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Bush
Wants to Restore Food Stamps
Wednesday,
Jan. 9, 2002
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Bush administration, seeking to reverse
part of the 1996 welfare overhaul, on Wednesday proposed to
restore food stamp benefits to 363,000 legal immigrants who
have lived in the country for at least five years.
Under
current rules, adult immigrants must have worked in the country
for at least 10 years or be a refugee or member of the military
to qualify for benefits. There is no work requirement in the
White House proposal, which will be part of President Bush's
2003 budget.
A senior
administration official who described the proposal on condition
of anonymity said the change would go a long way toward meeting
the needs of a number of children and adults.
The Senate
is considering revisions in farm and nutrition programs that
would lower the existing work requirement for immigrants from
10 years to four years.
Congressional
Republicans have argued that a work or residency requirement
is necessary to keep people from moving to the United States
to take advantage of the welfare system.
The administration's
plan would cost $2.1 billion over 10 years. The White House
has not said how it would pay for the proposal. The food-stamp
program costs about $17 billion annually.
Food
stamp rolls fell from 25.5 million in 1996, when Congress
overhauled the welfare system, to below 17 million early last
year. By October, the number swelled to 18.4 million.
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