
Barb Kalbach (Courtesy Barb Kalbach)
Why is Gov. Kim Reynolds saying “No” to a summer food program for children?
I love getting together with my kids and grandkids for family meals. Passing dinner around the table, sharing stories, and enjoying time with one another—these are some of my favorite things to do.
Unfortunately, having enough money to pay for those meals is difficult for too many Iowa families. That’s why we need food assistance programs.
One of these programs helps children—who usually get two meals a day during the school year—get the food they need during the summer. It’s called the Summer Electronic Benefits Transfer (EBT) program, and it’s administered by the US Department of Agriculture’s Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP).
Around 245,000 Iowa kids are eligible for the program. It provides $120 per child in nutrition benefits during the summer when they’re not in school. That’s about $40 a month, which is a modest amount.
But Governor Kim Reynolds is working hard to prevent those kids from getting it. To me, that’s downright wrong.
Reynolds wants to reject federal funds through Summer EBT and instead use a “food box” plan that we already know won’t get the job done. The Trump Administration’s food box program was an unmitigated disaster and a complete waste of taxpayer dollars. In fact, Iowa CCI members—along with other grassroots community groups—protested food boxes at a February 2018 national policy conference in Washington DC.
It was a bad idea then. It’s a bad idea now.
Reynolds says Iowa can’t afford to administer the Summer EBT program, but that excuse doesn’t hold water. It would cost around $2 million to run, and there are federal grants to help pay for it.
SNAP has huge economic benefits, especially in rural areas. It creates $1.54 of economic activity for every $1 in SNAP assistance. Grocery stores and our local economies benefit from the program.
Reynolds is on a power grab. It seems like she favors the “food box” route because she wants to dictate what food people purchase. But my experience tells me parents know best how to feed their families. People should have the freedom to make their own food choices rather than depend on the “Reynolds’ Diet.”
SNAP is critical in delivering what kids need. There’s overwhelming research documenting how important nutrition is for students. But in the summer, SNAP families don’t have school meals to rely on.
“Too many of our neighbors are struggling to put food on the table right now,” said Luke Elzinga, board chair of the Iowa Hunger Coalition. “Food pantries are overwhelmed. Iowa’s children missed out on Summer EBT this year. We cannot afford to turn down this important program again.”
Luke is right. This is a no-brainer. Summer EBT would help feed 245,000 children and provide $29 million to pay for it in a way that supports jobs and healthy food all over the state. It’s absolutely the right thing to do.
Barb Kalbach is a fourth-generation family farmer, registered nurse, and board president of Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement. She can be reached at [email protected].

‘What changed, Chuck?’ Grassley faces angry crowd at Iowa town hall
Angry constituents greeted Sen. Chuck Grassley at a town hall in North Iowa on Friday morning. Why wouldn't he answer their phone calls and emails?...

Guest post: Congress needs to stop the handouts to the rich
Iowans work hard and deserve a government that works for them, not one that rigs the system in favor of the rich and powerful. As a new Congress...

Guest post: Don’t give Bayer a free pass when Iowa has high rate of cancer
When the state of Iowa has the second-highest cancer incidence rate and fastest growing rate of new cancer, we have no business handing agrichemical...

Lutherans decry Reynolds’ ‘failure to defend’ Lutheran Services of Iowa
Gov. Kim Reynolds was asked about an unevidenced, Elon Musk-backed conspiracy calling Lutheran Services of Iowa a “money laundering operation.” She...

Reynolds admits to gutting Sand’s auditing ability at DC oversight hearing
In a hearing about government oversight, Gov. Kim Reynolds admits to restricting the Iowa auditor’s oversight of state government. Gov. Kim...

Auditor Sand uncovers $430,000 fraud scheme in Iowa Workforce Development funded program
Embezzled federal funds paid a family member’s cell phone bills and non-existent daycare services. Auditor Rob Sand says the state needs to...