Parents Worry as WIC Funding Dwindles During the Government Shutdown
WIC, a program that provides essential aid for women, infants and young children, is in jeopardy as shutdown continues.
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Update: On Oct. 31, the Trump administration聽聽an additional $450 million from the U.S. Department of Agriculture鈥檚 section 32 account to send to the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC), which was at risk of running out of money on Nov. 1. This was the second time the administration drew emergency funding from section 32, with the first infusion of $300 million in October. The National WIC Association聽聽the $450 million would typically last for three weeks, but with disruptions to other assistance programs, like SNAP, it could run out faster.
April Perez was 22 years old when she had her first daughter. Enrolling in the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children, commonly known as WIC, was a lifesaver. 鈥淲ith her being my first child,鈥 she said, 鈥淚 was still finding my way through motherhood.鈥 The program helped her access healthy foods for her family, get formula when she wasn鈥檛 able to produce enough breastmilk to breastfeed her daughter, and even get a referral to sign up her daughter, now 4 years old, for health insurance.
WIC provides food, nutrition education, breastfeeding support, and health care referrals to low-income mothers and young children ages 5 and under. Perez said the benefits for formula and foods like milk, fruit and vegetables alleviated some of the financial pressure around her transition to motherhood. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 have to stress about whether I was going to feed her or not,鈥 she said. The benefits also made it possible for Perez and her husband to save up for their own apartment and move out of the friend鈥檚 house they were staying in.
Perez鈥檚 husband works long days in construction, but she doesn鈥檛 work due to a number of health issues. She has cerebral palsy, which makes it hard for her to stand, use her arms and hands, or sometimes even walk, and hydrocephalus. WIC benefits help keep her family afloat. Perez, who lives in Virginia, now has two more daughters, a 3-year-old and a 3-month-old, and all three of her children are enrolled in WIC. Her 3-year-old, who has been diagnosed with autism, is very particular about food given her sensory sensitivities, but Perez is able to get her plenty of milk, bananas and other foods she likes with her WIC benefits. 鈥淚t gives me peace of mind for my kid,鈥 she said. Her infant, meanwhile, needs a special formula because she has acid reflux, which she said would cost her $50 if she didn鈥檛 get it through WIC.
But the government shutdown has now put the WIC program at risk. Unlike Social Security, WIC isn鈥檛 an entitlement program, so it relies on Congress to appropriate money every year, but Congress wasn鈥檛 able to pass bills funding the government before the fiscal year lapsed on September 30. The program is on funds, operating mostly on a contingency fund of , which is , as the shutdown continues.
Federal funds would likely have lasted just two weeks from the start of the shutdown, estimated Zo毛 Neuberger, a senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Then on Oct. 7, the Trump administration it had found a 鈥渃reative solution鈥 to use tariff revenue to keep federal WIC funding flowing. In a briefing for Congressional staffers three days later, the administration said it would about $300 million in unused tariff revenue into WIC, allowing it to continue until the end of October.
After federal funding is gone, states will have to use their own money if they want to keep the program going and try to get the federal government to pay them back when it reopens. The administration recently sent states an email saying that if they use their own funds for WIC allowable purposes they may be reimbursed, according to Neuberger and the National WIC Association. But 鈥渢here isn鈥檛 a guarantee鈥 of reimbursement, Neuberger noted, and 鈥渋t would be helpful to have assurances.鈥
States have used their funds to keep WIC going in past shutdowns, and some plan to do so now. Colorado lawmakers a bill to fund the program for a month in the event of a shutdown, and the governors of and Montana have that they鈥檒l keep their programs running for the near term. But not every state currently has that capacity.
While Mississippi not to disrupt benefits for current recipients, the state has suspended enrolling new ones. The Inter-Tribal Council of Nevada WIC, which serves Nevada鈥檚 Native tribes and is open to all of the state鈥檚 residents, announced that it would benefits starting on Oct. 9, but then unspent federal recovery funds that allowed it to stay open through the end of October. Similarly, Washington state officials they don鈥檛 have the money to keep WIC open, but also federal funding on Oct. 9 that allows the state program to keep operating through the end of the month. If the shutdown drags on longer than that, states in similar situations will either have to stop enrolling new families to stretch their funds or risk having to cut off benefits entirely.
