THE AMERICA ONE NEWS
Jun 5, 2025  |  
0
 | Remer,MN
Sponsor:  QWIKET 
Sponsor:  QWIKET 
Sponsor:  QWIKET: Elevate your fantasy game! Interactive Sports Knowledge.
Sponsor:  QWIKET: Elevate your fantasy game! Interactive Sports Knowledge and Reasoning Support for Fantasy Sports and Betting Enthusiasts.
back  
topic
Boston Herald
Boston Herald
18 Jul 2023
James Whitford


NextImg:Whitford: Work requirements for food stamps … work

Because I fear that America is sinking into the mire of national debt and government dependency, I testified in favor of work requirements for the food stamp program at a Senate hearing on the Farm Bill in April.

Few offered similar arguments, and most gave impassioned speeches about the need to grow welfare programs. To the latter, I’d like to extend an invitation to Missouri, which instituted work requirements for able-bodied adults without dependents (ABAWDs) on food stamps in 2016.

The outcomes of Missouri’s work requirement efforts saw 85% of ABAWDs move from welfare to work, and statewide food insecurity dropped from 14.2% to 12%. I was encouraged to learn that the “Limit, Save, Grow” debt ceiling bill debated in Congress in the spring included a provision to raise the welfare work requirement age for ABAWDs from 50 to 56 years of age while limiting the ability of states to waive those requirements.

Unfortunately, the bill failed.

More Americans returning to work equals less government spending on social safety net programs. That’s one reason the failure of the Limit, Save, Grow Act as an answer to the debt ceiling crisis really hurt. Our national debt has doubled in the last 10 years from $16 trillion to $32 trillion. The current rate of government spending is untenable, and  the Treasury Department has been forced to acknowledge in its 2022 Financial Report that “the projected continuous rise of the debt-to-GDP ratio indicates that current policy is unsustainable.”

As the June deadline for default on the national debt approached, the government was still trying to figure out how to continue spending what it didn’t have by borrowing more to pay what it owed. Higher interest rates and economic recession loomed. At the same time, the “Limit, Save, Grow Act” was tossed aside for a compromise that increased the debt ceiling but failed to reign in government spending. Its replacement, the Fiscal Responsibility Act, signed by President Biden on June 3, only trims deficit spending by 3 percent over the next 10 years. The Congressional Budget Office projects it will leave us with a debt bill of $45.2 trillion in 2033.

The most significant opportunity for saving in this scrapped bill was that of human dignity. Although the Fiscal Responsibility Act retained some aspects of work requirements for SNAP (food stamps), overall, the rules were relaxed enough that SNAP enrollment is now projected to increase by 78,000 people for $2.1 billion.

Sadly, though being employed is essential to escaping poverty, more people on food stamps ultimately results in fewer people working. Having the opportunity to provide for yourself and your family establishes a sense of dignity that can be stripped away by welfare dependency.

Offering those in poverty the opportunity to untangle themselves from the ever-expanding welfare safety net would be a refreshing disruption to the status quo by limiting government spending and reach, saving human dignity and growing stronger communities. The Limit, Save, Grow Act would have helped. It pointed toward a more robust, less dependent America.

James Whitford is the founder and CEO of  True Charity, a nonprofit organization. He and his wife are the founders of Watered Gardens Ministries, a homeless mission in Joplin, Missouri./InsideSources