Two Dakota County food shelves are turning down free federal food because of new rules that they say conflict with their goals of helping food recipients regain self-sufficiency.
Hastings Family Service and Neighbors Inc. in South St. Paul have declined to sign a new federal agreement requiring food shelves to serve needy people without requiring Social Security cards or income or address verification.
The agencies may be the only two among 270 food shelves receiving cheese, ground beef and other federal commodities to refuse to sign by October an agreement forbidding local food shelves from seeking to verify income or other recipient data, said Erin Sullivan Sutton, an assistant commissioner of children and family programs for the state Department of Human Services.
"It is unfortunate they have chosen not to sign," she said. It means "a loss of food otherwise available to families in their community." She said both food shelves doubled the federal food they received from 2008 to 2009, when Neighbors received 37,590 pounds and Hastings 28,195 pounds.
Hastings Family Service, one of the state's largest emergency food providers, has two social workers who help food recipients set up a budget to become self-supporting, said executive director Chris Koop. The agency needs evidence of recipients' income and expenses to do that.
"We could not ask for income verification, and that goes totally against our values of really working with families to get them on their feet again," Koop said. She said the declined food would cost about $15,000 a year at retail prices.
Churches say not to sign
Joan Rhodes, a Neighbors manager, said the community has been generous in supplying food and clothes for the needy. She said the agency asked its 32 member churches whether it should sign the agreement forbidding income verification, and the unanimous response was no.