Nutrition Program Put on a Crash Diet by Sequestration

by | March 6, 2013

Home 9 Family Economic Security 9 Nutrition Program Put on a Crash Diet by Sequestration ( Page 2 )

Pregnant Women or Children First? — States Are Faced with Grim Choices

The Women, Infants and Children supplemental nutrition program (WIC) is one of many federally funded services that will take a big hit because of sequestration. A new paper issued today by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities (CBPP) examines the effects and the extremely difficult choices that will fall onto state officials administering WIC.

CBPP estimates that between 575,000 and 750,000 eligible low-income women and children will be turned away by the end of the current federal fiscal year (September 30), if sequestration remains in place. That number will depend on how quickly and broadly states beginning denying benefits to low-income pregnant women and children.

If states indiscriminately deny as many applicants and re-applicants as possible, they can reduce the total number who are affected. However, if they set priorities and retain eligibility for high risk women and infants, which I think is probably the wiser course of action, then the cutting will go more slowly, and a larger number of people will have to be turned away by the end of the fiscal year to achieve the mandated spending reduction.

Read more in the new CBPP paper.

Jon Peacock

Kids Forward
Kids Forward

Join us to build a Wisconsin where every child and family thrives.

Recent

Wisconsin Health Insurance Eligibility

Wisconsin Health Insurance Eligibility

Below are infographics detailing how different groups are affected by the health insurance landscape in Wisconsin, and which programs each group is eligible for by income. They have been updated with the new 2024 Federal Poverty Levels (FPL). ACA Eligibility and FPL...

Immigrant Taxpayers Deserve Dignity and Justice

Immigrant Taxpayers Deserve Dignity and Justice

Undocumented Immigrants Pay $198.9 Million in Taxes in Wisconsin By Liliana Barrera & William Parke-Sutherland Immigrants have been and continue to be vital to our communities. Nearly 300,000 immigrants in Wisconsin—about 76,000 of whom are undocumented—have put...

Back-to-School Means Language Access More Important than Ever

Back-to-School Means Language Access More Important than Ever

Better access to services and resources for multilingual community members begins with proactive approach to language barriers Contacts: Emily Miota, emiota@kidsforward.org or Lisa Cruz, lisa@ourmci.org  Madison, WI – With kids heading back to the classroom and many...

Sign up for Emails

Your address helps us identify your legislators and the most relevant messages to send you.