I hate when people rant about what food can be bought!
Do they realize that fresh fruit and other healthy items are expensive! Starchy, processed foods are cheaper are easy to stretch.
Also - getting to stores is oftentimes a hardship for many living in poor neighborhoods relying on public transportation.
When DH and I were both laid off of work in 2007, we had to get help. We lost everything---our cars repossessed, struggled to pay rent (thank you Catholic Charities, for helping for the worst 2 months), and many a night, I went hungry so that the kids and DH could eat. (He had to eat, was on home dialysis then. No insurance due to screw ups by the social worker at the clinic, ran up $500,000 in medical bills in that 6 month time. Too many people out of work for too few jobs in our area----they opened a new
Walmart and 10,000 people applied for less than 1,000 jobs.)
We walked three blocks to the bus stop, took the bus past our house the 3 miles, walked the 2 blocks to get to the store, did the shopping, and reversed the process to get home (with each of us carrying a backpack of food plus bags in our hands). For a family of 4, we received $425 a month for 6 months, and then DH got a part time job selling software and his disability and insurance kicked in, and we started to recover. It took him another year to get a FT position, and I stopped looking----any money I make would have paid daycare and maybe bus fare.
We had to stretch, that's true, especially with his diet----no sodium, which meant no processed foods-----but we did it. If you want to succeed for your family, you figure out a way to do so.
Do I think that people on Food stamps should be eating caviar and lobster? Not really. But I don't think they need to be eating Cheetohs and drinking Mountain Dew either. People who want to cheat will do so, no matter what rules are put into place. Decades ago, it was selling the paper food stamp booklets for cash; now it's buying the food and selling it for cash. I think there should be a limit to how long you get assistance, and that when you reach that limit, you must either be working or in school for the help to continue. I also think there should be a price limit, as other posters have stated---I think 7.99 a lb on meat is fine. I pay $5.99 a lb for 90/10 ground beef (it's $4.99 lb for 80/20). I also think there should be a limit on how much you can purchase for "junk" food---chips, candy, snack cakes, etc. $50 a month is more than enough to purchase those items. The rest should be spent on meat, fruit, veggies, etc.
(Edited for typo)