Caregiver Academy Two

“Nutritional Health”

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

9:30 am to 11:30 am

Admission is Free

Helping The Aging, Needy and Disabled, Inc.  and Parsons House Austin will present Caregiver Academy Two “Nutritional Health” on Wednesday, August 11, 2010 at Parsons House Austin 1130 Camino La Costa, Austin, TX 78752 from 9:30 am to 11:30 am.  Admission is free.

Speakers:  Megan Anderson, Registered Dietician, Nutrition Education Manager and Certified Diabetic Educator from Austin Heart Hospital.  Along with Monica Escobar, MSHS, RD, LD from Capital Area Food Bank of Texas.  They will discuss Nutrients on food labels and their function, Adapting meals for people with dietary restrictions, The Four Basic Food Groups and Common tips for eating well..

Respite care will be available.

For more information please contact: Karen J. Christensen, Development Director, Helping The Aging, Needy and Disabled Inc. 512/477-3796 Email address: karen@handaustin.org or Jennifer Scott, Marketing Coordinator, Parsons House Austin  512/454-0524 Email address: jscott@parsonshouseaustin.com

Central Market Cooking School North

“Southern Favorites”

Saturday, August 21, 2010

10 am to 12:30 pm

Tickets are $45.00 per person

(Cash or Check only)

Helping The Aging, Needy and Disabled, Inc. and Central Market Cooking School will present “Southern Favorites” on Saturday, August 21, 2010 at Central Market Cooking School 4001 North Lamar Austin, TX 78756 from 10 am to 12:30 pm.

Nancy Buchanan, Central Market Cooking Instructor and her Mom, Lorie Marr will share their favorite recipes from summers at the beach. The menu includes: Texas Gulf Shrimp Boil with Cocktail Sauce, Fried Catfish with Tartar Sauce, Mom’s Fried Patty Pan Squash, Sweet Summer Creamed Corn and Texas Peach Cobbler with Homemade Vanilla Ice Cream.

RSVP is required….For reservations…please call Central Market Cooking School 512-458-3068

All proceeds will benefit Helping the Aging, Needy & Disabled, Inc.

For more information please contact: Karen J. Christensen, Development Director, Helping The Aging, Needy and Disabled Inc. 512/477-3796 Email address: karen@handaustin.org

http://www.statesman.com/news/texas-politics/legal-aid-group-sues-state-over-food-stamp-129389.html

A legal aid group on Thursday sued the Health and Human Services Commission over Texas’ food stamp application backlog, demanding decisions for seven specific families and seeking to force the commission to meet required deadlines for all applications.

The commission’s failure to process food stamp applications within the 30 days required by the federal and state governments is “denying individual Plaintiffs and tens of thousands of other Texans access to food, the most basic of human needs,” says the lawsuit filed in state district court in Travis County by Texas RioGrande Legal Aid.

A spokeswoman for executive commissioner Tom Suehs had no comment on the lawsuit but said that the commission has made significant strides toward fixing the problems, such as hiring more than 600 eligibility workers since September.

Federal officials have said the state’s food stamp funds are at risk if it doesn’t process applications more quickly. In November, the state, which has struggled with an economy-related spike in applications, processed 57.5 percent of applications on time, according to state data.

About 1.2 million Texas families — more than 3 million people — are on food stamps.

The legal aid group filed the lawsuit against Suehs and the commission on behalf of two Rio Grande Valley nonprofits and seven Texas families who applied months ago. They include a Bexar County mother of two who has been without food stamps for 221 days as she attempts to renew the benefits and an Amarillo mother of three who is going from church to church asking for help, according to the lawsuit.

The lawsuit tells of families failing to receive calls from caseworkers on the day of scheduled phone interviews, waiting for hours at food stamp offices without seeing their caseworker, and calling offices repeatedly without being able to reach their caseworker or leave a message.

“If you try to call, they’re busy,” said San Antonio resident Amalia Guedea-Nelson, one of the plaintiffs, in an interview. “After hours, there’s no way to leave a message. It takes longer to try to get food stamps than it does to get a job.”

Stephanie Goodman, a spokeswoman for Suehs, said she couldn’t comment on specific cases in the lawsuit. She did say: “We feel like we’re finally turning a corner and starting to see our ability to work through the backlogged cases increase pretty dramatically, but we’ll continue to look at what else we can do.”

The lawsuit said the efforts haven’t been enough. Rather than declare an emergency and temporarily suspend bureaucratic hurdles, as Texas did in the aftermath of Hurricane Ike, the suit says, the commission is “considering smaller, incremental steps while eligible Texans go hungry in violation of state law.”

About 40,000 past-due applications are in the backlog, Goodman said. She said the state’s system is old-fashioned, paper-based and not designed to handle so many cases.

“One of our fears, frankly, is: Is there an application just sitting on someone’s desk?” Goodman said.

