Coalition Letter: Reform Food Stamps by Including Taxpayer Protections
FreedomWorks has signed onto the following coalition letter on reforming food stamps and other nutrition entitlement programs in the Farm Bill.
An Open Letter to the United States Congress:
Reform the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program by including Taxpayer Protections!
Dear Members of Congress:
On behalf of the millions of Americans represented by the undersigned organizations, we write to urge support for several common sense taxpayer protections to the nutrition programs included in the Farm Bill, particularly the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). It’s impossible to achieve significant savings in the bill without considering reforms to nutrition programs, as they account for 80% of total spending under the Farm Bill.
When Congress takes up the food and farm legislation later this year, it should ensure that basic taxpayer protections are applied to nutrition programs. The following reforms would limit spending, while continuing to provide a basic social safety net for the most vulnerable of Americans.
- Use block grants: Replacing the annual appropriation with a block grant would give states an incentive to control costs. This is an improvement over current policy, in which states have an incentive to procure as many federal dollars as possible. Last session, Rep. Huelskamp introduced a bill (H.R. 6567) that proposed to merge the six food welfare programs in the Farm Bill into a single block grant.
- Apply income and asset tests to categorically eligible households: A major driver of the growth in food stamp spending is state-based efforts to increase benefits and expand eligibility. An increasing number of recipients are automatically, or “categorically,” eligible for benefits based on their participation in other programs. According to the Congressional Budget Office, adding income and asset tests to categorical eligibility requirements would trim average annual outlays by $12 billion over 10 years.
- Roll back spending on Title IV to FY2008 levels: Federal outlays for nutrition programs in 2008 were $37.6 billion; in 2013, they will total $82.0 billion. Returning spending to FY2008 levels would strike a balance between fiscal responsibility and providing a reasonable social safety net.
- Separate Title IV from the rest of the Bill: Nutrition assistance is unrelated to the agricultural subsidies contained in the rest of the bill and it deserves its own treatment in separate legislation. Washington needs to stop rolling massive programs together in order to secure votes and shield programs from much-needed reform. Last session, Sen. Ron Johnson made a motion to send the bill back to the Agriculture Committee with instructions to strike Title IV—the title dealing with food stamps (SNAP) and other nutrition programs. We urge you to take this important step this year.
Although there are many other areas in the Farm Bill that are ripe for improvement, lawmakers should consider a combination of the aforementioned reforms to nutrition programs.
Sincerely,
James Valvo
Director of Policy
Americans For Prosperity
Phil Kerpen
President
American Commitment
Al Cardenas
Chairman
American Conservative Union
Randy Lewis
President
American Seniors Advocates
Grover Norquist
President
Americans for Tax Reform
John Tate
President
Campaign For Liberty
Timothy Lee
Vice President of Legal and Public Affairs
Center for Individual Freedom
Chris Chocola
President
Club for Growth
Tom Brinkman Jr.
Chairman
Coalition Opposed to Additional Spending and Taxes (COAST)
Jonathan M. Bydlak
President
Coalition to Reduce Spending
Matthew Brouillette
President and CEO
Commonwealth Foundation
Fran Smith
Board Member and Adjunct Fellow
Competitive Enterprise Institute
Mattie Duppler
Executive Director
Cost of Government Center
Tom Schatz
President
Council for Citizens Against Government Waste (CCAGW)
Myron Ebell
President
Freedom Action
Dean Clancy
Vice President, Public Policy
FreedomWorks
Jimmy LaSalvia
Executive Director
GOProud
Julie Gunlock
Director, Women For Food Freedom Project
Independent Women’s Forum
Seton Motley
President
Less Government
Colin A. Hanna
President
Let Freedom Ring
Lew Uhler
President
National Tax Limitation Committee
Pete Sepp
Executive Vice President
National Taxpayers Union
Eli Lehrer
President
R Street Institute
Paul Gessing
President
Rio Grande Foundation.
David Williams
President
Taxpayers Protection Alliance
Morton Blackwell
Chairman
The Weyrich Lunch
Jeff Frazee
Executive Director
Young Americans for Liberty