Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 01, 1984, Page 10, Image 10

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    Food stamp benefits will increase for some
By Mike Sims
Of tha Emerald
Most Oregon food stamp reci
pients will receive increased
benefits beginning this month.
According to Bob Labbe, state
food stamp program unit
manager, recipients may be af
fected by changes in one or
more facets of the program.
Labbe said that an annual in
crease in the program’s cost-of
living allowance, beginning in
October, will mean an increase
in the maximum amount of food
IT
stamps allowed per household.
For example, a family of five
would see its monthly benefits
increase by $9.
Also, standard deductions in
household income will increase
from $85 to $89 this year. The
Adult and Family Services Divi
sion of the Oregon State Depart
ment of Human Resources,
which administers the federally
funded food stamp program,
uses household income as a par
tial basis for determining
whether a household is eligible
for benefits, as well as the
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amount of benefits to be
received.
Food stamps are issued by
household, whether that
represents one person or
several. The 223,000 persons
receiving benefits represent
about 92,000 Oregon
households.
Some recipients will receive
an allowance for higher utility
costs during the winter. The
AFS considers household utili
ty costs in determining the
amount of food stamp benefits.
Recipients may choose to either
receive a standard allowance,
which is adjusted in October
and March to allow for seasonal
changes in utility rates, or to
have benefits adjusted accord
ing to their actural utility costs.
Recipients who choose the
standard allowance for utility
bills will receive an increase in
food stamp benefits when the
winter allowance takes effect to
day. An average increase for a
family of five would be about
$15 a month in food stamps.
The standard allowance is $122
from April through September,
and $199 during the winter.
Many recipients with low
utility bills opt for the standard
allowance and thus obtain more
benefits than if they had their
eligibility adjusted according to
their actual utility costs, Labbe
explained.
Labbe also stated that food
stamp program officials hope to
begin conducting rate studies
among a sampling of food
stamp recipients, energy
distributors and public utility
concerns in late December or
January. Labbe says that the in
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formation gathered will be used
to help adjust food stamp
benefit amounts, and officials
hope to use the data when
benefits are adjusted again in
April.
Increases in food stamp
benefits represent "relatively
minor changes in policy,"
Labbe said, adding that he
doesn’t expect the number of
food stamp recipients to in
crease dramatically.
"Persons who’ve applied
already and have been denied
benefits might consider re
applying," Labbe said. "Every
year there are changes in
eligibility requirements in
small, incremental amounts,
and people who were right on
the borderline last year may
qualify this year," Labbe
explained,
CUB
Continued from Page 1
And because the amount of
donations to CUB cannot ex
ceed $100 by members, no
special interest will become
paramount, Tippens says.
“No tax dollars are involved
and you don’t have to worry
about the ups and downs of
government," Tippens says.
"CUB wouldn’t represent any
special interest groups, just the
consumer.
Because of OSPIRG’s intense
efforts, the public utilities have
become concerned that the
measure will be passed,
Lawrence says. The CUB
measure has been the target of a
massive advertising campaign
funded by the major utilities,
she says. These companies
charge that CUB will not have to
follow state agency laws and
that the citizens will have little
control over the board.
“This is a good example of
what money can do for you,”
Lawrence says. “They are
developing a smokescreen
because the laws they are refer
ring to are state agency laws,
but CUB is not a state agency.
United Way doesn’t have to
follow these laws and neither
does CUB.
“It’s frustrating. Hopefully
anyone in their right mind
won’t listen to them.”
Although there was a drop-off
in student participation at the
end of last decade, OSPIRG is
thriving today.
“OSPIRG had some dark
years at the end of the 1970s,
but right now it’s great,” Tip
pens says. “The last two years
have been a rebirth. We’re now
the largest advocacy group in
Oregon.”
“OSPIRG wants to get
students involved in the
system,” Tippens says. “We try
to get what they’re learning in
school into social action.”
Oregon
RESUMES
10% off
with current
student ID
300 EMU • 686-5511