UPDATE: The state budget director announced late Thursday that North Carolina will resume funding for the WIC program. Nonetheless, consider donating to your local food bank.
North Carolina is the only state during the government shutdown to halt new enrollment in the federal nutrition program known as WIC, which provides low-income women and children with vouchers for food and formula.
Governing reported this week that “North Carolina services almost 264,000 people a month on an annual budget of $205 million that’s completely funded by the federal government, which cut off funding last week” after the shutdown. Progressive Pulse picked up Governing’s story and added this:
Other states have relied on $125 million from a USD emergency contingency plan has kept the program running in the other 49 states.Now, questions are being raised about why North Carolina stopped issuing vouchers on Tuesday, instead of furloughing employees or finding other sources of funding to keep vouchers for formula and food going to the young children and their mothers that depend on the program.
Progressive spoke with the head of Cabarrus Health Alliance, the Piedmont county’s public health agency, who said his office has turned away 35 to 40 women in the last two days, “pointing them to area food banks as a possible way to get needed formula.” But, as Progressive points out, the state’s food banks are stretched thin because of problems with the state’s food stamps delivery system.
Click here to find out how to donate formula, non-perishable food and money to your local food bank.

- Bridget Coila (Flickr Creative Commons)
This article appears in Oct 9-15, 2013.




How “pro-life” of our legislators.
The collateral damage is of no concern to those who are causing it. It is a fight for power and they couldn’t care less about those who get trampled in the process.
Ummm….
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State has money to resume funding WIC program
By Joseph Neff
jneff@newsobserver.com
Posted: Thursday, Oct. 10, 2013
North Carolina has enough federal money to provide food to the state’s low-income mothers and their babies, the state budget director said Thursday.
Art Pope said there is enough money on hand to fully fund the WIC program, officially known as the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children.
DHHS issued a statement saying local health departments are being notified to resume issuing WIC vouchers.
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Retraction time, Ana?
Oh for love of Pete….