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Electronic Benefits Transfer

Electronic benefits transfer (EBT) is a relatively new, mandatory method of delivery for food stamps. Some states also opt to use EBT to deliver state funded and administrated benefits, such as general assistance and TANF (temporary assistance for needy families). This new delivery method affects the ten percent of all food stamp recipients in the United States who are elderly, including the twenty percent of food stamp households with elderly members. EBT also affects elderly recipients of state administered cash benefits and general assistance.

EBT recipients use a card similar to a debit card linked to a checking account to access benefits. Recipients are issued an EBT card and a secret personal identification number (PIN). This card is not linked to a personal account, but rather recipients have limited access to an allotted benefit award amount from the state’s account. To access food stamps at USDA authorized access points, including grocery stores, convenience stores, some farmers’ markets, route vendors and group living facilities, recipients simply “swipe” the EBT card through a point-of-sale (POS) device, much like a debit card. To access cash benefits, recipient can withdraw money from an ATM, receive cash back with a purchase, or use the EBT at a POS to pay directly for goods. Most EBT recipients encounter fees to access EBT cash benefits that were not incurred under the former paper check delivery method. There are usually two separate charges to access EBT funds at an ATM (and sometimes at a POS)- first, a fee per transaction by the company with whom the state contracts to administer the EBT program (usually $0.80) and second, a surcharge imposed per transaction by the owner/operator of the ATM or POS device (usually $1.50). These charges effectively reduce recipients’ need-based award by imposing costs to access those very benefits. In the majority of states, EBT is the mandatory delivery format for all cash assistance benefits, which means that recipients have no alternative to incurring these charges.

Special Access Concern for Elderly Recipients

Some elderly recipients may encounter difficulties mastering the new EBT technology and may be unable independently to access cash benefits or to fulfill their basic shopping needs using EBT. In many states, elderly or disabled recipients who have difficulty with EBT must assign an alternative payee or authorized representative to assist in navigating the system. The alternative payee has access to the recipient’s benefits and is expected to act on behalf of the recipient.

This alternative payee system leaves elderly and disabled recipients dependent upon a third party, unreasonably limiting the recipients autonomy and independence. The recipient must rely upon the alternative payee, not only to assist in accessing the benefits, but to do so honestly and without great expense. Some recipients must pay a fee to a third party performing this service, and in some parts of the country there is a thriving business of individuals and agencies that sell this service to persons who cannot otherwise find someone to fill this role. This practice may also open the door to potential fraud by the alternative payee and a loss of benefits for the recipient.

More information is available at National Consumer Law Center’s, Electronic Benefits Protection Initiative.

Additional Resources

  • Consumers Union, Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT) Programs: Best Practices to Serve Recipients (August 2000).
  • Consumers Union, An Advocate’s Guide to Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT) in California (November 2002).
  • National Consumer Law Center, Consumer Banking and Payments Law (2nd ed. 2002).
  • USDA, Food and Nutrition Service.

 


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