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This practice also paradoxically continues as New York State and New York City continue to tout the benefits of the program as a means of supporting low income households and the state’s overall economy. This practice continues even as the incidence of SNAP overpayment errors reaches historic lows (a 2.9 percent error rate in FY 2014, down from double digit rates in the 1990s) and the program itself remains an example in efficiency when compared to other federal programs such as the Earned Income Tax Credit, which consistently reports overpayment rates between 22 percent and 26 percent. Under the guise of program integrity and quality control, the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), which administers the federal program, burdens low income people with the task of remedying the mistakes of local Agencies. If the recipient’s SNAP case is active, this is done by reducing the monthly benefit amount, and if the case has been closed, an invoice, identical to the one my client received, is sent to the household demanding cash repayment. When HRA does not take any action and the SNAP recipient continues to receive the higher amount to which they are no longer entitled, HRA is mandated by federal law to recover the “overpayment” caused by its own error. If, as they are required to do, SNAP recipients report changes in household circumstances such as a reduction in the number of household members or an increase in income, it is the agency’s responsibility to re-calculate the benefit amount with the new information.
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Within this context, when HRA makes an error in calculating a household’s benefits, the clients are the last to know.
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In general, however, SNAP recipients are told, through various forms of cultural narratives, to simply be grateful for any amount of benefits they receive.
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If HRA has made an easily recognizable error in calculation, such as one concerning the household’s income, SNAP recipients might request an administrative hearing to ask that the change be made. The household applies for benefits, submits the required documents, appears for the required appointments and waits for approval at some benefit amount. The household either knows of or learns of SNAP benefits. Most people’s actual engagement with SNAP follows a similar path: A household struggles to purchase food. “Standard Utility Allowances,” “Thrifty Food Plan” and other jargon are not terms that the average SNAP recipient could define but their ever-changing definitions have substantial impact on an individual’s eligibility for benefits and the benefit amount. In general, SNAP recipients have very little knowledge about the highly political math that determines how their monthly benefits are calculated.
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A significant portion of our preparation for the hearing involved me explaining to my client that her diligence in adhering to the program’s rules would not matter in this case. HRA finally recognized its mistake, closed the case, and sent a $2,054 invoice to a two-person household that barely made $1700 per month. For six months, she continued to receive Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits although, unknown to her, the new employment income made her ineligible.
#FOOD STAMPS NYC UPDATE#
Staff members in the agency had failed to update her income information despite her submitting the necessary proof of income multiple times. “But I brought them the pay stubs,” my client tried to explain as we looked over documents in preparation for her administrative hearing, documents including the invoice for $2,054 she had received from NYC’s Human Resources Administration (HRA).
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