Ohio
Related: About this forumSNAP, Medicaid Rollback Bill Would Cost Nearly $20 Million in Red Tape, Analysts Say
A legislative proposal to restrict eligibility for social safety net programs like food stamps or Medicaid would cost nearly $20 million to implement, according to state policy analysts.
The Ohio Legislative Service Commission, a nonpartisan arm of the state legislature that evaluates policy proposals, estimated a plan to require photo identification on every Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program card would cost about $15 million to implement and $930,000 annually to maintain.
Senate Bill 17 would end policies known as categorical eligibility and simplified reporting that lower income reporting burdens on SNAP recipients along with the bureaucratic burden on state government. The new, more onerous income reporting system would cost about $4.5 million to implement, according to the LSC.
The bills lead sponsor, Sen. Tim Schaffer, R-Lancaster, said the bill is a means to combat benefits fraud and ensure monies only go to the truly needy.
Read more: https://www.citybeat.com/news/blog/21149354/benefits-rollback-bill-would-cost-nearly-20-million-in-red-tape-analysts-say
(Cincinnati Citybeat)
Skittles
(159,276 posts)you know, stuff that wastes BILLIONS of dollars
https://www.usnews.com/news/world/articles/2021-03-01/report-us-wasted-billions-on-cars-buildings-in-afghanistan
Walleye
(35,663 posts)ladym55
(2,577 posts)Who cares how much it costs? It's all about making sure that those poor people "deserve" the help they get. Ohio's legislature is just such an embarrassment.