Thursday, July 12, 2012

REPUBLICANS PROPOSE CUTTING FOOD STAMPS FROM 3 MILLION, INCLUDING CHILDREN AND ELDERLY

On Thursday the REPUBLICAN LED House Committee on Agriculture approved a version of the legislation known as the farm bill that cuts $16.5 billion from food stamps, $12 billion more than the cuts approved in the Senate's version last month. Eighty percent of farm bill funding goes towards food stamps.

The two versions of the bill will have to be reconciled between the chambers before a uniform bill can be passed by both the House and Senate. Some Republicans oppose entitlement programs and argue that the bills don't go far enough to cut spending amidst a ballooning deficit, while Democrats say the food stamp cuts unfairly target those who rely on them.
"Today marked an important step forward in the development of the next farm bill," said Republican Rep. Frank D. Lucas of Oklahoma, who chairs the House agriculture committee. "This is a balanced, reform-minded, fiscally responsible bill that underscores our commitment to production agriculture and rural America, achieves real savings and improves program efficiency."
Food stamps, officially known as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), feed 45 million Americans every year. The number of people receiving food stamps has grown exponentially since 2007 when the country entered a recession. Economic recovery has been slow, forcing families to continue their reliance on the program.
Connecticut Democrat Rep. Rosa DeLauro said up to 3 million people could lose their food stamp benefits if the current House bill gets passed, and 300,000 children would no longer receive free school lunches.
"These cuts are a slap in the face to millions of people trying to make ends meet," said California Democrat Rep. Lynn Woolsey.
The bill approved by the agriculture committee faces a ticking clock in being sent before the full House for a vote: Congress is only scheduled to be in session until August 3, and a five-year farm bill must be passed before September 30 when the current version, passed in 2008, expires.

2 comments:

Defensores de Democracia said...

Congress Republicans and Mitt Romney want to starve the Poor while giving Great Gifts to the Rich and Wealthy ( Tax Cuts, Deregulations, etc ... )

The 1% already are the Greatest "Welfare Queens" in History, but that is not enough, "Starve the Poor".

Anonymous said...

The truly needy will continue to get food stamps you lying POS!

Cutting waste and fraud should be eliminated. But like a typical Democrat you think the lazy and illegal should continue to get them.

What happened in your life to make you become such a traitor to this country?

Page Hits