A Spanish-language leaflet that the U.S. Department of Agriculture has provided to the Mexican Embassy in Washington advises border-crossing Mexicans that they can collect taxpayer-funded food stamp benefits for their children without admitting that they're illegal immigrants.
Underlined and in boldface type, the document tells immigrants who are unlawfully in the United States that, 'You need not divulge information regarding your immigration status in seeking this benefit for your children.'
The USDA's Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), commonly known as food stamps, is funded in order to prevent hunger by helping poor families maintain a basic level of nutrition for both adults and children.
Congress
spent $86.5 billion on the SNAP program in 2012, by far the largest
single line-item in the USDA's $205 billion overall budget
The underlined portion reads: 'You need not
divulge information regarding your immigration status in seeking this
benefit for your children'
That education partnership is carried out through a program called 'Ventanillas de Salud,' meaning 'Windows to Health,' implemented through 50 Mexican consulates in the U.S.
In an email, a spokesperson for the SNAP program told The Daily Caller, which first reported on the leaflet, that “non-citizens who are unlawfully present, are not, nor have they ever been, eligible to receive Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits.
U.S. Border Patrol agents walk fences on the
Mexican border, and detain illegal immigrants - including children -
before returning them to south of the border. A majority will try to
cross the border again
'The revelation that the USDA is actively working with the Mexican government to promote food stamps for illegal aliens should have a direct impact on the fate of the immigration bill now being debated in Congress,' Judicial Watch president Tom Fitton said in a statement.
'These disclosures further confirm the fact that the Obama administration cannot be trusted to protect our borders or enforce our immigration laws. And the coordination with a foreign government to attack the policies of an American state is contemptible.'
Fitton's group also obtained a March 2010 USDA flyer advertising a taxpayer-funded online seminar for nonprofits serving Hispanic communities. The teaching session, promoted as being 'free for all participants,' taught activists how to get USDA funding to provide free lunches during the summer.
The federal government's SNAP program served
about 43.6 million people in November 2010. Before the recession, the
program had just 26 million enrollees. The USDA licenses food retailers
like this Oregon grocery store as SNAP program participants
Judicial Watch said Thursday that the 2012 document did not discriminate between legal US residents and illegal immigrants.
In August, Agriculture Under Secretary Kevin Concannon rolled out a new range of anti-fraud programs aimed at preventing food stamp funds from going to ineligible recipients.
'USDA has a zero tolerance policy for SNAP fraud,' Concannon said when announcing new measures to clamp down on abuse of the program that he promised would 'help us hold bad actors even more accountable than in the past and discourage them from abusing the public's trust.'
The agency's press release, however, made no mention of efforts intended to deny SNAP benefits to illegal immigrants.
People line up for their monthly debt cards and food stamps all over the country
Former Iowa Governor Tom Vilsack is President
Obama's Secretary of Agriculture and is responsible for the SNAP
program's operation
An estimated 11 million illegal immigrants are living in the United States. President Obama and a bipartisan group of eight U.S. Senators are gathering support for comprehensive immigration reform legislation that would put most of them on a path to legal residence and, conservatives allege, both amnesty and citizenship.
No comments:
Post a Comment