Food Stamps and Healthy Food

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Replies

  • rushfive
    rushfive Posts: 603 Member
    Jackie pointed out a good reason pay can be low... many do not want the raise b.c they lose food stamp money.
    We have had employees who would not work 40 hr a week to keep their income low. and one who did not want a raise b.c he would lose food stamp money. We thought we were doing a good thing by giving him a raise? guess not.
  • CharlieBeansmomTracey
    CharlieBeansmomTracey Posts: 7,682 Member

    Jackie9950 wrote: »
    chelsy0587 wrote: »
    I've used food stamps before, we needed them and we used them.

    I've also known people that get hundreds of dollars per month for 4 or 5 kids and they sell their food stamps to get cash to buy drugs or alcohol. THESE ARE THE PEOPLE THAT MAKE EVERYONE LOOK BAD. They do need some serious education...

    This is an issue we see a lot around here!
    same here. Yet, if you report it nothing gets done because there is NO proof.the kids are the ones who are suffering.

  • DorisSilver50
    DorisSilver50 Posts: 98 Member
    There are some clerks that will go ahead and ring up alcohol and cigarettes as something else to put it on food stamps, but it is illegal. I reported it at a store by us because the store can be fined as well as lose the ability to accept food stamps. So it is a matter of people ringing things up inappropriately to "help" people (sometimes because they know them). Food stamps are determined by income and number of people in the home. The amount varies by state. WIC is a federal program for Women, Infants & Children (up to age 6, I believe) and limits purchases to "essentials" such as cheese, peanut butter, bread, milk and eggs. For both all the money must be spent in a month as it does not "roll over" to the next month. Food stamps do not include non-grocery items including diapers, wipes, cigarettes, alcohol, candy, paper products, etc. There is not a "free flow" of money however and when it is spent it is gone until the card reloads (most are debit style cards now). Using someone else's card is also illegal, but I know when someone was going to be out of town they would give it to a friend to use so that the money "didn't go to waste", they are supposed to show i.d. to use, but that usually doesn't happen. Hope that helps.
  • rushfive
    rushfive Posts: 603 Member
    Back to original question.. what would be considered "healthy" foods? I think it would be easier to list what is Not allowed. But kind of pointless due to all the abuse with food stamps. Education on foods, may be better before they even can qualify for f/s.
    idk- it is a mess, glad it helps the people who use it correctly, but disappointed in the people who abuse it.
  • itsmeGennie
    itsmeGennie Posts: 39 Member
    @krumpli Thanks so much for this - my sister was on SNAP (food stamps) for her Americorps year also. She definitely had to get creative when buying groceries in Brooklyn NY. I used to work at Pathmark so I'm familiar with SNAP, WIC and TANF

    There's different kinds of assistance:

    SNAP - food stamps. You can only buy food, not prepared food (like the rotisserie chicken at Pathmark). The amount you get depends on how much your taxable income is. For example, if it's $0 taxable income, you get the full amount for your state (around 150-200$ in NYC)

    WIC (Women Infants and Children)- This is for women with children. You can only buy items for a child under 5 such as baby food and baby formula ie, Similac. This is to supplement your child's nutrition. If you're getting 20$ in foodstamps, you obv won't be able to use that to buy baby milk that costs $18

    TANF- It's basically a cash card - can be used on a lot of different things. But it's for needy families that are going through a rough patch, are under employed.

    OP, to answer your question, watching my sister on SNAP was really tough because you can't let ANYTHING go to waste. I challenged myself to spend about $35 on groceries a week and the "cheap" healthy options are:
    • Alot of pasta and "fillers" - no breads - just pennes spaghetti etc
    • Thank goodness her farmers market accepted EBT (foodstamp card) because they would sell fresh vegetables like spinach, kale, apples, squash and bananas The banana single handedly helped her get her 5 fruits/day. Everything else was frozen
    • Trader Joe's which was really reliable for healthy, low sodium (canned) soups and "staples" like peanut butter, beans, lentils
    • All her meats were purchased on sale and her other protein was greek yogurt
    • A splurge would be almonds, avocado, beef and coming to my house :)

    It's really hard to stay healthy bc you have to stay mindful of what's on sale, your habits. Which everyone should do but she did it for a year and I couldn't do it for a month. (I love avos)

  • sdirks
    sdirks Posts: 223 Member
    Having worked in marketing, I can shead some light on a dirty secret about food stamps and especially WIC.

