When 15 States Opt Out of a Summer Food Program, Community Organizations Must Fill in the Gaps
When 15 States Opt Out of a Summer Food Program, Community Organizations Must Fill in the Gaps
1/21/2024 by Sarah Stripp
When Mississippi opts out, we opt in.
(Courtesy of Springboard to Opportunities)
Over the past few days, as winter storms and frigid temperatures have swept across most of the country, many of us have been reminded of the challenges that come with school closures and disrupted routines. For many of the families we work withminimum-wage, essential workersschool is so much more than an academic institution. It is daycare during working hours and the provider of two meals each day for kids who might otherwise go without.
Out-of-school time is incredibly stressful for families who are already just trying to make ends meetincluding providing an extra 10 meals per week for each child in the household. Thats why we were extremely disappointed by the decision of Mississippi and 14 other states last week to opt-out of a new summer EBT program that would have provided each eligible family with $40 per month per child during the summer to help cover the additional costs of food. For a mother working full-time at minimum wage (approximately $1,160 each month), that $40 could make a huge difference.
Once again, we are reminded that poverty, and all its consequences, are the result of policy choices. But when policy choices put an undue burden on our families, we know that it is our time to step into the gap. Thats why we will be offering cash disbursements to each family in our communities with school-aged children during the upcoming summer months. Just like in the past when water pipes and power systems failed and we stepped in with cash, we are committed to ensuring our families have what they need for a healthy summer when our policymakers fail, too.
If we want to be a country that cares about families, we must start prioritizing policies that have been proven to provide families with healthier lives and the ability to meet their needslike summer EBT and the expanded child tax credit. Our hope is that our summer cash disbursements, like all our socioeconomic well-being programs, will model again what policies grounded in dignity, equity and trust can do if we would make the choice to implement them.
https://msmagazine.com/2024/01/21/summer-ebt-food-program-mississippi/