| 222 South Warren Street
Trenton, NJ 08625
Contact: Ed Rogan
Laurie Facciarossa
(609) 292-3703
RELEASE: September 15, 2003
Previous Screen
There Should Be No Shame in Asking for Help
--
Food Stamps is a Vital Safety Net Program for Those Who Need It
By Gwendolyn L. Harris
Commissioner
New Jersey Department of Human Services
By now, I hope you have seen the advertising campaign
that the Department of Human Services initiated this summer to promote
participation in the Food Stamp Program.
"Everyday People Use Food Stamps Every Day,"
is the slogan, and I believe this is a vital message for us to deliver.
For too long, too many people have allowed their pride to stop them
from calling out for help.
We know that in New Jersey there are many seniors
and working parents and recent immigrants who struggle to feed themselves
or their families. Yet we also know that barely half of the households
in New Jersey who could qualify for food stamps actually receive
them.
The DHS Division of Family Development is committed
to changing that. Probably some of those people who are not receiving
food stamps simply don't know they are eligible, and we must address
that as well.
But I suspect greater numbers never even wonder
if they are eligible, they just won't think of taking what they
consider to be "welfare."
I cannot state emphatically enough that the Food
Stamp Program is not welfare. It is a cornerstone of our nation's
safety net for low-income families and individuals.
About four of every five households that receive
food stamps in New Jersey are not on welfare. The overwhelming majority
are headed by working people whose incomes simply don't stretch
far enough.
Those people should feel no shame in taking help
when they need and deserve it.
Pride cannot feed you. It will not nourish your
children.
Everyone who is struggling to put food on the table
should reach out to their county board of social services to see
if they might qualify for food stamps.
Our ad campaign targets seniors, low-income working
parents and immigrants because those groups tend to have large numbers
of people eligible for food stamps who do not receive them. The
ads are displayed on NJ Transit buses, on supermarket shopping carts,
in foreign-language newspapers and in publications aimed at seniors.
Food stamps are available to individuals and families
earning up to 130 percent of the Federal Poverty Level -- an annual
income of $11,674 for an individual or $23,920 for a family of four.
Currently, about 150,000 households in New Jersey
receive food stamps, but the federal government estimates that represents
only 53 percent of the households that are eligible.
Perhaps you head one of those low-income households,
or perhaps you know someone in that situation.
It doesn't have to be this way. Visit your county
board of social services or call the Food Stamp Hotline at 1-800-792-9773.
There is no shame in calling for help.
The true shame would be allowing your family to
go undernourished when help is so available.
###
|