The difference between convicted felon Donald Trump's warped sense of the country and the reality that he has created has never been starker. For the 42 million people who rely on the Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program (SNAP, the country’s largest anti-hunger program),
it has been a chaotic, nerve-racking week. During an address at the America Business Forum in Miami this week, Trump said:
"Our opponents are offering an economic nightmare-- we are delivering an economic miracle."
Middletown, OH: The uncertainty over SNAP benefits consume 49-year-old Mary Schiely her at home and follows her
to the grocery store, where she has worked for almost 15 years. Most of
the store’s customers depend on SNAP, she said, and so does she. Her SNAP benefits (almost $500 a month) augment her $12-an-hour job. Her pay vanishes quickly on rent,
electricity, cellphone and Wi-Fi. SNAP, she said, “is what puts food on the table.”
Milwaukee, MN: 26-year-old Latrica Williams has not received SNAP funds since early October. Her
baby, 4 months old, was born with a heart defect and needs a special
formula that does not trigger his allergies. Williams had paid for
it with a combination of federal programs, including SNAP. “Formula is really expensive,” Williams said. “It’s like $75 a can, and I don’t have $75 to get him a can of milk.”
Granada, CO: 25-year-old Arianna Payton quietly stepped across a Walmart parking lot and climbed into a dumpster. “I grabbed as much as I could,” she told a reporter. “I wasn’t even looking to make sure that it was safe.” When
she got home, she inspected everything. She retrieved a few bags of
frozen vegetables, meal replacement shakes, cheese and fruit. She also
found some loaves of moldy bread that she thought she could salvage some usable pieces from. Last week, Payton (who has had health issues for years and lives on disability insurance) tried the only nearby food bank. “Everything was gone,” she said.
"America is back and is back stronger than ever before. We're doing
numbers that nobody's ever seen before. We're the hottest country in the
world, actually." Donald Trump (at the APEC CEO lunch in South Korea)
Lewisville, TX:
55-year-old Jennifer Lunn went to a food pantry for
the first time last week. She’s a customer service agent with four
children. For the past two years, she has been able to feed her children
because of SNAP. After her SNAP benefits were cut off, she
found herself at the Heart of the City Lewisville, a pantry
near her house, north of Dallas-Fort Worth. Lunn received a box with
chicken, canned goods and salad ingredients. “This is something I
never thought I’d have to do,” she said. With
SNAP, she usually buys noodles, potatoes, vegetables, chicken and
ground beef, anything to keep her teenagers fuller for longer. But, she
said, they plow through the food. “Two and a half weeks, we’re done,”
she said.
Annoka, MN: At the
grocery store, 44-year-old Jeanne Nihart, a
single mother, picked up some deli meat, cheese and french bread for her
12-year-old daughter, who loves turkey sandwiches. Then she remembered
that her next SNAP payment was at risk. “I can’t justify buying meat
right now,” she recalled thinking at the time. Nihart stopped working
in 2010 because of health issues, including
fibromyalgia, a chronic disorder that comes with pain and fatigue. She
receives a monthly $1,060 disability payment and relies on subsidized
housing, Medicaid and a SNAP benefit of $436 a month. She
expects her next SNAP payment will be half the full amount. “It’s
better than nothing,” she said. “But half doesn’t keep us fed for the
whole month.”
"We have the greatest economy. We are the hottest country anywhere in the world, by far." Donald Trump at the American Business Forum.
Jeffersonville, GA: 39-year-old
Julia Asherman runs a farm, selling
fruits and vegetables to small grocers and green markets. Her customers
are often SNAP recipients. She’s bracing for slower sales and a
financial hit. This time of year, Asherman said, is the worst time to
take SNAP benefits away
from farmers’ customers. That’s when little money is coming in, but
farmers must spend money to prepare for spring planting. In her town,
half the people who buy her produce are on SNAP. And she needs it, too,
for her and her 3-year-old son. “My take-home at the end of the year
already hovers around zero, like many farmers around this country,” she
said.
