|
PRESIDENT’S
PROPOSED BUDGET CUTS VITAL FOOD PROGRAM, PUTS
ST. LOUIS SENIORS AT RISK OF
HUNGER
*More than 4,000 seniors in St. Louis City will be
impacted*
ST. LOUIS (February 6, 2007)
– President Bush released his Fiscal Year 2008 budget proposal
yesterday eliminating funding for the Commodity Supplemental Food
Program (CSFP) - a critical nutrition program benefiting nearly half
a million low-income seniors and women with young children each month
in 32 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico.
Seniors have unique nutritional needs
and often require special diets for medical conditions. Ensuring they
are able to access wholesome, nutritious foods is extremely
important, as hunger increases the risk for stroke, exacerbates
pre-existing health conditions, limits the efficacy of many
prescription drugs, and may affect brain chemistry increasing the
incidence of depression and isolation. The monthly food boxes
provided through CSFP are geared toward these needs including staples
like cheese, meat, canned fruit and vegetables, milk, beans, pasta
and cereal.
In the Greater St. Louis area,
seniors represent the second largest segment in need of food
assistance and the St. Louis Area Foodbank relies on CSFP to help the
organization provide much-needed food boxes to more than 4,000
seniors each month. “Our network of 500+ agencies are already being
stretched to the limit with requests for food assistance,” stated
Frank Finnegan, St. Louis Area Foodbank executive director. “If this
program is eliminated, replacing those meals would be impossible.
It’s difficult to understand how a program that does so much good can
even be considered for elimination,” Finnegan concluded.
“CSFP serves the most vulnerable
population of low-income Americans in the United States, and in many
cases it is their most critical source of nutritious food,” said
Vicki Escarra, president and chief executive officer of America’s
Second Harvest—The Nation’s Food Bank Network. “It is morally
reprehensible that many of our senior citizens are experiencing
hunger. We live in a land of plenty. No one should go without food,
especially our seniors who have contributed so much over the years to
their communities and to this great nation of ours. If these cuts are
passed, the impact will be devastating.”
Nearly 10 percent of America’s elderly
live below the poverty line and the nation’s growing boomer
population threatens to worsen this statistic. The America’s Second
Harvest Network now serves nearly three million seniors each year.
Elimination of CSFP will impose additional strains on already tight
food bank budgets as hundreds of thousands of seniors will be turning
to America's Second Harvest Network Members for a meal.
We urge Congress not to forget those
in need and fund CSFP and other hunger-relief programs to adequate
levels.
### |