    Grocery stores have stickers they can place on shelves to designate that a product qualifies for a particular state-funded program. Managers are encouraged NOT to put these stickers on all applicable items, but to only use the stickers on items that are about to go bad or that aren't selling well in order to get it off the shelves. Parents want the best for their children, so when they see that bright yellow WIC sticker they're more likely to buy the product--regardless of whether it's actually of good quality or healthy for their child. That WIC endorsement makes them curious, and that's the first step to a sale.

    This type of marketing is really a disadvantage to the people who buy their food with these government programs (also why I don't work in marketing anymore; I want to help people and educate them, not fleece the poor).

    Grocery store marketing uses this same tactic for the new fad "gluten-free." As someone who actually can't eat gluten because of my health and not by choice, I often find "GF" stickers that have been inappropriately placed by a manager trying to move product or make people think it's healthier than it is.

    Bottom line is we need better food education in schools. Teach kids how to read labels and make healthy choices. Then the kids go home and teach mom & dad, implementing healthier practices at home. Demand for healthy food goes up, so stores stock more of it... and stop lying to us with flashy stickers because now that we're educated we can't be tricked.
  • EZDUZIT68
    EZDUZIT68 Posts: 1,168 Member
    How about the fact that 47 million people are using food stamps? That's nearly twice as many than the number of people receiving them between 1975 - 2008, which ranged anywhere between 17-26 million per year.

    We need a lot more than food education in this country.
  • LAMCDylan
    LAMCDylan Posts: 1,218 Member
    My grandma is on food stamps and only gets $21 a month. Yeah, there's no healthy food that's gonna last a month, other than frozen foods but even a frozen bag of peas still cost $1 and last 1 meal. I called to scream about the $21 and was told that we are lucky because the uncle of the person we were talking to only gets $15 per month. Yep. Food stamps arent the excessive amount of free money everyone thinks they are and planning several meals around small amounts of money is probably incredibly difficult.

    I agree with this! When it comes to single individuals even those with SEVERE disabilities (developmentally disabled, paraplegic, disabled senior citizens, etc), they often get a very tiny monthly sum. I worked with severely disabled adults and it was average for them to get between $10-35 per month in food stamps.

    So many misconceptions abound when it comes to this topic. I'm glad to see quite a few people in this thread are acknowledging them.

    It is probably due to other income or assets that is how they calculate what a person gets each month. There is a certain allowance and they subtract.
  • LAMCDylan
    LAMCDylan Posts: 1,218 Member
    I have seen people using food stamp debit cards to purchase an entire cart full of groceries and non-groceries. I may be wrong, but I'm thinking that although it is supposed to be used for food, food stamps still get used for other things.

    I've seen one used in an Indian gas station to buy cigarettes too. I don't know if that's allowed or not either, but I saw it happen.

    Wish I had more to offer though, sorry.

    Food stamps are restricted and can only be used for certain things, mainly food. You cannot buy cigarettes with food stamps. However, there is such a thing as TANF (temporary assistance needy families), and that assistance can probably be used for anything, so that is probably what you saw.
    http://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/eligible-food-items

    Cannot and should not are two different things. The food stamp card where I live is very distinguishable, and that's what I saw. So yes, cigarettes can be bought with food stamps.

    Are you American?

    If you are, then no, you absolutely cannot buy cigarettes with food stamps. When I used to work at a grocery store, people put anything and everything into their cart, the cashier totals it up, and the register only applies the food stamps to the portions that qualify for it. If there are cigarettes, charcoal, and candy on the bill, then the individual has to pay for those items a different way.

    The only way cigs and alcohol can be bought is if the merchant is crooked. I knew a guy who would go to downtown LA and he knew a liquor store that would let him buy cigarettes with the food stamps and offered like 80 cents on the dollar. He would buy several cartons and then sell out the packs to people at full price. Food stamps use to be like a paper currency but it was easier for people to misuse them so they switched to the cards. But people still can cheat it.
  • fitmomma99
    fitmomma99 Posts: 29 Member
    I am going to be straight up here and probably get some hate mail while I am at it. I am on FS and lived for many years with the mentality that healthy is too expensive. BULL!!! If you are only buying junk with your FS or money then you are fooling yourself into thinking you are saving. A bag of apples cost less than a bag of chips and last longer. A large bag of spinach cost less than $3. A bag of peas cost less than $1.50. Chicken is .99/pound. You cannot seriously justify killing your kids with "its more affordable"! Wake up america you are killing our future! And another thing since educating myself and making better (cheaper) choices I have noticed I get full quicker and stay that way longer. I also do not use all of my fs every month. I am guilty of using them at gas stations to buy water when I am in a hurry. And no I am not proud of being on FS but I have to feed my family and at least I am not killing them slowly.
  • fitmomma99
    fitmomma99 Posts: 29 Member
    fitmomma99 wrote: »
    I am going to be straight up here and probably get some hate mail while I am at it. I am on FS and lived for many years with the mentality that healthy is too expensive. BULL!!! If you are only buying junk with your FS or money then you are fooling yourself into thinking you are saving. A bag of apples cost less than a bag of chips and last longer. A large bag of spinach cost less than $3. A bag of peas cost less than $1.50. Chicken is .99/pound. You cannot seriously justify killing your kids with "its more affordable"! Wake up america you are killing our future! And another thing since educating myself and making better (cheaper) choices I have noticed I get full quicker and stay that way longer. I also do not use all of my fs every month. I am guilty of using them at gas stations to buy water when I am in a hurry. And no I am not proud of being on FS but I have to feed my family and at least I am not killing them slowly.

