天美视频

Nick Grube/Civil Beat/2022

About the Author

Amber Granite

Amber Granite, born and raised in Kailua, works in the WIC Program at the Waimanalo Health Center and is a master in public health candidate with a focus on Native Hawaiian and Indigenous health at the University of Hawaii Manoa.

There are 25,000 WIC participants in Hawaii, but federal budget cuts are looming.

More than ever before, WIC is a critically important program to the people of Hawaii.

WIC stands for Women, Infants and Children and is a federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. It was developed during the first White House Conference on Hunger and Nutrition in 1969 after many U.S. doctors noticed their pregnant patients were suffering from malnutrition and began prescribing healthy foods to combat the problem.

The WIC program has now grown into a nationally recognized program providing nutritious foods to families across the state. These foods are backed by nutritional research and provide the proper vitamins and minerals that are critical for prenatal health and growing keiki.

Applicants are eligible if they fall under 185% of the federal poverty level, have Medicaid or SNAP benefits and have a nutritional risk. Qualifying WIC participants receive a supplemental amount of nutritious foods like whole wheat bread, iron-fortified cereals, a cash value benefit to use for fresh fruits and vegetables, milk, eggs, cheese, yogurt, peanut butter, canned beans and more.

They also have access to nutrition education, breastfeeding support and referrals to many other family resource programs.

The WIC program of today is one of the strongest federal nutrition programs in the nation. In 2022 there were over 6.2 million WIC participants nationwide and 25,000 WIC participants in Hawaii. Unlike the SNAP program, recipients do not need to be U.S. citizens to access and apply for WIC. Adjunct eligibility through SNAP and Medicaid make it easy to qualify.

Currently, WIC needs to be fully funded in order to provide these critical benefits to families like many of us who are struggling to afford everyday groceries and put food on the table. The federal government has until Nov. 17 鈥 this Friday 鈥 to finalize their 2023 spending budget and often times WIC is at the top of the list when cuts need to be made.

In a recent plea to our federal legislators I wrote this message:

鈥淚 am writing to you about the critical matter of fully funding WIC for the fiscal year 2024 budget. I ask that you please protect our Hawaii families鈥 WIC benefits as many depend on these for healthy food on their table. The fruit and vegetable cash value benefits, called 鈥楥VB鈥 that are allotted for each participant are currently: $26 for each keiki ages 1-5, $47 for pregnant and postpartum people and $52 for lactating people.

鈥淚f this government budget crisis continues the CVB benefits could be cut to $10 per child and $12 per adult, or even cut all together. Please don鈥檛 let this happen to our WIC ohana. We must fight hard to keep the current amounts. For many, WIC is the only government benefit they have access to because they are overqualified for SNAP and, unlike SNAP, WIC provides very specific foods that are backed by scientific research for the nutritional value they contain.鈥

The federal WIC program helps families with nutrition assistance. (Wikimedia Commons/1988)

Care For Our Families

I was once a WIC mom with four keiki worried about how we would make ends meet. After the birth of our second child, I left the work force to become a 鈥渟tay-at-home鈥 mother and we were completely reliant on my husband驶s income.

I went to the Waimanalo WIC office and was welcomed and qualified for WIC for almost five years. It was the boost our family needed to assure our keiki were growing well and thriving. I will never forget my time as a WIC participant and how it helped me to be a better mom to my kids.

I am now the WIC supervisor of the Waimanalo WIC Program and I support a caseload of almost 1,300 pregnant, breastfeeding and postpartum participants and their keiki. I think of each of them as my ohana and by assuring their health and wellness, I assure that their future generations will live well and prosper.

I hope you will join me in supporting the WIC program as a means to supporting ohana across the pae aina (archipelago) by encouraging the community to share their stories of how WIC may have helped them and its importance to our federal legislators.

M膩lama I k膩 k膩kou 驶ohana. E Ho驶oulu l膩hui aloha. Care for our families, Raise a beloved nation.

Community Voices aims to encourage broad discussion on many topics of community interest. It鈥檚 kind of a cross between Letters to the Editor and op-eds. This is your space to talk about important issues or interesting people who are making a difference in our world. Column lengths should be no more than 800 words and we need a photo of the author and a bio. We welcome video commentary and other multimedia formats. Send to news@civilbeat.org. The opinions and information expressed in Community Voices are solely those of the authors and not Civil Beat.


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About the Author

Amber Granite

Amber Granite, born and raised in Kailua, works in the WIC Program at the Waimanalo Health Center and is a master in public health candidate with a focus on Native Hawaiian and Indigenous health at the University of Hawaii Manoa.


Latest Comments (0)

In a nation where 40% of the food produced is thrown away, it's hard to argue with providing the small amount that WIC makes available to those who need it. Parents choosing to work or not is more complex & nuanced than simply taking responsibility. Quality childcare is hard to find and expensive, balancing financial and emotional needs of families is hard, many workers make little relative to the costs of working. Yes, ideally communities would support all in them so government assistance would be unneeded. Ideally every person would have all their physical and emotional needs met to ensure all make perfect choices, if that can even be defined. Sadly, much provided on WIC is NOT nutritionally appropriate, seeming more driven by corporations desires or willingness to participate than by health concerns. Lists of qualified foods needs complete revision to meet nutritional needs of recipients. Even with that, it is a valuable resource that should be continued, perhaps while communities also work to provide better ways to support those with needs. Further wounding, shaming, and depriving of those already hurting compounds rather than benefits individuals, families, & communities.

Barbara · 1 year ago

I am glad for the author that she and her four children were able to benefit from this program. However, I continue to wonder why people think it is the responsibility of the government to take care of their needs when they have an equal responsibility to take care of themselves? She needed assistance after the birth of child #2 but continued to have two more children? At taxpayer expense?The Federal government has a multitude of responsibilities keeping our nation safe for all. We, as citizens, have the responsibility to make smart choices for ourselves.

ahhnow · 1 year ago

I fully support those raising the next generation to be healthy and fed. Children are the workforce of the future. WIC should be expanded. Research shows there is a positive return on investment in communities that support children's health and education.

ECM · 1 year ago

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