See How Food Stamp Cuts Are Hitting Across the U.S.
That’s one of the surprising statistics brought out by Stateline’s interactive food stamps map, which tracks how each state is being affected by cuts in the Supplemental Nutrition and Assistance Program that went into effect on Nov. 1. The program, which helps feed 47 million Americans, saw $5 billion in reductions when a temporary boost in benefits enacted as part of the federal stimulus package expired.
In the past few weeks, media stories have told compelling, sometimes heartbreaking stories of families who rely on food stamps forced to make even harder choices - buying less milk for the kids, eschewing meat purchases as too pricey.
Interestingly, Stateline’s map shows how cold, hard numbers can also serve to humanize the problem. For instance, as the map shows, in Oregon, 304,000 kids and 159,000 elderly people and those with disabilities have seen their benefits cut.
Another fact that jumps out when looking at the map: While Republicans have led the call to slash the SNAP program in the House, many of the states whose residents are most reliant on food stamps are reliably Republican and located in the GOP’s Southern heartland. About 20 percent of the population in Tennessee, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Kentucky, and South Carolina, for instance, receive benefits from the federal food assistance program.
More: See How Food Stamp Cuts Are Hitting Across the U.S. : The Salt : NPR