    This was my first response. Choices and education. Thanks for the perspective. No hate here. Just trying to figure this all out. It seems like there are a lot of facets to this issue I haven't considered. To me it still seems to come down to making better food choices and of course, portions. Many good points in this thread.

    Absolutely agree. Educating ourselves is the key to success in any aspect of our lives.

  • gothchiq
    gothchiq Posts: 4,590 Member
    I have friends on SNAP. Lack of car or public transportation is a big issue. They can walk to the Sheetz in 10 minutes. To the grocery store it would be an hour walking where there's no sidewalk by heavy traffic. I load them all in the Gothmobile to go to the Food Lion when I'm in town. Buses in many locations are a joke if that.
  • pechepanda
    pechepanda Posts: 7,939 Member
    I that up for one of my classes
    I found they couldn't be used for anything other than good unless you had a baby then it covered diapers
    And it didn't cover fresh fruit/vegetables/meat for the most part
    Just stuff like KD and canned food
    Though the info I found was pretty old
  • shezza4mobee
    shezza4mobee Posts: 250 Member
    have you seen the Gwyneth Paltrow article where she tried to live of a food stamp budget and be healthy, and she failed. Then again who on food stamps buys a cart load full of limes (ah, Gwyneth!). She admitted it was near impossible to keep up, mind you, I think she was a good $10 under the weekly budget, because well, math must not be a strength she possesses either (still love her acting though, in most movies).

    I think the main thing people mean is not necessarily healthy eating versus fresh cooking. For example PB&J sandwiches will be cheaper than a deli meat and salad sandwich, although mind you, PB&J prices have skyrocketed too!
    And for example mac n cheese from a box is quicker and cheaper than making it fresh from scratch.

    I admit, healthier and fresh food in my area (NE) can be a bit more expensive. We don't have as many healthfood store options as I'm sure the East and West Coast have. I spend on average $200/every two weeks on groceries with me and two kids when we mainly buy ready made and junk options, I spend $250-275 if I buy fresher stuff like fruits and vegetables rather than cookies and snack bars/candy.
    So there is a definite difference felt. BUT at the end of the day, do I feel better with the fruits & veg or the junk?
  • stuart160
    stuart160 Posts: 1,628 Member
    Our local Farmers Market has 2 for 1 SNAP Dollars. Every SNAP dollar spent is worth 2 dollars.
  • jnv7594
    jnv7594 Posts: 983 Member
    edited May 2015
    .
  • CharlieBeansmomTracey
    CharlieBeansmomTracey Posts: 7,682 Member
    fitmomma99 wrote: »
    I am going to be straight up here and probably get some hate mail while I am at it. I am on FS and lived for many years with the mentality that healthy is too expensive. BULL!!! If you are only buying junk with your FS or money then you are fooling yourself into thinking you are saving. A bag of apples cost less than a bag of chips and last longer. A large bag of spinach cost less than $3. A bag of peas cost less than $1.50. Chicken is .99/pound. You cannot seriously justify killing your kids with "its more affordable"! Wake up america you are killing our future! And another thing since educating myself and making better (cheaper) choices I have noticed I get full quicker and stay that way longer. I also do not use all of my fs every month. I am guilty of using them at gas stations to buy water when I am in a hurry. And no I am not proud of being on FS but I have to feed my family and at least I am not killing them slowly.
    it all depends on where you live though too what the price of things are. a bag of apples here(WV) cost more than a bag of chips,a huge bag of spinach is also more than $3 here.and chicken is more than .99 a lb(dont get me started on beef prices here).our farmers markets are far and few between I would have to travel 40 miles to get to one and thats one way. we are also limited when it comes to stores. But you can still find other healthy foods to buy.It can be done on a budget/foodstamps. I agree that we need to have classes on nutrition.