500 word response 2 references/intext citations Due 1/22/2025 Answer the two questions

500 word response 2 references/intext citations

Due 1/22/2025

Answer the two questions below

Rule Making Process Case Study:  
Food Stamps and Fast Food

 
Bloomberg Businessweek reported in November of 2011 on an interesting and controversial fast-food and government benefits controversy. The giant fast-food company, Yum Brands, wants government to allow low-income people to use food stamps at its Taco Bell and KFC restaurants. Health care advocates as well as the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which funds the food stamp program, have criticized the proposal; and the Agriculture Department is asking the states not to accede to Yum Brand’s request. The Under Secretary of Agriculture for Food and Nutrition  stated that not to be concerned with the quality of the food is a serious mistake, and that the government should be promoting access to healthy foods. 
Bloomberg Businessweek indicated that Yum Brands has lobbied government officials in Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Florida to permit its restaurants to participate in the food stamp program, which is called the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). SNAP, though funded by the federal government, is administered by the states. The program is approximately five decades old, and distributed in 2010 a record amount of $64.4 billion. With that money available, one university professor of nutrition stated that “Everyone wants to get a piece of that action.” The professor also noted that now the bulk of that money is going to grocery stores, and restaurants think that the current situation is unfair. 

Bloomberg Businessweek related that the demand for food stamps has “exploded” since the recession began in 2007, and consequently as of August 2012 a record 45.8 million Americans participated in the food stamp program, which number was an 8.1% increase over the previous year. The magazine also pointed out that though the name “food stamp” is used, actual paper coupons were discontinued several years ago to be replaced by an electronic debit card system. The SNAP program has restrictions on the types of products that can be purchased with food stamps, for example, alcohol, tobacco, pet food, vitamins, and hot food. Approximately 85% of food stamps are redeemed at large grocery stores and supermarkets. However, in the last few years several states, including California, Arizona, Michigan, Rhode Island, and  Florida, have been allowing people who cannot cook for themselves, such as the disabled, the homeless, and the elderly, to buy hot meals at authorized fast food restaurants.

In 2011, 
Bloomberg Businessweek reported that certain restaurants, such as McDonald’s, Wendy’s, Taco Bell, and KFC collected approximately $21 million in food stamp redemptions.  A Yum Brands spokesperson stated that it makes “perfect sense” to expand the program, which is working well in certain states, to allow the aforementioned types of people to use food stamps in restaurants as they would in supermarkets. A member of Congress, whose district in Kentucky includes the headquarters of Yum Brands, stated that even though there may be a profit motive to Yum Brand’s request, there nonetheless is “some merit” to allow the company to more fully participate in the SNAP program. However, a spokesperson for the Pennsylvania Welfare Department stated that fast food is “not really a healthy way to get food,” and that it is “not always the best choice financially.” Another member of Congress, also from Kentucky, stated that to allow the expansion of the SNAP program would harm the needy in the long-term since they are going to get less food for their food stamps.

Bibliography: Patton, Leslie, “Food Stamps for Chalupa? Not Likely,” 
Bloomberg Businessweek, November 21-November 27, 2011, pp. 32-34.

Questions for Discussion: 

1. The appointed administrative head of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), has decided to make a new regulation.  The regulation will prevent any individual state agency administrating the SNAP program within their state and individual recipient of SNAP benefits from using SNAP benefits or funds towards “fast food”.   The USDA agency head has decided that 
Informal Rule Making will be used to promulgate this new federal regulation using  the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) process.   Explain the following using our materials and readings this week:

· Explain all the material steps involved under the APA for Informal Rule Making for such a new regulation;

· Explain how Formal Rule Making is different then Informal Rule Making; and  

· Explain how Negotiated Rule Making Process is different then Informal Rule Making.  

2.   Would it be ethical for the USDA or an individual state agency to expand the SNAP program to cover “fast food”?   Pick one of the below ethical theories (
utilitarianism), explain it, then apply it to the facts of this case and conclude under it if it is moral/ethical to expand the SNAP program to cover “fast food”?  You will have to do some independent research on each of the below ethical theories online to learn about them and how they work.

Share This Post

Email
WhatsApp
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
Reddit

Order a Similar Paper and get 15% Discount on your First Order

Related Questions

1. In “Research Methods in Criminal Justice and Criminology,” Rennison and Hart (2018) emphasize the importance of both descriptive and

1. In “Research Methods in Criminal Justice and Criminology,” Rennison and Hart (2018) emphasize the importance of both descriptive and inferential statistics in research analysis and reporting. Descriptive statistics involve summarizing and organizing data to understand its main characteristics, providing a clear picture of the dataset’s structure. Inferential statistics, on

400 word response 2 references from the internet that are downloadable Due 3/12/2025 Drawing upon your readings and any field experiences,

400 word response 2 references from the internet that are downloadable Due 3/12/2025 Drawing upon your readings and any field experiences, critically analyze the importance of evaluating criminal justice programs, mainly how these evaluations influence policy formulation and the justice system’s effectiveness. Explore such assessments’ ethical implications and role in

please see attachment,  Theories of crime and criminal justice can be defined as statements about relationships, particularly between an

please see attachment,  Theories of crime and criminal justice can be defined as statements about relationships, particularly between an independent variable and a dependent variable. Academics refer to formal theories in order to establish testable hypotheses; for our consideration, formal criminological theories offer many suggestions about where crime originates and