FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 12, 1997
Contact: Dave Redmond
(202) 225-4050
WASHINGTON, D.C. - THE
HOUSE COMMITTEE ON AGRICULTURE TODAY APPROVED INSTRUCTIONS FOR
BUDGET RECONCILIATION, COMMITTING $1.5 BILLION IN NEW FOOD STAMP
FUNDS AS REQUIRED BY THE BALANCED BUDGET AGREEMENT, BUT ALSO ALLOWING
STATES TO PRIVATIZE ADMINISTRATIVE FUNCTIONS IN THE FOOD STAMP
PROGRAM, JUST WEEKS AFTER THE CLINTON ADMINISTRATION REJECTED
A SIMILAR REQUEST FROM THE STATE OF TEXAS.
The House Budget Resolution for Fiscal Year 1998
(H.Con. Res. 84) requires Congress to spend an additional $1.5
billion for food stamps from FY98 to FY02 - on top of the $26
billion already spent on the food stamp program annually. The
Committee on Agriculture, as the committee with jurisdiction over
the food stamp program, voted today to distribute $920 million
of the additional $1.5 billion to state job training and workfare
efforts over the next five years.
The Committee also adopted an amendment, authored
by Larry Combest (R-TX), Chairman of the Agriculture Subcommittee
on Forestry, Resource Conservation, and Research, to allow states
to privatize the administrative functions of the food stamp program.
Rep. Combest and Agriculture Committee Chairman Bob Smith (R-OR)
have cosponsored a bill, H.R. 1709, to allow for privatization
of welfare's administrative functions.
"We've lived up to our end of the budget agreement,
but we've also taken the first step in moving scarce federal funding
from the bureaucracy and into the hands of the folks who need
it," said Agriculture Committee Chairman Bob Smith (R-OR).
"The food stamp program is intended to provide the needy
with nutritional help. It ought not be a full employment program
for bureaucrats, and I hope and expect there will be substantial
support for that position in both the House and Senate."
"Texas proposed doing this as part of its welfare
reform efforts, but was blocked by the Clinton Administration.
I am disappointed the president would not help Texas as he had
indicated some months ago. By including this amendment, we will
ensure that Texas and every other state has the maximum flexibility,
choosing the best way to deliver food stamps to needy families,"
Combest said.
Consistent with the budget agreement, the Committee
also voted to permit states to exempt up to 15% of their able-bodied
food stamp recipients from the welfare reform bill's food stamp
work requirement - in addition to the provision in last year's
welfare reform bill that allows states to waive the work requirement
in regions with high unemployment. Under current law, able-bodied,
18 to 50-year-old food stamp recipients with no dependents can
receive food stamps for three months in any three year period.
After exhausting the three months, those recipients must either
work 20 hours per week or enter a job training or workfare program
in order to continue receiving food stamps.
The Committee on Agriculture will transmit its food
stamp spending recommendations to the Budget Committee for inclusion
within upcoming budget reconciliation legislation.
Smith represents Oregon's Second Congressional District,
which includes most of eastern, central, and southern Oregon,
in the U.S. House of Representatives. Combest represents Texas'
19th Congressional District, which includes the Panhandle,
South Plains, and the Permian Basin.