Minnesota charities and state officials are preparing to confront another public health threat stemming from the coronavirus: hunger.
As the pandemic continues to spread, fears are mounting that people in or near poverty will have difficulty getting food, particularly if schools close and more people take public health officials' advice and stay home. Already, many of Minnesota's 300 food shelves are bracing for a decline in donations and a shortage of volunteers, many of whom are retirees at high risk to the disease.
Across the state, nonprofits that serve poor communities face a logistical dilemma: How to deliver vital food supplies to families at a time when people are isolating themselves at home and being told to avoid crowds and public places.
In response, Second Harvest Heartland, the state's largest food bank, will begin a campaign this week to prepare and distribute 10,000 emergency food boxes for low-income people across the state, including many too frail or too sick to visit a food shelf. Each box will contain an eight-day supply of items, including fruit, pasta, rice, rolled oats and canned chicken. Other nonprofits are seeking to reduce the risk of exposure to the virus by delivering meals directly to people at home, and bundling deliveries to minimize visits.
"Hunger does not take a break at times like this," said Allison O'Toole, chief executive officer of Second Harvest Heartland, which last year delivered the equivalent of 97 million meals to food shelves and hunger-relief programs in Minnesota and Wisconsin. "In fact, the need intensifies and compounds."
The urgent response is being accelerated by fears of an economic downturn and looming cuts to the social safety net. Even before the virus arrived on U.S. shores, social service agencies were preparing for a possible surge in need stemming from planned cuts to federal food stamps. A new Trump administration rule would tighten work requirements, making it more difficult for able-bodied adults without dependents to qualify for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP. State officials estimated that 8,000 Minnesotans could lose their monthly food benefits under the change.
The food stamp cuts were set to take effect on April 1, but late Friday a federal judge granted a preliminary injunction suspending implementation of the rule change.
To address gaps in the social safety net, Gov. Tim Walz took the unusual step this week of proposing a temporary, state-funded assistance program, which would extend monthly food benefits for up to a year to able-bodied adults kicked off SNAP by the new federal rules. The proposed new program, essentially a state version of SNAP, would cost about $18.2 million through the next fiscal year. Approximately 400,000 low-income Minnesotans receive SNAP benefits each month.