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Saralyn Fosnight's avatar

I’m currently surviving on my Social Security check alone. I just moved into subsidized housing. Illinois cut my food stamps from $249/month when I lived in market rate housing first to $83 then to $23 with no explanation. I pay a small sum for Part D coverage and I have Medicare and Medicaid. The idea that I or anyone else could feed themselves on $23 a month is ludicrous, particularly with inflationary food prices as they are currently. I also have a large charge account bill I’m paying on that includes my costs for moving out of my old apartment. This was one of the most expensive moves I ever made in my life! I’m wondering when I will ever experience a “benefit” from my “affordable housing.”

I used your table for estimating how much I should receive and there was no comparison with what I actually receive. I guess I have to challenge their math, and not for the first time either. They will always lowball you and force you to challenge them. I’ve been keeping a tally of what I actually spend on food and it comes in, on average, to around $300 a month. This is food only, not cleaning products and things like toilet paper. I cook most of what I eat from scratch, and I’m a good cook; however, I could not eat the food you eat. I can’t eat dried beans at all because of problems with FODMAPS that lead to IBS. So my diet, of necessity, contains a lot of protein. I’m borderline diabetic so I can’t live on pasta either. Age affects a good deal of what I must contend with daily. I know for a fact that many diabetics on food stamps have a bad time with food choices. The very things that fill you up and are cheap are glucose bombs. So I’m left wandering between Scylla and Charybdis, afraid to turn in any direction.

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Boomer281's avatar

Thanks so much for the black bean meat loaf recipe. I've been promising myself that I'd start cooking a little more since transitioning to veganism a couple of months ago. My modus operandi in the past has been to "nuke it" if I can. I'm also a SNAP and Medicaid recipient since my SS barely covers rent and utilities (I live on Oahu, HI). I used to be embarrassed to use my SNAP card at stores like Whole Foods where the rich white folk shop -- at least that has been my perception of the store. But now, I don't care. I see these benefits as a form of reparations that I deserve given all the free labor my ancestors contributed to this country's wealth that was never passed down to me and mine.

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