That’s Guedea-Nelson’s fear, too. “Did I get lost?” she asked. “Was I misplaced?”

Guedea-Nelson, 56, said she applied for food stamps in early July after her hours were cut at her telemarketing job. She later quit the job because she couldn’t afford to commute or pay rent on her reduced salary. She also lost her apartment. As of Thursday, she didn’t have a response to her application, she said.

While waiting, she initially stayed with friends or slept in her car and asked friends for food, she said. She found a job through a work-study program at a community college and now lives in an apartment at a shelter , she said.

But her new job ends when the semester is over this month, she said. So this week, she called her food stamp office to check on her application, she said. Neither her caseworker nor the caseworker’s supervisor were available, and she couldn’t leave messages because their voice mailboxes were full, she said.

This is not the first time that the commission has been sued over the problems. A class-action lawsuit filed over the summer was dismissed by U.S. District Judge Sam Sparks in October. Sparks ruled that the plaintiffs did not have the authority to sue under federal law. Texas RioGrande Legal Aid is trying a different approach: suing in state court under state law.

“The law is very clear,” said Robert Doggett, an attorney with the legal aid group. “What we hope we’ll accomplish is to get done what the commission should have done a long time ago. We’re not going away on this issue.”

SPREAD THE WORD!

December 8, 2009

Families that are being victimized by the state of Texas for failing to
make a food stamp determination timely (initial application or
recertification) and organizations frustrated by this problem should
contact a new statewide food stamp delay hotline established today:
866-757-1570.

http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/local_news/69256012.html

Despite efforts to improve the system, food stamp applicants continue to face long delays in assistance amid a recession-fueled surge in demand.

In Bexar County, the state processed 22,463 more applications from March to September than it did in 2008.

More than 210,000 people received $26 million in food stamps in October in the county, with the average family getting $322 a month. In the vast majority of households receiving food assistance — 82 percent — at least one person is employed.

Many have had to wait six months for their first food stamps.

“We’re just not keeping up,” said Stephanie Goodman, spokeswoman for the Texas Health and Human Services Commission. “We’re processing more cases per month than we have before, but we just don’t have enough workers. Our employees are … exhausted and working extended hours. We need to give them a break, but there are still people lined up waiting for services.”

State leaders recently said 250 more employees will be hired to process applications, with more to come. Goodman said she hoped to have 750 additional workers out in the field by next spring.

“We’re planning to hire 150 to 250 per month, but of course all those additional people have to get desks, phones and computers. They all have to be trained, which takes time. So we probably won’t be able to feel the affect until spring.”

The backlog in qualifying people for food stamps has left many San Antonians frustrated.

When Damian Perez and girlfriend Sandra Hernandez tried to get food stamps, they thought they had done everything right.

The application was arduous, requiring a raft of documents for verification. They brought in all the right forms.

“Then they told us to come back on Monday,” Perez said.

They were asked for more documentation the next week, and the application was delayed several times.

“The bottom line is it took us about six months to get the (Lone Star) card,” said Perez, whose girlfriend since has found work. “All I want is for somebody to be accountable. I want somebody to say, ‘We messed up.’”

Their experience is far from a quirk in the system: About 40 percent of Texans who apply for food stamp assistance aren’t certified within the 30 days required by federal law.

Some go hungry

“It’s a humongous problem,” said Renee Trevino, an attorney and group coordinator for public benefits with the Texas Rio Grande Legal Aid, which helps people experiencing food stamp delays. “We’ve had clients who have just given up because it takes months and months for them to even get an interview.”

In the absence of food assistance, she said, low-income people rely on food pantries or forgo paying rent or utilities. Sometimes, they go hungry.

Cyrus Orozco, who makes $100 a week washing dishes, was struggling to buy a $13 can of powdered milk to feed the youngest of his three children. When he applied for food stamps, he was told it would be six months before he could receive assistance.

“I just couldn’t wait that long,” he said. “My children had to be fed.”

He sought help from the Advocates Social Services of San Antonio, whose volunteers are experts at navigating the food stamp application. Within two days, he had his food stamp card.

Carlos Mata, head of the agency, said he sees about 100 clients a month who have found their food stamp application delayed or derailed. He said the average wait is three to four months. He claims some 3,700 Bexar County families are being unjustly delayed from getting food stamps.

Food bank depleted

In the meantime, people seek help from places such as the San Antonio Food Bank, not only for emergency food but for assistance in applying for food stamps.

Eric Cooper, the food bank’s executive director, said last month his organization processed about 3,500 applications. When there are delays, applicants come back to him for groceries.

“Our resources are being depleted at a much more rapid rate because of delays,” he said. “Food banks across the state have felt this tidal wave of need. … This business-as-usual approach has created a significant backlog.”

