JUDY WOODRUFF: The economic crisis also means
that demand for food stamps will swell.
While Congress did pass additional benefits
for some recipients, a high percentage of
the poorest households didn't get an increase.
Questions over additional money will undoubtedly
be debated in Congress in the weeks to come.
But many people are already facing complications
when using their benefits right now.
Economics correspondent Paul Solman has the
story for our series Making Sense.
PAUL SOLMAN: A mile-long line at a Pittsburgh
food bank, and it's hardly unique.
Dave Wellons manages a food warehouse in El
Paso, Texas.
DAVE WELLONS, El Pasoans Fighting Hunger Food
Bank: Usually, by 8:00 in the morning, there's
vehicles lined up a mile to a mile-and-a-half
long.
PAUL SOLMAN: Michael Lopez is in New York.
MICHAEL LOPEZ, The Hungry Monk Rescue Truck:
There's a tremendous need.
Typically, The Hungry Monk Rescue Truck serves
about 200 meals a week in our food pantry.
Over the past 35 days, that number has grown
to about 2,000 families that we are serving.
BROOKLYN DOTSON, Nashville Resident: I don't
have any income coming in. I don't get any
food stamps. It's just hard to get any help
right now.
PAUL SOLMAN: Nashville's Brooklyn Dotson doesn't
get food stamps, not yet anyway, but nearly
40 million Americans do, as so-called SNAP
benefits.
No one is starving, says Hunger Free America's
Joel Berg, but:
JOEL BERG, CEO, Hunger Free America: They're
rationing food. If this goes on much, much
longer, then we could start to see actual
starvation in America. We're doing far much
worse than any developed Western nation.
PAUL SOLMAN: Economist Hilary Hoynes:
HILARY HOYNES, U.C. Berkeley: Prior to the
crisis, about 11 percent of Americans suffered
from food insecurity. And we have every reason
to believe that those statistics are increasing
dramatically in the current time period.
NATOSHA MCCRAY, SNAP Recipient: I'm Natosha
McCray, and I live in the Bronx, the nation's
hungriest urban county. This is my daughter,
Ariana (ph), and my son Ethan (ph).
PAUL SOLMAN: Three years ago, McCray was struggling,
even with SNAP. But the pandemic has her kids,
now 4 and 16, home from school, where they
got their morning and afternoon meals.
Suddenly, says McCray:
NATOSHA MCCRAY: You got to have breakfast,
lunch, dinner, snacks, and with them both
being home, everybody is hungry all the time.
PAUL SOLMAN: McCray gets about $550 a month
for her family of three. But her income as
a tutor to low-income kids has plummeted.
So, how about free food? She was using New
York City's Grab-and-Go school meal program,
which expanded to adults on April 3.
NATOSHA MCCRAY: And then, shortly between
week three and four, when I went to pick up
a breakfast or a lunch or two, there weren't
any more breakfast or lunch available.
PAUL SOLMAN: Joel Berg isn't surprised.
JOEL BERG: Even in the best of times, the
charitable sector only handles a small portion
of the need. The federal nutrition assistance
programs still provide more than 10 times
the dollar amount.
PAUL SOLMAN: But for those like McCray, already
getting maximum SNAP benefits before the pandemic...
NATOSHA MCCRAY: You have to wear a face mask.
PAUL SOLMAN: ... the assistance hasn't gone
up, while prices have.
NATOSHA MCCRAY: Hamburgers $18.99, $31.99.
PAUL SOLMAN: At least they have in her food
desert stretch of the Bronx.
NATOSHA MCCRAY: When the pandemic first started,
they were gouging prices. I mean, the cost
of eggs was around $8.00. Milk was $7.00.
Over the past five weeks, it has been a nightmare.
PAUL SOLMAN: And the crisis has caused lots
of SNAP snafus.
Quincy Pettis is home from college, so he
isn't getting meals there. But he can't get
SNAP either.
QUINCY PETTIS, College Student: I applied,
but they denied me, because they were saying
that I would have to work 20 hours.
NARRATOR: Your pizza stays untouched from
here to your table.
PAUL SOLMAN: He got a job at Domino's Pizza,
even though he's taking 21 class credits online,
and still no food stamps.
QUINCY PETTIS: I would have to go and have
my own apartment. But I am currently living
with my -- at my parent's house.
PAUL SOLMAN: So, because you're living at
your parents' house, as opposed to having
your own apartment, you're not eligible for
SNAP?
QUINCY PETTIS: Yes sir, correct.
PAUL SOLMAN: Did you get a stimulus check?
QUINCY PETTIS: No, I didn't get a stimulus
check.
PAUL SOLMAN: Because he's in college. The
rules are a problem for millions of students
right now, says Ken Regal of Just Harvest.
KEN REGAL, Executive Director, Just Harvest:
College students can't get food stamps at
school, can't get food stamps at home. The
parent can't get food stamps for the child
in their household.
Parent can't get the stimulus payment for
the child. And the child, the college student,
can't get the stimulus payment of their own.
So, it's a quintuple whammy.
PAUL SOLMAN: Are you hungry at all?
QUINCY PETTIS: Yes, I am hungry.
PAUL SOLMAN: Another SNAP snafu, online shopping.
Alisa Grishman, a Pittsburgh disability rights
advocate, has six autoimmune diseases.
ALISA GRISHMAN, SNAP Recipient: The main ones
that affect me are multiple sclerosis and
Crohn's disease. But I also have forms of
arthritis. I have diabetes from steroids for
my other conditions.
And so it's extremely dangerous for me to
go out. I haven't left my house in a month-and-a-half.
If I get sick, I'm going to get very sick.
PAUL SOLMAN: So, if you can't go out, can't
you just shop online?
ALISA GRISHMAN: Unfortunately, no. Pennsylvania
doesn't allow you to use your food stamps
to order online delivery of any sort of groceries.
I also can't use it to do a pickup order and
have someone pick it up either.
PAUL SOLMAN: In fact, only six states do allow
it, under strict conditions.
KEN REGAL: So, this is a huge problem for
large numbers of people, people who are immunocompromised,
people who have disabilities, people who have
difficulty getting around, people whose buses
have been cut.
PAUL SOLMAN: Tens of millions of Americans
are food-insecure right now. Doesn't bode
well for them or the economy, says Joel Berg
emphatically.
JOEL BERG: Even before this crisis, food insecurity
cost our economy over $160 billion a year,
because hungry children don't learn as well,
hungry workers don't work as well, and hungry
seniors can't stay independent.
PAUL SOLMAN: And all of their numbers are
growing. This is Paul Solman.
