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Advocates worry for future food programs after SUN Bucks cut

SUN Bucks gave parents $150 per month, per kid, to buy much needed groceries during the summer months.
SUN Bucks gave parents $150 per month, per kid, to buy much needed groceries during the summer months.

After Indiana opted out of a federal program that fed children through the summer, advocates are worried about the future of other food assistance programs.

Indiana officials announced in May that the state would not participate in the federal SUN Bucks program, which provided low-income families $120 per child, per month, to buy groceries during the summer.

Mark Lynch, director of advocacy for Indy Hunger Network, said that the Indiana Family and Social Services Administration (FSSA) missed the original February deadline to apply to the program. The department submitted a waiver in March to participate, but didn’t receive a response before the Braun administration intervened.

“We heard that the $2.8 million that it would cost to administer the fund for the summer was something that the Braun administration didn't feel like they had the money to do,” he said.

Lynch said that because the state administration wasn’t willing to pay to administer the SUN Bucks program, it may not be willing to cover changes to the even larger SNAP program.

“If it passed the way that it (the U.S. House of Representatives budget) currently is, there's about a $350 million cost share that the state would have to take on, and as we talked about earlier in the interview, they weren't willing to take on $2.8 million,” he said.

About 669,000 Hoosier children were enrolled in the SUN Bucks program last year.

Read more:  ‘A giant leap backwards’: Indiana opts out of summer program for hungry schoolchildren

Clayton Baumgarth is a multimedia journalist for Indiana Public Media. He gathers stories from the rural areas surrounding Bloomington. Clayton was born and raised in central Missouri, and graduated college with a degree in Multimedia Production/Journalism from Drury University.