Lines for hot meals and free groceries are growing longer, New York City nonprofits say, citing a surge in recent months reminiscent of the worst days of the pandemic when crowds wrapped around the block.
The Salvation Army says theyโve served 53% more meals to New Yorkers in the first nine months of 2023, compared to the same time the year prior. Meanwhile, the Food Bank for New York City is seeing an 8% uptick in average monthly visits since February.
Food pantry providers point to the end of a pandemic-spurred food assistance benefit that gave people extra cash to buy groceries, a record backlog at a city agency delaying public assistance checks and skyrocketing food prices for the growing demand.
โWhen the SNAP benefit is less or is delayed, then you start to really have problems on top of existing problems,โ said Stephen Grimaldi, executive director of the New York Common Pantry. He said they served 30% more hot meals in fiscal year 2023 than the year before.
City data shows more than half the applications for cash assistance and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits, known as SNAP, werenโt processed on time between last July through June of this year, the worst rates reported in at least 10 years, Gothamist previously reported. The cityโs Department of Social Services previously said theyโre working to reduce delays but are facing an unprecedented number of applications amid staff attrition.
A monthly look at the numbers show just 10.7% of the 43,000 cash assistance applications in June were processed on time, according to city data. Thatโs the lowest rate since 2006. About 30% of cash assistance applications and about 40% of food stamp applications were processed within 30 days as required by state and federal laws.
A Department of Social Services spokesperson didnโt immediately respond to questions. But agency officials previously told Gothamist the need among New Yorkers hasnโt abated since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic….
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