Feb. 9, 2012: Stamping out food stamp abuse

GREATER BOSTON Greater Boston

A production of  

 

Recent Episodes

Supported by:

May 24, 2012
Massachusetts' fallen troops are honored on the Boston Common

May 24, 2012
Massachusetts' fallen troops are honored on the Boston Common

Greater Boston

This Memorial Day weekend, make plans to visit the Boston Common where thousands of flags have been planted to honor Massachusetts’ fallen soldiers. Emily talks with Christie Coombs of the Massachusetts Military Heroes Fund who lost her husband Jeffrey on 9/11.

May 24, 2012
David House on his efforts to help Pvt. Bradley Manning

May 24, 2012
David House on his efforts to help Pvt. Bradley Manning

Greater Boston

Open-government advocate David House founded the Bradley Manning Support Network to assist U.S. Army Private Bradley Manning who is charged with sharing classified military documents with WikiLeaks. House joins Emily to talk about his efforts to help Manning and his own battles with the U.S. government.

May 24, 2012
Richard Tisei on his run for Congress

May 24, 2012
Richard Tisei on his run for Congress

Greater Boston

Could Massachusetts elect another Republican to Congress? All eyes are on veteran state lawmaker Richard Tisei who is running against longtime Democratic Congressman John Tierney. Richard Tisei talks with Emily about his campaign.

May 23, 2012
Despite parishioners' protests, the Vatican says church closures are valid

May 23, 2012
Despite parishioners' protests, the Vatican says church closures are valid

Greater Boston

The Vatican dealt another setback to local groups hoping to stave off the shuttering of six area churches. The groups have been fighting the Boston Archdiocese's decision to close the churches for almost eight years. Despite the upsetting news, the parish groups plan to appeal the decision to the Vatican’s highest court. Emily talks with former Ambassador to the Vatican Ray Flynn and parishioner Jon Rogers about the years-long struggle.



May 23, 2012
Massachusetts Teacher of the Year Kathleen Turner

May 23, 2012
Massachusetts Teacher of the Year Kathleen Turner

Greater Boston

Sharon High School French teacher Kathleen M. Turner received the state’s highest honor for educators when she was named Massachusetts Teacher of the Year earlier this month. Emily talks with Turner about the recognition and her approach to teaching young minds.

May 23, 2012
The Griffin Museum of Photography celebrates its 20th anniversary

May 23, 2012
The Griffin Museum of Photography celebrates its 20th anniversary

Greater Boston

The Griffin Museum of Photography opened in 1992 in Winchester with the mission of promoting appreciation for the art of photography. Jared Bowen goes inside the museum as it celebrates its 20th anniversary and sees how the institute plans to commemorate the 100th anniversary of Fenway Park.

Schedule

Thursday
5/24/12 11:00 PM
WGBH World
Friday
5/25/12 12:00 AM
WGBH 2/HD
Friday
5/25/12 6:00 AM
WGBH World
Friday
5/25/12 12:00 PM
WGBH World
TBA TBA TBA TBA

Related Content

Comment on This Episode

Post a Comment

Maryann commented on Greater Boston on 02.13.12
For an educated woman Emily Roony showed her ignorance by making comments such as "We took the shame out of it," "Theres 70,000 people on it. Do we really think all these people need it," and "How do I get one." A true journalist knows not to make comments that reflect their own opinions or bias when conducting an interview. A true journalist also prepares by doing research on the topic they are discussing. If Ms. Roony did this she would know that over 50 of the people who receive food stamp benefits are children. Does she really want them to be shamed by their hunger? Or does she think the shame should be reserved for the elderly and disabled who also receive food stamps? If she did her research, she would know that in order for her "to get one" her gross income could not exceed 130 of the federal poverty level. $1,180 for a single person. If she checked the census report, she would have discovered that there are over 43 million people in this country living in poverty and she might have thought twice about the comment"Do they really need it?" If Ms. Roony was a true journalist, she wouldnt have relied on secondhand information that someone saw someone buying a blender with their EBT card. She would investigated and discovered that people make one time large cash withdrawals to pay rent or bills. If Ms Roony so much as even went to the USDA web site to inquire what the amount of an average monthly food stamp allotment for an individual was $200 per month, not per week as she thought, it might have added an ounce of credibility to her title as journalist. It also would have helped if she conducted a discussion with a panel that expressed both sides of the issue. Instead, Ms. Roony now has the general public who are not familiar with food stamps or know anyone who rely on them to feed their families believing that all food stamp recipients are buying lobsterprecooked, not live. Instead of acting as a true journalist Ms. Roony perpetuated the bias against the poor that has now become the norm in this country.

Are your taxpayer dollars paying for liquor, lottery tickets, and cigarettes? Republican lawmakers are mounting pressure on Gov. Patrick to overhaul what items publicly-funded EBT cards can be used to purchase.

Greater Boston updates from WGBH

See a sample »

   

2012 WGBH Auction
Explore! Members' Magazine iPad App