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Impending loss of pandemic CalFresh boosts could trigger hunger spike

In this April 18, 2020, file photo, San Francisco-Marin Food Bank volunteers pack food into bags to be delivered to people in San Francisco. Food banks and anti-hunger advocates are bracing for the end of a pandemic-era boost in food assistance that the federal government has been providing for nearly three years.
Jeff Chiu
/
AP Photo
In this April 18, 2020, file photo, San Francisco-Marin Food Bank volunteers pack food into bags to be delivered to people in San Francisco. Food banks and anti-hunger advocates are bracing for the end of a pandemic-era boost in food assistance that the federal government has been providing for nearly three years.

For nearly three years, an increase in federal aid has allowed California to issue higher-than-usual amounts in food stamps. That ends in April.

Food banks across California are bracing for a feared spike in hunger amid inflated prices after a pandemic-era boost in food aid ends in April.

March is the last month CalFresh recipients will get the additional benefits, as the federal government cuts off the 鈥渆mergency allotments鈥 that have kept food stamp allowances higher than usual for nearly three years now.

The average household on CalFresh will lose about $200 a month, said Becky Silva, government relations director at the California Association of Food Banks. A single-person household, for instance, could drop from $281 a month in food aid to as low as $23 in April.

U.S. Department of Agriculture documents show that since November, the pandemic boosts have amounted to in additional food stamps coming into low-income Californians鈥 budgets.

鈥淭here鈥檚 no way to overstate how devastating this is going to be,鈥 Silva said. 鈥淔amilies are going to see a dramatic and sudden drop in their food benefits at a time when food price inflation and the cost of living in California especially is through the roof.鈥

Food stamps are funded by the federal government, which determines benefit amounts annually based on the nationwide cost of living as well as recipients鈥 household size and income.

鈥淭here鈥檚 no way to overstate how devastating this is going to be.鈥
BECKY SILVA, CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF FOOD BANKS

In March 2020, Congress allowed the USDA to give states funding to boost all recipients鈥 aid to the maximum allowable benefits for their household size, or add $95 on top for those already receiving the maximum. The recent Congressional spending bill passed in December cuts that off this spring in exchange for funding for extra food aid for school children during the summer months.

More than 2.9 million California households , a number that has risen steadily throughout the pandemic.

The state social services department attributes the increase partially to a more flexible application process during the pandemic, while advocates like Silva also suggest the boost in aid made going through an application more worthwhile for eligible residents.

The loss of emergency allotments will be felt particularly hard by older and disabled people, many of whom have already seen their food aid eligibility reduced after in Social Security checks in January. In addition to wages, Social Security, unemployment benefits and disability payments all count as income for the person receiving food aid.

Tom McSpedden, a 69-year-old Citrus Heights resident with Type II diabetes, saw a nearly $60 decrease in his normal CalFresh allowance last month after getting a $109 increase in his monthly Social Security checks.

But he continued to get the pandemic CalFresh boosts, which kept the total food stamps on his benefits card at $281 that month 鈥 the maximum allowable aid for a single-person household.

In April, McSpedden鈥檚 monthly CalFresh benefits will drop to roughly $50.

Nearly half of McSpedden鈥檚 monthly $1,368 Social Security check goes toward renting a room; the rest is meticulously budgeted for his phone, car insurance, gas, the portion of insulin and medications that Medicare doesn鈥檛 cover and bankruptcy payments.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 have the $230 left over each month to compensate鈥 for the drop in aid, he said. 鈥淚鈥檓 just not going to be able to afford food. It鈥檚 that simple.鈥

There isn鈥檛 any plan to immediately backfill the loss.

The food banks association and other anti-poverty organizations have proposed that the state spend more than $2 billion providing a 鈥渞amp-down鈥 of the extra benefits for five months after the federal boosts end.

But it鈥檚 unclear whether the Legislature and Gov. Gavin Newsom鈥檚 administration would agree on new spending as they .

鈥淚鈥檓 just not going to be able to afford food. It鈥檚 that simple.鈥
TOM MCSPEDDEN, CITRUS HEIGHTS CALFRESH RECIPIENT

Advocates are also calling for the state to add its own funds to the regular food stamps program, to boost the minimum food aid grant from $23 to $50 with corresponding inflationary increases. Other ideas include expanding special CalFresh programs that provide extra dollars for those purchasing California-grown produce, or for certain Central Valley households who lack clean drinking water in their homes.

Those proposals are 鈥渘owhere near approaching the $500 million a month that will be absent from people鈥檚 budgets, dinner tables and California retailers as well,鈥 said Jared Call, senior advocate at the food policy organization Nourish California. 鈥淏ut our approach is, no tool in the toolbox should be unused.鈥

The California Department of Social Services says it鈥檚 warning households of the upcoming decline in aid and directing CalFresh recipients to food banks, which have received additional funding from both the state and federal governments in recent years.

The state鈥檚 network of food banks continues to serve on average 1.5 times the number of clients as before the pandemic, Silva said.

The Sacramento Food Bank and Family Services, which provides food in the county McSpedden lives, averaged 150,000 clients a month before the pandemic, said community resource manager Lorena Carranza. In recent months, that number has been about 275,000.

But food distributions can鈥檛 replace the flexibility of food stamps that many residents rely on.

With a special diet to manage his diabetes, McSpedden said food distribution boxes usually only contain a few items he can eat. He鈥檚 loath to take a full box when others could use it, he said.

McSpedden worked for nearly three decades as a long-haul trucker until about 15 years ago, when a series of heart attacks ended that career and landed him in a hospital stay that wiped out his savings and retirement accounts.

鈥淚鈥檝e been in predicaments before,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut this thing here with the extra food stamps, I have no idea. I鈥檓 looking into a tunnel with no light at the other end.鈥

 is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics.