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In Short

The Safety Maze: Inconsistent and Unpredictable Rules in the Public Benefits System

Last week at the National Anti-Hunger Policy Conference, I attended a roundtable about SNAP outreach to veterans and military families. Over the past few years, SNAP sales at commissaries. At the same time, the 2008 Farm Bill permanently from service members鈥 countable income for SNAP purposes. It鈥檚 clear that there is growing recognition that military members and their families are vulnerable to hunger. Nevertheless, certain policies serve as barriers to access by this population鈥攕pecifically, the allocation of the Base Allowance for Housing (鈥淏AH鈥) to income. And in many ways, the policy is emblematic of larger gaps in equity and transparency in the public benefits system. 

Many military families who would otherwise qualify for SNAP benefits are found ineligible because of the BAH. For purposes of SNAP eligibility, the BAH is treated as countable income, despite the fact that it commonly goes directly to the recipient鈥檚 landlord. By contrast, military families who live in base housing are not required to include the value of their housing as income. Military members have the option of participating in an alternative food assistance program, the (鈥淔SSA鈥), which was created specifically to prevent significant military participation in SNAP (and the resulting public outcry). However, it鈥檚 even more difficult to be eligible for FSSA than SNAP because all income is counted, including the value of base housing and military bonuses. Furthermore, service members must apply for the FSSA through their commanders, which often operates as an additional deterrent due to the shame involved in admitting one鈥檚 family is going hungry, particularly in the proud military culture.

This policy serves as but one example of how receipt of one government benefit may offset or preclude another. This in turn relates to the larger issue of the complex set of decisions that navigating the public benefits system often requires. For participants in this system, the financial consequences of any particular decision鈥攕uch as enrolling in a new program or starting a new job鈥攁re rarely intuitive.

Furthermore, the BAH income rule reveals how incongruence in policy often contributes to inequitable outcomes. For example, Section 8 housing vouchers are generally treated as excluded unearned income for the purposes of determining TANF or SNAP eligibility. Yet for military families whose incomes would qualify them for SNAP without their government housing subsidy, the BAH tips the scales and renders the household ineligible. Thus, as elsewhere in the public benefits system, similarly situated families鈥攊n this case, those with low incomes and receiving government housing assistance鈥攁re subject to different rules and varying levels of access. The result is an inequitable distribution of benefits and general frustration with accessing services.

The variation among further illustrates these types of inconsistencies. For example, Virginia has eliminated its TANF asset test, while its neighbor North Carolina only excludes vehicles, retirement accounts, burial and life insurance, EITC refunds, and income-producing property. These types of disparities result in not only inequity, but also a high prevalence of misinformation that deters saving even in states that have eliminated or substantially liberalized their asset tests. As documented in a prior NAF publication, even though there is no TANF asset test in Virginia, the presence of such a test in Maryland deters Virginia residents from saving or even maintaining bank accounts. In other words, asset rules are not intuitive, and the lack of predictability discourages both applying for benefits and saving money.

A truly effective safety net would offer the same level of support to those with the same level of need. It would also provide participants with a reasonable basis to feel confident in the system. Unpredictable and inconsistent rules pose a barrier to both of these goals. With respect to the asset tests, one response would be to eliminate the tests altogether, particularly since the vast majority of families applying for benefits don鈥檛 come close to the asset limit in the first place. Alternatively, asset limits could be standardized across programs and states. For a more thorough exploration of these types of interventions please click here.

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Aleta Sprague

Fellow, Family-Centered Social Policy

Programs/Projects/Initiatives

The Safety Maze: Inconsistent and Unpredictable Rules in the Public Benefits System