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Food-bank comment causes furor

An Agriculture Department official’s comment that people who eat at food banks may be “taking the easy way out” was taken out of context, a spokeswoman said Wednesday. Members of Congress called for his resignation.
/ Source: The Associated Press

A senior Agriculture Department official’s comment that people who eat at food banks are “taking the easy way out” was taken out of context, an agency spokeswoman said Wednesday, after several members of Congress called for his resignation.

Eric Bost, the department’s undersecretary for food and nutrition programs, was quoted in a June 6 story in The Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch about the growing use of food banks as saying he was skeptical of claims that food needs among the poor were increasing.

“There’s a bump, but how much of that is due to people taking the easy way out? I don’t know,” he said.

Bost told the newspaper that food-stamp enrollment is up because of government outreach to eligible people. He also said that since many food pantries don’t require documentation of income, not everyone receiving provisions is truly in need.

Ohio Democratic Reps. Sherrod Brown, Ted Strickland, Marcy Kaptur, Stephanie Tubbs Jones, Tim Ryan and Dennis Kucinich sent a letter Tuesday to Bost, calling on him to resign.

Lambasted for ‘callous, biased attitude’
“You have displayed a disparaging attitude toward the victims of hunger and an astonishing lack of awareness of what is happening beyond the Beltway,” the lawmakers’ letter said. “It is clear to us that your callous and biased attitude make you unfit for the high position you hold.”

Jean Daniel, a spokeswoman for the Agriculture Department, said the article included quotes that were “not quite right.”

Bost was concerned that people who are eligible for food stamps or other federal food assistance programs are instead going to food banks because they don’t know they’re eligible or they think the application process is too cumbersome, she said.

“There is a perception that it is a simpler process — not that people are taking the easy way out,” she said. “We know that there are hungry people out there who need assistance and we want to make sure that they have access to all of the food safety programs that they are eligible for.”