Congressman Conaway Climbs Uphill in Battle to Reform Food Stamps

 

SAN ANGELO, TX — “The Democrats en mass fled the scene and walked to the sidelines during the markup for the 2019 Farm Bill. They didn’t offer one amendment. They didn’t even offer an amendment that said ‘start over!’ They cared so little about the legislative process that they basically just sat there,” is how Congressman Mike Conaway began his explanation of how his committee drafted what has become a controversial piece a legislation the full house will vote to approve or disapprove next week.

Conaway addressed the San Angelo Rotary Club meeting at Zentner’s Daughter Steakhouse, 1901 Knickerbocker Rd., on Friday, May 4.

Conaway is the chair of the House Committee on Agriculture. His committee drafted a bill that increases the work requirements for recipients of food stamps, the program officially known as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP.

The provision in the bill the Democrats don’t like is, if you are aged 18 to 59, and work capable, you must work 20 hours a week, or you must participate in a state-run program to do whatever it takes that will elevate the work-capable SNAP recipient to a level where that person can become gainfully employed, whether it’s job training, case management, help with a search for a job, childcare assistance, and etc. In 2026, the work requirement jumps to 25 hours per week.

“The idea is, if you’re willing to help yourself, then we’re going to take government resources and help you along,” Conaway said.

The work requirement will in practice only impact 40 percent of SNAP recipients. Conaway noted that 60 percent of recipients are always going to be helped because they are not work-capable. These people include the elderly, children under the age of 18, physically disabled. “That body of folks we’re just going to help, because that’s who we are as a country,” he said.

SNAP already requires for able-bodied individuals, from 18-49 of age, to work or participate in a work program. It will allow abled-bodied individuals to receive food stamps for up to three months every three years without work, however.

Conaway said the committee conducted a review of the SNAP program last year and formed recommendations based upon its findings. Further, Conaway argued, the work requirements for receiving SNAP have high approval—around 80 percent combined—for both Republicans and Democrats.

But Conaway’s senior leader on his committee from the minority party, Congressman Collin Peterson (D-Minnesota), told the NPR that Conaway’s SNAP overhaul would “increase food insecurity and hardship.”

This will be the first time in history that the farm bill will be voted up or down on a pure party-line vote. Peterson accuses Conaway of partisan rancor with the bill. Conaway claimed not Peterson or anyone else on the other side of the aisle attempted to collaborate with Republicans when drafting the legislation.

Conaway said he desired bi-partisan help with the bill. “I can get this bill out of the House on a strict party line vote,” he said. “The problem is in the Senate, they have the 60-vote issue, so I have to have Democrat support,” he said. Conaway was referring to the rule in the Senate that requires a supermajority of 60 votes in the 100-member government body to pass new legislation without a filibuster. Republicans hold a small majority of just 51 votes. Conaway needs nine Democrat senators to help him reform SNAP.

Conaway admitted he has very little leverage in getting the reforms passed through the Senate. “The non-SNAP provisions of the law expire October 1. On the non-SNAP portion of the law, it has a dramatic impact by that expiration date. Farm programs go away, and we revert back to permanent law which is from 1937 to 1947,” he said. That means farmers will not get their farming subsidies. But SNAP, because of the way previous laws were passed, continues on unfettered, based in the Obama-era legislation. “Nothing bad happens to SNAP when the law expires,” Conaway said.

The Senators who don’t want to change SNAP, or oppose the new bill, only have to sit on their hands or vote No.

Conaway is working with the House leadership to secure enough Republican votes to take it to the floor next week (week of May 14). According to Politico, he is facing opposition from more conservative members of the House who say the 2019 Farm Bill doesn’t do enough to reform food stamps. Food stamps comprise about 80 percent of the Farm Bill’s proposed spending.

About 13.5 percent of Americans receive SNAP, which equates to about 40.7 million people on April 6, 2017.

For more on other provisions in the Farm Bill, the High Plains Journal has a complete rundown.

Conaway defended the SNAP reform in a radio interview here.

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After giving more than 1,5 trillion dollars to the rich and large corporations because the Republican donors demanded it in order for the GOP to continue getting their money Conaway and his fellow Republicans want to further weaken the social safety net that protects our most vulnerable.

The CBO estimates that 1.2 million of our most vulnerable citizens will be kicked off of SNAP if Conaway's plan is implemented. The plan changes from the current 18 to 49 year old able bodied participants that are required to work or receive training to 18 to 59 year old able bodied participants. In 2026 the hours will change from 20 to 25. The penalties built into the plan are designed to punish our most vulnerable not help them. The Democrats want nothing to do with this odious plan written by the same people who fall all over themselves to appease their wealthy masters with huge tax cuts.

Here is a summary:

"Here is how it works under the current SNAP plan: if you are "able bodied", between the ages of 18-49 and able to work, you are "required" to accept a job if you are offered one. You can only receive benefits for a limited amount of time, unless you can show that you are working or attending training for 20 hours per week."

"The Republicans make it sounds like millions of Americans are sitting at home, eating lobster, refusing to work, and taking money away from all the other taxpayers that are going to work. Indefinitely. That is simply not the case."

"So how is Conaway trying to change this bill? They are adding the changes to the "House Farm Bill" and upping the age to 59 instead of 49. You will still have to work work at least 20 hours a week, but that jumps to 25 hours per week starting in 2026. If you can't find a job for some reason, states will be responsible for offering you a spot in a training program (how will you get paid or pay for childcare, who knows). If you refuse to attend or violate some other rule, you will be kicked off SNAP for a full 12 months. Mess up again and the punishment jumps to 3 years."

"Based on these work requirements, the CBO has determined that over 1.2 million people would no longer be eligible due to the work requirement alone. On paper, it looks good, though. Slate reports that it will be a true "welfare to work" bill. But it will end up costing more money overall, especially to states with high unemployment, as they will have to provide job training to everyone ages 18-59. This bill also creates a huge vacuum of hoops for SNAP recipients to jump through. They will have to provide proof every single month that they worked 20 hours per week, were in training or were exempt. Who is going to do those verifications? States will have to hire people to fill those jobs."

"At the end of the day, this is a cruel bill designed to catch people and kick them off at the first opportunity. You have a sick kid and miss a few hours of work? Boom, off for 12 months. It is nice on paper, makes for some good ads designed at "hard working Americans who are subsidizing those lazy takers who refuse to get a job" but really it is more cruel than that. It is about literally starving the most vulnerable and punishing them for the economic situation they are in, even if it largely out of their control."

https://crooksandliars.com/2018/05/paul-ryans-last-act-kicking-least-one

"Congress has long depended on the coalition formed by uniting agriculture and consumer interests to pass the Farm Bill. In the past, that’s warded off the partisan bickering and brinksmanship that has come to define the way Capitol Hill handles almost everything else."

"the ranking Democrat on the committee, pulled his members from negotiations when the GOP chairman, Rep. Mike Conaway of Texas, wouldn’t budge on his SNAP proposals."

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