Release No. 0589.09
WASHINGTON, November 24, 2009 - USDA today issued a study
which shows how successful each State is in reaching families eligible for
the Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program (SNAP) and that state-by-state participation
rates in SNAP varied widely. According to
Reaching Those in Need: State Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance Program Participation Rates in 2007, the
latest annually released report, 66 percent of eligible persons received
SNAP benefits. Among states, SNAP participation rates varied widely from an
estimated low of 47 percent to a high of 100 percent.
"These figures underscore the importance of continuing
USDA's efforts, in partnership with the States that operate the program
directly, to ensure that potential clients are aware of the benefits of SNAP
and can access those benefits easily," said Under Secretary for Food,
Nutrition and Consumer Services Kevin Concannon. "We will continue to work
across the country to encourage the most effective outreach and customer
service strategies so that eligible families in every State can make use of
the program to improve their diets and promote good health."
Concannon emphasized the importance of ensuring that
eligible low-income families understand that SNAP offers an option to
supplement their food budgets, and that the program operates in every State
to serve them effectively. Nationally, SNAP served 36.5 million in August
2009, up from 29.4 million the previous year.
"Programs like SNAP are essential to good nutrition and
well-being, especially in tough economic times, and participation not only
helps these households with food at home, but also provides their children,
through direct certification, with access to nutritious meals at school,"
said Concannon.
USDA recently released a report that shows schools have
increased their use of direct certification. In SY 2008-2009, 78 percent of
all local educational agencies (LEAs) directly certified some SNAP
participants. These LEAs enroll 96 percent of all students in schools that
participate in the NSLP. This is an increase from SY 2004-2005, when 56
percent of LEAs, enrolling 79 percent of all students in NSLP schools,
directly certified SNAP-participant students.
SNAP participation rates for all eligible people and the
working poor suggest that some States have fairly consistently been in the
top of the distribution of rates in recent years. In all 3 years from 2005
to 2007, Arkansas, Illinois, Kentucky, Maine, Missouri, Oregon, Tennessee,
and West Virginia had significantly higher participation rates for all
eligible people than two-thirds of the States.
The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program
(SNAP)-formerly the Food Stamp Program-is a central component of American
policy to alleviate hunger and poverty. The program's main purpose is "to
permit low-income households to obtain a more nutritious diet...by
increasing their purchasing power" (Food and Nutrition Act of 2008). SNAP is
the largest of the domestic food and nutrition assistance programs
administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Food and Nutrition
Service serving 36.5 million Americans in August 2009, half of whom are
children. To review Reaching Those in Need, or for more information on SNAP,
please visit
www.fns.usda.gov.
#