finally, do these taxes impact long-term health?

A Muslim Perspective on Food – Hisham Moharram

Dr. Hisham Moharram describes how he lives his Muslim faith with respect to his relationship to food, land and agriculture.

This talk was part of a Food & Faith Convening event held in November 2018 at Duke University. The event was developed through a partnership between Duke Divinity School and the Rural Church Program Area of The Duke Endowment, the Duke World Food Policy Center (WFPC).  Convening discussions identified several themes that drive the work of faith communities: moving from charity to justice, food sovereignty, and equitable food-oriented development; moving from charity to justice for the land & environment; the need for bridging and relationship building between practitioners, funders, and the academy; and the need for bridging between faith communities and policy. Additionally, several academic themes for future research were identified focused on cross-faith comparative analysis and the broad impact of faith community-based food systems work.

About Dr. Hisham Moharram

Dr. Hisham Moharram is an American Muslim born in Egypt. He is a plant biologist by formal training, with sixteen years in academic research, who chose to become an agripreneur and an environmental and social justice activist. To serve that dual mission, Moharram started The Good Tree Farm project in 2007. Moharram seeks to engage Muslims and other faith communities in working together to care for people and planet.

 

Summary

I want to thank everybody for attending and the organizers for inviting me. I’ll start with Bismillah-ir-Rahman-ir-Rahim, in the name of our Creator, the most gracious and merciful. It’s an honor to be here today and give you this Muslim perspective. I want to emphasize this is my Muslim perspective. There are many other Muslim perspectives out there that could have been shared, so, I’m not by any means speaking for all Muslims.

I’m going to speak to you about my Muslim faith grounding as I proceed in my work and what it is, that is my work. So I call what I’m doing, “The Good Tree Farm Project,” because it’s going to be what I’m going to be working on probably until the day that they bury me.

In this slide, you can see a verse that describes the origin of the name. If I translate the Arabic for you it would be something like this, “Do you not see how God gives the parable, like a good tree… A good word is like a good tree. Its roots are firm, its trunk is strong, and its branches rise up to the heavens. And it brings forth its fruit and bounty and benefit at prescribed times by the will of its Lord. And God gives the best parables for those who contemplate.” That’s the meaning of the verse in the Qur’an, which by the way, is reflected to some extent in Luke and Matthew as well.

Now, how does Islam impact my vision of a model food system? I was asked to speak to that. So first, what is a model food system? I decided to think about the central theme in Islam to guide me with that. So, basically a Muslim has to live this physical life that his soul is experiencing to please the Creator and be among those whom God loves and rewards in the hereafter. That is actually the ultimate self-focused, I would say, reason to be for a Muslim. We do that, in my view of Islam, by upholding the balance of justice.

In one of the chapters of the Qur’an, verse eight in Surah Ar-Rahman it says, “Do not transgress on the balance.” The verse’s prior to that are all about the natural world. Exactly the kind of transgression that has got us today to where the climate and the environment are experiencing everything, everybody here knows, they are experiencing. To achieve that then, our ethical values become all important, a lot more than what drives most of the economies around the world that is the bottom line. For us, the bottom line needs to be the values we uphold not our bank account and how fat our pockets are. What we give to others is more important than what we take. Doing no harm to any other thing whether it’s species of animal or plant or part of the natural ecosystem – the web of life upon which, by the way, all of our lives depend. And to keep the balance of justice at all times between ourselves, as men and women, between ourselves as different cultures and races and tongues. God said in the Qur’an, “We made you peoples and tribes that you may come to know one another, not to kill one another, not to exploit one another but to know one another. Go to the market, experience the culture and the food and the dress.”

So, for me, the guidance is from the Qur’an. The Qur’an is a whole other set of lectures by themselves, I couldn’t even begin to go there, but the Qur’an in its majesty and the teachings of Prophet Muhammad, which are both the authenticated sayings, I emphasize authenticated, of Prophet Muhammad as well as his habits, his traditions from the life he lived, which is the Seerah.

So for me, a model food system would be one where people are freed from the servitude of having to work to secure their food. Can you imagine how many hours we would all save, and our youth in particular would all save if they didn’t have to work so hard simply to eat? What if that became a human right? So, people are guaranteed being able to eat nourishing food, brain development, human potential. Second, it has to uplift and empower. It cannot entrench exploitation and wealth hoarding which is what’s happening. 0.1% we’ve heard that in recent years, and it needs to maintain access to good nutrition, so nutritional equity within the community.

Second, it needs to maximize the local food security. That’s not just important because of politics but because of real climate change effects. When a location we depend on for food like California, experiences a drought and we don’t have access to the plentiful supply of vegetables that they routinely provide to the whole country, that’s an aspect of food security that every one of us, every one of our communities suffers from.

And it must protect the environment. Those are central to what I think a model food system is. So I came up with a model a few years ago, which is The Good Tree Model. In The Good Tree Model, by the way, all of you are included. So if you look at the image of the tree, I had at the beginning and in the last slide, each one of you is either a major root in the root system or one of the smaller roots in the root system but you’re all part of it. So basically, I’ve set up a model whereby communities can own their land. We can set up a partnership between people who will never really be actively farming or engaging in agricultural entrepreneurship because they’re simply contributing their financial ability. But they’re part owners along with the youth of their community, across the minority range that you have so that these youth who would otherwise not have these opportunities to develop their agriculture entrepreneurship potential can. So it’s a partnership between those who have the health and the age and the willingness and those who have the financial ability and those who may have the contacts, etc.

It addresses pollution from industrial agriculture in a real way, on a personal level, on a community level. We go from talking about it to actually doing something, think globally, and act locally. It addresses the economic hardships that are due to built-in discrimination in the system that exists. It addresses the social inequities and injustices because in those gatherings of youth for various types of events and activity, they may not even be related to growing the food, but simply a third space, where Amira a Muslim youth, right? Muslim youth meet up with Jewish youth, with Secular youth, Christian youth, a Hindu youth, and they talk about things that they have a problem within their community and the environment and the future world they want to create for their children, our grandchildren. And you know what? Their innovative potential is a lot more than ours.

So the next most faithful steps, as I was asked to speak to enacting this vision, is to reach out to all of you. You’re part of that good tree. So I’m trying to help communities set this up for themselves. One thing I can provide is motivating potential impact investors. That’s exactly what I did when I raised $580,000 to buy the farm and start the project. It came from teachers whose annual salary was $23,000 and they gave 1,000, or physicians who made several millions a year and they wrote a check for 60,000 after 10 minutes of talking to them. The impact investor doesn’t have to be someone who invests on Wall Street. It can be your next-door neighbor. So basically, I see this as my practical reverence. Look at the roots of that tree, they’re all sitting here. So that’s what I’m trying to create. And I’m here to appeal to you, to partner with me. Thank you.