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AB
231: THE SAVE MONEY, CUT HUNGER ACT
The federal Food Stamp Program is a cost-effective tool for
helping hard-working families put food on the table. As a federally funded benefits program, it
provides over $1.5 billion in food purchasing dollars to stimulate local
economies throughout
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Step
1 €€€€€€€€€€ Only
49% of eligible Californians
receive food stamps
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Remove waste, attack hunger, and fight fraud
responsibly: Eliminate
the Finger Imaging Requirement
*Fact
Sheet What
AB 231 Would Do: Eliminate the finger imaging system to save $10 million each
year and to remove a major hassle from the lengthy and intimidating food
stamp application process. Use the
cheaper and effective fraud detection tools used in over 40 states. |
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Step
2 €€€€€
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Support the welfare-to-work transition: Establish
Transitional Food Stamp Benefits
*Fact
Sheet President Bush and Congress want
to help people leaving welfare by providing them with 5 months of federal food
stamps benefits – without any hassles or red tape. However, states need to
actively choose this option in order for it to take effect. What
AB 231 Would Do: Require
the state to establish transitional food stamps for people leaving cash
assistance. This will bring an
estimated $80 million in federal benefits into |
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Step
3
It
takes an average of 5 hours at the food stamp office to get help
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Help Hungry Folks Keep Their Jobs and Get
Food Assistance: Cut
Down on Food Stamp Face-to-Face Interviews *Fact
Sheet Many
working Californians can’t afford to take time off from work to get the food
stamps their families need. Assisting
families by phone, mail or other means will help them keep their jobs and put
food on the table. It will also reduce
the time it takes for counties to process food stamp applications, helping
county food stamp offices manage cuts in administration. What
AB 231 Would Do:
Follow |
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Step
4
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Make Food Stamps Work for Working Families: Allow
Hungry Folks to Own Reliable Cars
*Fact
Sheet A key barrier to food stamp
participation is our state’s car rule, which can dis What
AB 231 Would Do Require California to do what most other states are already
doing: let low-income families keep the car they need for work without losing
their eligibility for food stamps. |
Fulfill the Pupil Nutrition, Health and Achievement Act
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Increase children’s
access to healthy food: Invest in a Nutritious School Environment
*Fact
Sheet In 2001, the
Legislature and Governor agreed on new nutrition standards for all food sold
in elementary schools and on a ban of meal-time sodas in middle schools. The law (formerly SB19-Escutia) will take effect in
January 2004, but only if the state is able to increase its reimbursement by
10 cents per school meal. Given the
state’s budget crisis, CFPA is working to identify a range of federal and
state sources of funding so that we can fulfill the promise of the new
standards. Action: Increase the school meal reimbursement. Implement new nutrition standards at
schools. |
For more
information on this agenda, contact
Visit us at www.cfpa.net