From Texas Public Radio:
Looking out from under his ball cap with the words “Marines” stitched across the bill, Richard Maldonado’s eyes are tired. He got to this parking lot on San Antonio’s Southwest Side at 4 a.m. to get food from the San Antonio Food Bank. The distribution last Saturday didn’t start until 9 but he said he didn’t want to miss out.
“Without them, we’d be in bad shape,” he said.
Sitting next to him, Corina Guttierez said her Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) — which she still calls food stamps — is running out more quickly than expected, and they have to rely even more on the San Antonio Food Bank.
“The stamps are once a month, and before we know it, by almost two weeks, we’re out of the food,” she said.
Congressional Republicans continue to push for spending cuts to the nation’s social safety net, including unprecedented ones to SNAP — the largest feeding program in the nation.
The reconciliation bill will cut more than $290 billion from the program, push billions of dollars in costs down to the states and push people off the low-income feeding program through work requirements.
Maldonado and Guttierez are among the estimated 41 million people who accessed SNAP last year.
The two are in their 60s and 70s, and they worry the proposed cuts would lead to less food to go around for more people and they will have to turn to family for help.
“We’re gonna be dependent on people like donating money or food or whatever. It’s gonna come down to that,” Maldonado added.
Up ahead, teams of volunteers cut open 50-pound bags of white onions. Next to them, volunteers rush to break down pallets of limes, beans, broccoli and yellow squash.
“Squash are going into this bag. So you’re just going to keep on filling up squash,” said one volunteer as the team bagged the items quickly. Ten onions went into a bag. Thirty limes into another.
The team was short on volunteers, and Food Bank staff called back to the headquarters to ask for more to come.
More than 250 cars were already in line for food by 7:30 a.m., and more kept showing up.