Houston’s state Rep. Jessica Farrar, chairwoman of the House Democratic Caucus, said complaints about the food stamp program make up the chief reason for calls to her office. She blames an attitude among some lawmakers that if you starve the program, the problem will go away.

“This is symptomatic not just of the food stamp program but mental health, children’s health insurance, welfare,” she said. “If you don’t spend the money, then the problem doesn’t exist. In Texas, we consistently turn away money that then goes to other states. That needs to change. We need to take care of Texans in need.”

The food stamp program has been in trouble since the 1990s, said Celia Hagert, senior policy analyst for the Center of Public Policy Priorities, a group that helps low-income people. She said that in 2006, the state sought to privatize the food stamp program, a move that triggered a massive exodus of workers.

“We lost about a third of the work force, maybe closer to half,” she said.

The privatization program was put on hold, but the dearth in workers remained.

“The system became overwhelmed, and since then we haven’t met the federal standard,” she said.

On behalf of B-Side Entertainment, I wanted to inform you of TWO FREE public screenings taking place in Austin next week of the film that Bill Moyers calls “one of the strongest documentaries I have seen in years and could not be more timely”.

MONEY-DRIVEN MEDICINE
***
Wednesday, December 2nd
10:00am – Texas Capitol Building
Auditorium E1.004
7:00pm – Millennium Youth Entertainment Complex
1156 Hargrave Street, Austin TX 78702
***
followed by a discussion about health-care reform with
Consumers Union and the Center for Public Policy Priorities


Money-Driven Medicine, produced by AcademyAward® winner Alex Gibney (Taxi to the Dark Side, Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room) and based on Maggie Mahar’s book of the same name, is a powerful expose on America’s profit-driven health care system, and sheds light on just how vital it is for us to accomplish comprehensive health care reform now.

Last month Money-Driven Medicine screened on Capitol Hill for members of Congress and their staffers; now we’re carrying the momentum from that event into select cities around the country to galvanize Americans to help push us closer to realizing universal health care that serve patients rather than profits.

 

Sincere thanks, and Happy Thanksgiving!

Chris Sharp

Please click on the link below and cast your vote for Project MEND so that they can have a chance to win a $2500 gas card from Citgo! The gas card is so important to them right now since they’ve lost so much of their funding due to the economy. They can really use it to ensure that they can get medical equipment items to those who don’t have the means to pick it up! So, please, cast your vote for Project MEND today and everyday until November 15th! Thanks so much for your support!! www.FuelingGood.com PLEASE FORWARD TO YOUR FRIENDS AND GET THEM TO VOTE FOR PROJECT MEND EVERYDAY BETWEEN NOW AND NOVEMBER 15TH!!! THANK YOU! banner

Congress is about to act! Come to a large rally to declare your support for meaningful Health Care Reform.

Emcee: Linda Chavez-Thompson, EVP Emeretia, National AFL CIO
Speakers: TBA

Other Details: Free Parking, Free Hotdogs!

Early Sponsors:Alliance for Retired Americans, Center for Public Policy Priorities, Health Care for America NOW!, MoveOn.org, Organizing for America, Texas AFL-CIO, Texas Democratic Party, Travis County Democratic Party, Texas AFT, La Fe Policy Research and Education Center, Texas State Teachers Association.

 

Date:
Saturday, November 14, 2009
Time:
1:00pm – 3:00pm
Location:
Texas Capitol – South Steps
Street:
11th Street and Congress Avenue

CPPP

This Saturday, October 24, 2009 at 2 PM
Austin, Texas
Texas State Capitol Building South Side (11th and Congress)

10th Annual March

Three innocent, exonerated former death row prisoners will be among the special guests at the Tenth Annual March to Abolish the Death Penalty October 24, 2009 at 2 PM in Austin, Texas at the Texas Capitol on the South Steps at 11th and Congress. Also attending will be the penpal of Todd Willingham, Elizabeth Gilbert, who first investigated his innocence. Plus, Todd’s last lawyer Walter Reaves. Please attend the march to support the Willingham family as they fight to prove that Todd Willingham was innocent.

In a withering critique, a nationally known fire scientist has told a state commission on forensics that Texas fire investigators had no basis to rule a deadly house fire was an arson – a finding that led to the murder conviction and execution of Cameron Todd Willingham.

The finding comes in the first state-sanctioned review of an execution in Texas, home to the country’s busiest death chamber. If the commission reaches the same conclusion, it could lead to the first-ever declaration by an official state body that an inmate was wrongly executed.

SIGN THE PETITION…and acknowledge that Texas executed an innocent man.

New Yorker Article

Click HERE to see Video on the Rachel Maddow Show

Rep. Louie Gohmert of Texas described the Matthew Shepard Act which is attached to a defense authorization bill as holding soldiers hostage and a sociological attack on the morals of America.  Sometimes I’m left speechless.

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