Gov. Kevin Stitt said Oklahoma won’t participate due to questions about program’s cost, administration
OKLAHOMA CITY — As Gov. Kevin Stitt decided Oklahoma would not participate in a new federal program to provide food assistance to low-income children, three of the state’s largest Native American tribes said they will administer the program within their reservations.
According to a list the U.S. Department of Agriculture provided Wednesday, Oklahoma is the only state to have tribal nations participating in the program that will help low-income families cover food costs when school is out of session.
The Cherokee, Chickasaw and Choctaw Nations will offer the program to eligible Native and non-Native children on their reservations.
“It’s regrettable and bewildering that the state of Oklahoma is abandoning federal funding and losing an opportunity to address child food insecurity,” Cherokee Nation Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin Jr. said in a statement.
The USDA is administering the Summer Electronic Benefits Transfer for Children — or Summer EBT program — that will provide families $40 per child each month during the summer. Students that qualify for free or reduced-price lunches, which are available to households earning up to 185 percent of the federal poverty line, are eligible for the program.
Stitt on Wednesday said the state declined to participate because the program hasn’t been “fully vetted.” State officials didn’t have enough information on the administrative duties and costs associated with the program, he said in a virtual news conference.
Although Hunger Free Oklahoma reports one in five children are food insecure, Stitt insisted no one will go hungry this summer because of his decision. The USDA estimates 403,000 Oklahoma children would be eligible for food assistance through the Summer EBT program.
Stitt noted the families who would be eligible for the summer benefits already qualify for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, also known as food stamps. Students who qualify for free and reduced-price meals also already qualify for the Summer Food Service Program that provides free healthy meals and snacks in low-income communities, he said.
“It’s not reasonable to think that kids are going to go hungry in the state of Oklahoma this summer because we’re not opting into a brand-new Biden administration federal program,” Stitt said.
The governor also said he philosophically disagrees with people who think that the government should take care of everybody and more welfare programs are the answer.
Chris Bernard, president and CEO of Hunger Free Oklahoma, said he’s disappointed in the governor’s decision, but hopeful that Stitt could change his mind at a later date so the state can participate in the program next summer, if not sooner.
“We are disappointed,” he said. “But we’ve been talking to the state. We know long-term that they want to do this program, and they recognize the need for it. I’m not going to pretend to understand all of the nuances of why they didn’t think it was possible this year, but we’re also committed to working with them, advocating to them and holding them accountable to make sure we do it in 2025.”
Advocates have been calling for a program like this for years because other summer food programs aren’t as effective in rural areas, Bernard said.
The USDA has offered Summer EBT benefits in previous years as part of a pilot program spearheaded by some Oklahoma tribes, Bernard said. Now, the federal government has made the program permanent. As part of that change, states that sign up will be responsible for covering a portion of the program’s administrative costs, he said.
Stitt said he won’t change his mind this year. Oklahoma could opt into the program next year after watching the rollout in other states, he said.
They’re so eager to turn down anything perceived as coming from Biden that they’re speeding their own irrelevance. Many of the kids they’re screwing over will remember these things the R cult is doing now. They’ll reach voting age, more elderly bigots will die, MAGA will be just a reminder of dark times, and many things will improve.