Losing benefits would be devastating for parents like Ashely Gooden-Stewart, a mother of three from Texas. She first enrolled in WIC in 2014, when her first baby, who died as an infant, was born. She enrolled when each of her other children were born and is currently receiving benefits for her 1-year-old. Gooden-Stewart works remotely on a contract basis, but the work is seasonal and spotty. She said she doesn鈥檛 have any current projects and doesn鈥檛 expect to before the end of the month, but in order to get a full-time job she needs child care, which she cannot afford.
WIC helps fill in the gaps. 鈥淓ggs is expensive, milk is expensive, life is expensive,鈥 Gooden-Stewart said. Her family relies on getting those staples through the program. If these benefits dry up, 鈥淲e would have to go with less,鈥 she said.
The educational aspects of WIC are also very valuable to her. She said the breastfeeding classes are 鈥渋ncredible鈥 and the classes on child development milestones, which she currently attends, have been very useful. 鈥淎lthough I鈥檝e been a mother for years, it鈥檚 different each time,鈥 she said. She loves the cooking classes that are offered, which help her discover more ways to incorporate vegetables into her family鈥檚 meals. 鈥淚t helps our family eat healthier,鈥 she said, adding that losing access to these classes would be 鈥渄etrimental.鈥
The uncertainty of the shutdown itself may be disrupting benefits for some people by making them hesitate to enroll. 鈥淛ust the news about a shutdown or WIC possibly being affected leads people to not get benefits that they need,鈥 Neuberger noted. And even after the government eventually reopens, WIC鈥檚 future remains uncertain. The program still has to be funded for the next year, and it鈥檚 unclear if it will get enough money to keep operating as it has been. In his , President Trump called for a significant cut to WIC鈥檚 fruit and vegetable benefits, which would between 62% to 75% for 5.2 million participants, according to an analysis by the Center on Budget Policy and Priorities (CBPP).
Although the Republican-led House proposed a smaller cut to the fruit and vegetable benefits in its latest appropriations bill, the proposal still calls for a reduction and doesn鈥檛 include enough funding to keep serving everyone that is likely to enroll over the next year. Under the proposal, recipients would see a reduction in their food benefits and states would have to turn away nearly a half million eligible families, according to a . The Senate Agriculture Appropriations , by contrast, fully funds WIC. Congressional Democrats, meanwhile, have a bill that would make WIC a mandatory program, sparing it from running out of money during a government shutdown or if enrollment surges more than expected.
There is also that if an agreement to reopen the government doesn鈥檛 include guardrails that ensure that the Trump administration actually spends the money Congress appropriates as is the law, WIC could be cut through measures the administration to withhold funding for other programs, such as impoundment and rescission. With higher enrollment from eligible families and rising food costs, WIC is in need of more funding than in past years to continue serving all eligible participants who enroll.
If WIC benefits are disrupted, Perez鈥檚 family will feel the impact immediately. 鈥淚t scares me,鈥 Perez said. Her family receives food stamps, but with food prices so high, 鈥渋t only lasts me for one week,鈥 she said. Perez knows she can鈥檛 work, and she doesn鈥檛 have child care, but she said that if WIC funding runs short in the shutdown, she might be forced to find some kind of job to make ends meet. The only alternative would be for her husband, who already works from 6 a.m. into the evening, to get a second job during night hours. She worries about how that would impact her children, especially her daughter with autism who doesn鈥檛 do well with change.
They might even have to move. Perez fears that if their WIC benefits are interrupted, her family may not be able to afford their monthly rent of $1,650 on top of utilities, internet and car payments.
Growing up, Perez said she watched her parents go without food so she and her siblings could eat. WIC benefits have meant she hasn鈥檛 yet had to do the same. But that will change if WIC鈥檚 food benefits disappear. 鈥淭he thought of that happening 鈥 and me having to do that for my kids 鈥 that hurts,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he thought of having to worry about that is scary. I don鈥檛 want to have to worry about if I鈥檓 going to be able to feed my kids or not.鈥
鈥淸If] I wasn鈥檛 able to take care of my kids like I want to,鈥 Perez said, 鈥渢hat would really make me disappointed in this country.鈥
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