Tuscon, AZ: 51-year-old
Wesley Peake Jr.
sat on his wheeled walker outside a grocery store. For breakfast, he ate
crackers and cheese, and now, with his hunger slowly building, his mind
conjured images of his favorite foods. Chicken, yogurt, bananas. But
Peake, who is homeless, had no money. And his monthly SNAP benefit, $57,
may not come as usual this month. The
food that SNAP provides usually lasts him about four days. That is a
big help because it means fewer trips to a soup kitchen. His
osteoporosis has weakened his bones. “I can’t walk that well,” he said,
“because my hip sockets are deteriorating.” He
sits outside the grocery store, hoping that passers-by will drop some
change in his hands. These days he is reluctant to ask people outright
for help. They, too, may be losing SNAP.
"This is the golden age of America-- this is the golden age."
Chouteau, OK: The grocery store is 12 miles from 61-year-old
Deana
Pearson’s trailer. The closest food bank is 10 miles away; the closest
gas station is nine. Which trip is worth the gas money? Pearson, whose
jewelry business closed during the coronavirus pandemic,
is running low on food. Without her usual SNAP payment (around $287)
she must rely on what she has left. On Tuesday, that was $1.18. A
gallon of gas is $2.50. “I don’t know what I’m supposed to do,” she
said. “I’m hoping that maybe someone will give me a ride to the food
bank.”
Denver, CO: 39-year-old Jessica Mayne began receiving SNAP in
2019, after tumbling misfortunes. Just
before the pandemic, she and her husband lost their jobs. Then there
was an accident that totaled her car. After she and her family moved in
with her mother, her husband was diagnosed with kidney failure, which
requires dialysis and a special diet. “We were just trying to make it,
and every single time something happened,” she said. They
have made some progress: Mayne now works full time as a behavioral
health
technician, while her husband works part time in construction
management. They had hoped to get
their own place. But Mayne must now handle the loss of her SNAP
benefits ($650) for their family of eight. “We’re stretching all of our
meals,” she said. “Everyone hates me for it, but it’s necessary.” For
dinner recently, she used one pound of ground beef (instead of three)
mixing in rice and beans for added protein. She also took on more credit
card debt to pay for groceries. “It’s just shameful. I feel bad about
it,” she said of her situation. “I feel like I’m failing as an adult.”
"I think it's the best nine months, they say, of any president, and I really believe that."
Alexandria, VA: A year ago,
55-year-old federal worker Andrea Grimaldi was the one donating to those
in need. This
year, she is the one receiving donations. In February, Grimaldi was
fired from a new job as a Head Start specialist at the Department of
Health and Human Services. She received her last paycheck in May.
Although
Virginia will now subsidize SNAP benefits through November, she has
started
to ration just in case. She still has $176 of her $292 monthly SNAP
benefits left from October. Family and friends have also organized food
and gift card deliveries. She has cut her expenses, including streaming
services and ride shares. But she has been forced to dip into her
savings. Grimaldi has been applying for jobs for months without
success. She never expected to rely on government benefits, including
SNAP. “It could happen to anyone in the blink of an eye,” she said.
Passaic, NJ:
When 32-year-old Rosy Hernandez, a single mother,
called SNAP for assistance, an automated message said that her November
payment, usually $748, was not yet available and might be late or not
issued at all. Her current balance: $50. “It’s going to look a little
bit different for me, restocking my fridge this month,” she said.
Hernandez, who has relied on SNAP for two years, cares for her sons,
Xavier, 7, and Adrian, 4. She does not work because Xavier, who has
autism, needs constant supervision. His needs make keeping a job
difficult, although she is looking for part-time work. She is nervous
about relying on a food pantry. Xavier has sensory issues and demands
specific food. “His diet might have to be forcefully changed,” she
said. “And there’s just no telling how he will react.”
"The golden age of American has begun. A golden age like you've never seen before."