
by Mike Sherry, KHI News
Less clear, though, is why.
“That seems to be the question that no one has the answer for,” said Laura Drake of the Johnson County Department of Health and Environment.
Drake is county manager of the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children, more commonly known as WIC. The federal program started as a pilot in 1972.
Those familiar with the program said a number of factors could be suppressing WIC caseloads, even as some families continue to struggle with the effects of the recession. The potential causes include demographics or simply an inability among potential applicants to make it to an office.
According to Johnson County data, the number of WIC participants dropped about 14 percent in 2013. The county now has a caseload of about 5,800 individuals on an annual budget of approximately $1.1 million.
Yet poverty is not declining in the county, according to United Community Services of Johnson County, a research and advocacy organization.
UCS officials said the poverty rate in the county stood at 6.8 percent in 2012, up from a pre-recession level of 4.7 percent. Children under 18 accounted for a third of county residents living below the federal poverty level, according to the data.
The number of WIC participants nationwide dropped by about 5 percent during a five-year period running through early December, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
During that period, caseloads in Kansas and Missouri dropped 8.3 percent and 6.4 percent respectively.
The national caseload now stands at about 8.6 million individuals. WIC provided about $6.8 billion in grants to states last year. In addition to serving women who are pregnant or new mothers, the program covers children up to age 5.
Applicants must have income at or below 185 percent of the federal poverty level, which would equal $43,567 for a family of four. They can also receive food stamps.
Eligible purchases through the program include juice, milk, fruits and vegetables, breakfast cereals, and whole wheat bread.
Officials at the Kansas Department of Health and Environment said the declining enrollment in WIC, could be the result of more-or-less routine fluctuations of the sort that occur when a major employer comes to or leaves a community.
They also said some clients might have assumed WIC had closed during the partial shutdown of the federal government in October, though that was not the case, an agency spokesperson said.
Drake said she also has considered the government-shutdown as a possible cause for the office’s caseload to drop significantly in November compared with the year before.
Other factors, she said, could be a lack of transportation among potential clients or a fear among undocumented workers that the office will report them to immigration authorities, though Drake said that isn’t done.
Ather possibility, she said, is that potential clients view food stamps as an easier alternative with a broader range of acceptable food purchases. WIC requires clients to undergo nutrition counseling and come in for periodic weighing and measuring.
Drake said she worried that a continued drop in enrollment could mean less state funding for the Johnson County program, even though she is convinced there is unmet need in the county.
She said officials on the state and local level were redoubling outreach efforts to get the word out to potential clients.
In Washington, D.C., the nonprofit National WIC Association lobbies on behalf of state and local WIC agencies. The Rev. Douglas A. Greenaway is president and chief executive of the association.
He said it would be nice to attribute the smaller caseloads to a lack of need, but he said, “With poverty at levels it hasn’t been in some time, the level of income inequality that is out there, stagnant wages for those at the bottom, WIC still obviously has a place.”
He said caseloads might rebound if birthrates increase once families feel more financially secure as the recession eases.
Greenaway said more women might also turn to WIC now that additional funding for food stamps, authorized as part of the 2009 federal stimulus bill, expired in November.
On the day before Christmas, Maria Alano, 24, of Overland Park, was at the Johnson County WIC office in Mission. She was pregnant with her third child, a boy, due in April.
The program, she said, supplements the income she and her boyfriend make as nursing aides in retirement centers.
Through WIC, Alano said, she can buy the grapes that her children love. It also satisfies her occasional craving for milk.
“And that’s the thing,” she said. “With pregnancy, it’s kind of what you are in the mood for.”