• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Kentucky Center for Economic Policy

Kentucky Center for Economic Policy

      

  • About Us
  • Press Room
  • Donate

Research That Works for Kentucky

  • Topics
    • Budget & Tax
    • Criminal Justice
    • Economic Security
    • Education
    • Health Care
    • Jobs & The Economy
  • Types
    • News
    • Op-Ed
    • Research

      

  • About Us
  • Press Room
  • Donate

Copyright © 2025 KyPolicy Privacy Policy Terms & Conditions Sitemap

Op-Ed

Kentucky Organizations Urge Protecting Food Assistance in Farm Bill

Dustin Pugel | September 19, 2018

One in seven Kentuckians has food on their table in part thanks to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). SNAP lifts 164,000 Kentuckians, including 73,000 children, out of poverty. It sends nearly $1 billion a year to grocery stores and our state’s economy, and injects even more into our local communities during hard times when they most need it. For decades, SNAP has had broad-based, bipartisan support, because all of us value making sure everyone has enough to eat.

As Kentucky’s two elected officials on the Farm Bill Conference Committee, Senator McConnell and Representative Comer, negotiate for the future of SNAP, we urge them to consider its value to the commonwealth. Specifically, we urge them to adopt the Senate version of the SNAP provisions that protect and enhance this vital food assistance.

More On Economic Security: Red Tape, Empty Plates: An Analysis of the SNAP Work Requirement in Kentucky

In contrast, the version of the Farm Bill passed by the House would have cut SNAP by $19 billion and left many Kentucky families without help paying for groceries. These cuts took the form of extremely restrictive work requirements, dangerous lock-out periods for up to three years, and expensive and burdensome administrative red tape that would likely result in errors and loss of benefits.

We can all agree that helping people get good-paying jobs is an important goal, but harsher SNAP work requirements won’t help us get there. The fact is that many SNAP participants are working – in low-wage jobs with irregular hours that don’t pay enough to get by. Nearly three-quarters of adults on SNAP work at some point during the year while receiving food assistance or at some point during the preceding year. But more than one in four working Kentuckians earned wages in 2016 that even at full-time, year-round employment, were too low to keep a family of four out of poverty. Low pay, unsteady hours and a lack of benefits like sick days leads to food insecurity and periods of underemployment.

SNAP supports work. Not only does it help Kentuckians whose jobs pay too little to make ends meet or while they look for employment, but research has also shown that when people have enough food, they’re healthier and therefore more productive members of their communities. Historical evidence shows that cutting people off from SNAP won’t raise their incomes or improve their career prospects, but it will make it that much harder for them to get by and feed their families.

At $1.36 per person, per meal, SNAP provides modest but important assistance designed to replace a third of a family’s grocery bill. This assistance boosts economies that are facing downturns, helps families make ends meet, and results in lasting improvements in the lives of children.

As lawmakers put the finishing touches on a new Farm Bill, they should leave behind dangerous proposals from the House and move ahead with the bipartisan Senate version of the bill. SNAP is a critical piece of the puzzle to ensure that all Kentuckians, including those in low-wage jobs, can make ends meet. Kentucky’s Farm Bill conferees need to protect and strengthen SNAP, not cut it.

The following organizations are signatories on the letter in opposition to the proposed cuts to SNAP in the Farm Bill.

ACLU of Kentucky, Advocacy Action Network, Appalshop, Catholic Charities of Louisville, Catholic Conference, Centerstone Kentucky, Children, Inc., Community Farm Alliance, Fahe, Forward Kentucky, The Friedell Committee, Healthy Reentry Coalition of Kentucky, Homeless and Housing Coalition of Kentucky, Jefferson County Teachers Association, Kentucky Association of Community Heath Workers, Kentucky Association of Food Banks, Kentucky Center for Economic Policy, Kentucky Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics, Kentucky Coalition Against Domestic Violence, Kentucky Council of Churches, Kentucky Education Association, Kentucky Equal Justice Center, Kentucky Non-profit Network, Kentucky Nurses Association, Kentucky School Boards Association, Kentucky State AFL-CIO, Kentucky Voices for Health, Kentuckians for the Commonwealth, Mental Health of America of Kentucky, Mountain Association for Community Economic Development, NAACP Branch 3107, National Alliance on Mental Illness, Lexington, National Association of Social Workers, Kentucky Chapter, The People’s Campaign, Sisters of Charity of Nazareth, The Women’s Network, UFCW Local 227.

This sign-on letter ran in the Northern Kentucky Tribune on September 19, 2018 and the Courier-Journal on September 27,2018.

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

FacebookTweetLinkedInEmail

Primary Sidebar

Get KyPolicy news updates in your inbox

Sign Up

Sidebar

Perspectives

Slashing Federal Programs Would Deal Another Blow to Rural Kentuckians

Kentuckians Need a New Trade Policy, Not a Chaotic Trade War

Kentucky Voters Buried Private School Vouchers. One More Idea Must Die to Truly Reinvest in Our Public Schools

Our Leaders Should Give Thanks to Food Assistance, Not Deplete It

A Warning for Kentucky From the Devastating Impact of Vouchers on Arizona, Florida Public Schools

Other Economic Security Items

city town fall mountain forest houses buildings

Op-Ed

Slashing Federal Programs Would Deal Another Blow to Rural Kentuckians

Our Leaders Should Give Thanks to Food Assistance, Not Deplete It

Op-Ed

Our Leaders Should Give Thanks to Food Assistance, Not Deplete It

uaw contract

Op-Ed

Union Victories Could Spark New Blue Collar Power in the Bluegrass

Ky. Policy

Footer

Research that works for Kentucky

433 Chestnut Street, Berea, KY 40403

859-756-4605

General information and inquiries: info@kypolicy.org

     

Help us make the facts free and accessible to everyone. That’s how Kentucky will thrive.

Donate

  • Topics
    • Budget & Tax
    • Criminal Justice
    • Economic Security
    • Education
    • Health Care
    • Jobs & The Economy
  • Work
    • News
    • Op-Ed
    • Research
  • About Us
  • Press Room
  • Contact

Get KyPolicy news updates in your inbox

Sign Up

Copyright © 2025 KyPolicy Privacy Policy Terms & Conditions Sitemap

made by P&P
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.Ok