Page added on December 14, 2005
WASHINGTON
State officials and advocates for the poor said the decision will make it hard for needy families to afford both heat and food. The Energy Department has forecast 25% average increases in heating bills this winter. Research shows that when utility bills rise, some poor families reduce food purchases.
Robert Greenstein, director of the liberal Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, said federal food stamp law says benefits should reflect current costs. “It’s effectively cheating low-income families,” he said. If the five states’ requests had been approved, many others would have followed, he said.
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