New laws go into effect tomorrow, and for West Virginia, SNAP benefits will no longer be able to be used to buy soda.
It’s part of the state government’s efforts to embrace the Trump Administration’s “Make America Healthy Again” plan.
But the head of one of two West Virginia food banks tells News4 the soda headline is actually hiding changes that will reduce access to healthy food. Cynthia Kirkhart is the CEO of the Facing Hunger Foodbank in Huntington, which serves about 100,000 West Virginia adults and children. She says the soda law, which is aimed at encouraging better nutrition, comes at the same time programs supporting that goal are being cut.
“Everything that we do is to improve the quality of the food we provide,” she said. “But it feels like we’re being done to, and it feels like that the contingencies of how many people are really using soda, all those things, we may be missing the mark.”
Kirkhart says a popular SNAP program that incentivizes the consumption of vegetables and fruits in the state has ended.
“SNAP Stretch provided two extra SNAP dollars for every dollar that a child and family would spend on produce and fruit, so that program kind of went away,” she said.
Kirkhart says SNAP Ed, a nutrition education program designed to stretch food dollars done in conjunction with West Virginia University, has also ended.
New SNAP purchase restrictions will go into effect in five states Jan. 1. The National Grocers Association predicts the changes will be confusing and costly to implement.
from Local – NBC4 Washington https://ift.tt/9AaeVTH
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