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With relief and recovery efforts still under way in Puerto Rico, after a series of hurricanes in the fall of 2017, reports emerged on 3 October that the Trump administration had denied the United States commonwealth the same food stamp assistance earlier given to the hurricane-stricken states of Texas and Florida. We received several enquiries from readers about the veracity of these reports. The Hill reported that Trump had denied Puerto Rico's request to let hurricane victims use food stamps for prepared hot meals. The web site's original article has been updated, but an apparent excerpt from the original piece on the Democratic Underground blog reads: That information, according to the updated article on The Hill, came from an earlier New York Times report, which has itself been updated and now reads: Under normal circumstances, the rules of the Nutrition Assistance Program (NAP, commonly known as food stamps) mean electronic benefit transfer (EBT) cards cannot be used to purchase these kinds of foods. Texas and Florida have successfully asked the Food and Nutrition Service (FNS), the Department of Agriculture agency that oversees NAP, for temporary emergency waivers on this rule in light of the damage caused by hurricanes in those states. In a press conference on Tuesday 3 October, Ricardo Rosselló said that Puerto Rico had petitioned the federal government for a waiver on hot food and fast-food restaurants, and that he hoped to receive that waiver. The relevant section of this video of Rosselló's press conference starts at 1.20. However, we know that a request for a hot food waiver made by Puerto Rico's Department of Family and Children on 28 September was agreed to by the Food and Nutrition Service on 30 September - three days before Rosselló's remarks. This is made clear in a letter included in The Hill's updated article. Later in the press conference, though, Rosselló says a previous request for a hot food waiver was denied. The relevant exchange there starts at around the 34.45 mark. His comments were made in Spanish, but can be translated as follows: This was reflected in a report about the press conference by the Puerto Rican news web site El Nuevo Dia, which wrote (translated from Spanish): It's not clear whether the governor was erroneously referring to the 28 September request as having been denied, or referring to an earlier request, while erroneously describing the 28 September request as still pending. We were unable to contact the offices of either Puerto Rico's governor or Secretary of Family and Children, who made the 28 September request. In a statement, the U.S. Department of Agriculture told us they were not aware of any earlier request for a hot food waiver, but had given the Puerto Rican government technical assistance on that issue. The Department of Agriculture provided us the following chronology of correspondence, requests and responses surrounding the suspension of food stamps rules in Puerto Rico: We were unable to contact the offices of either Governor Rosselló or the Department of Family and Children, in order to ask whether they regard this timeline as complete and accurate. Phone service is still down for much of the island. The 30 September letter - published by The Hill in its updated article - was written by Patricia Dombroski, Mid-Atlantic Region Administrator for the Department of Agriculture's Food and Nutrition Service, and addressed to Glorimar Andujar-Matos, Secretary of Family and Children in Puerto Rico. Among other provisions, it states that: However, the Food and Nutrition Service did not agree to every food stamps-related request made by Puerto Rico's Department of Family and Children. The department had requested that the cash portion of each recipient's monthly NAP allotment should be increased from 20 percent to 50-100 percent - meaning recipients would have been able to withdraw half or even all their food stamps allocation as cash. The FNS denied this request, and instead decided to postpone for two months a new rule which would have lowered the cash portion from 20 percent to 15 percent. The rule was originally due to kick in at the start of October. On 3 October, Governor Ricardo Rosselló wrote to Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue to ask him to reconsider that denial, and the request is pending, as of 5 October 2017.
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