308 F. Supp. 100 | N.D. Tex. | 1969
FINDINGS. OF FACT CONCLUSIONS OF LAW, AND COURT ORDER
This action was brought on November 19, 1968 by seven indigent individuals for a declaratory judgment (pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201, 2202) and injunctive relief (pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1343, 1361 and 5 U.S.C. § 702). Plaintiffs properly brought this suit as a class action in behalf of themselves and all of those needy and hungry Texas persons who receive no Federal food assistance- — through either the Food Stamp or the Commodity Distribution Program — solely because of their county of residence. This matter came before the Court on plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction and defendants’ motion for a summary judgment. The Court, having considered the complaint, the memoranda, the affidavits and exhibits in support and in opposition to the aforesaid motions, and having heard argument and testimony in open court, hereby finds the facts and states the conclusions as follows:
Findings of Fact
1. Plaintiffs — needy and malnourished residents of Texas — brought this action to obtain their entitlements to Federal food assistance. Although the Food Stamp Program (7 U.S.C. §§ 2011-2025) and the Commodity Distribution Program (7 U.S.C. §§ 612c, 1431, 1446a-1) were formulated by Congress to provide vital food assistance to the needy, plaintiffs have been denied their nutrition entitlements. Plaintiffs have been denied such assistance solely on the arbitrary basis of their county of residence.
2. Typical of the impoverished circumstances of plaintiffs and their class are the situations of Mrs. Annie Bell Jay and Mr. Willie Doss. Plaintiff Jay, a resident of Johnson County, Texas, testified, to the fact that she is unable to work and has no monthly income whatsoever. She is the mother of four children but has placed those children with
3. In 109 Texas counties, all indigents have been denied access to the Food Stamp and the Commodity Distribution Program. Defendant Lennart-son’s Affidavit, pp. 3-4. No matter how needy, hungry, or malnourished, poor people have been denied food aid altogether in the following Texas counties:
Andrews
Aransas
Archer
Armstrong
Bailey
Bandera
Baylor
Bell
Blanco
Borden
Bosque
Bowie
Brazoria
Brazos
Briscoe
Burnet
Calhoun
Castro
Chambers
Clay
Coleman
Collin
Collingsworth
Colorado
Comal
Concho
Coryell
Crane
Crockett
Deaf Smith
Denton
Donley
Ector
Edwards
Ellis
Erath
Fort Bend
Gaines
Garza
Gillespie
Glasscock
Gray
Gregg
Hall
Hansford
Harrison
Hartley
Hood
Hopkins
Hunt
Jack
Johnson
Kaufman
Kendall
Kenedy
Kett
Kimble
Lamar
Lampasas
Llano
Loving
Lynn
McCulloch
McMullen
Mason
Menard
Midland
Mills
Mitchell
Montgomery
Navarro
Newton
Ochiltree
Oldham
Palo Pinto
Parker
Parmer
Randall
Reagan
Red River
Reeves
Refugio
Roberts
Rockwall
Runnels
Rusk
San Saba
Schleicher
Shackelford
Sherman
Sovervell
Stephens
Sterling
Sutton
Taylor
Throckmorton
Upton
Uvalde
Van Zandt
Victoria
Ward
Wharton
Wheeler
Wichita
Winkler
Wise
Wood
Yoakum
Young
5. The Commodity Distribution Program provides vital food benefits to needy households by distributing commodities free of charge. The Food Stamp Program provides nutritional assistance by increasing poor households’ ■food purchasing power. Under the Food Stamp Program,- a needy household is entitled to purchase food stamps at a price determined to be equal to its “normal expenditures for food.” 7 U.S.C. § 2016 (b). In return for this payment, said household is given a significant amount of free “bonus” stamps in addition to those it has paid for. Thus, when the stamps are used at retail stores to purchase food, the needy family is enabled to buy substantially more food than it otherwise could afford. Both programs are administered by the defendant United States Department of Agriculture, and all of the benefits are wholly subsidized by the Federal government through Congressional appropriations.
6. Contrary to the intent of Congress when it formulated the two Federal food programs (i. e., the Food Stamp and the Commodity Distribution Programs), the Department of Agriculture has determined that it will provide Federal food assistance only in counties where local governmental officials approve of, and request, one of said programs. As a result of this arbitrary administrative determination, the Agriculture Department has approved plans of operation, submitted by the State defendants, that have entirely excluded thousands of indigents from food aid solely on the basis of their county of residence.
7. The Agriculture Department has, however, on occasion, directly implemented a Commodity Distribution Program under the control of Federal officials, in areas where the county officials opposed, and refused to request, a food assistance program. According to the affidavits submitted by the Federal defendants, there are “46 counties in the United States in which the Federal government has undertaken the operation of a commodity distribution program because the counties refused to participate even with Federal financial assistance.” Affidavit of John Slaughter, Director of the Southwest District of Consumer Food Programs, p. 2. Included in these 46 counties are 18 Texas counties in which the Agriculture Department presently operates the commodities program ■directly over the objection of local officials.
8. Areas which have no Federal food assistance programs are just as impoverished, and often more so, than areas in which the Agriculture Department has directly implemented the Commodity Distribution Program. As plaintiffs cited at the hearing, the State defendants’ annual public report indicates that numerous counties, without a program of food assistance, have many more poor people therein than do the counties which have a Federal food aid program available to its indigents. Consequently, the determination as to which counties should
9. The Department of Agriculture has sufficient food resources, which are presently and immediately available, to provide a Federal food program in every Texas county. The Federal defendants, as they indicated at the hearing, have the present resources and capability to implement a Commodity Distribution Program in all Texas counties within a two-week period of time.
10. Since Fiscal 1959, the Federal defendants have returned over one billion dollars of Congressionally appropriated Section 32 (7 U.S.C. § 612c) funds to the United States Treasury. All of this money could have been used for the direct implementation of the Commodity Distribution Program in the 109 Texas counties presently without Federal food assistance for the poor. The amount of money returned to the Treasury, at the end of each fiscal year, was a very substantial proportion of the annual Congressional appropriations for
Conclusions of Law
1. The purpose of the Food Stamp and the Commodity Distribution Programs is to aid needy families and households by providing them with vital Federal food assistance. Food Stamp Act, 7 U.S.C. §§ 2011, 2014(a) 2025(d); Commodity Distribution legislation, 7 U.S.C. §§ 612c, 1431. In enacting the Food Stamp and Commodity Distribution legislation, Congress was cognizant of the invidious effects, and the widespread conditions, of hunger in the United States. With its fundamental pur
2. The denial of Federal food assistance benefits on the basis of county of residence is contrary to the Congressional purpose and intent in the formulation of the Food Stamp and the Commodity Distribution Programs. Hernandez v. Hardin, Civ. Action No. 50333 (N.D.Calif., 12/30/68).
3. The two Federal food programs are intended to be complementary: where one program exists, the other cannot be implemented; similarly but conversely, where one program does not exist, the other program should be implemented. See 7 U.S.C. §§ 2013(b) and 2019(a).
4. Congress has clearly declared its intent that the Federal food programs be implemented and made available “to the maximum extent practicable.” 7 U.S.C. § 2011.
5. The Agriculture Department’s failure to provide Federal food assistance “to the maximum extent practicable” — while returning to the Treasury significantly over one billion dollars of funds Congressionally appropriated for the improvement and expansion of the Federal food programs — is a clear frustration of Congressional intent.
6.Nowhere in the Commodity Distribution legislation can there be found a justification for depriving Federal food assistance on the arbitrary ground of county of residence; the provision of food assistance is not to be conditioned upon a request from county officials. Moreover, the policy of directly implementing a food program in some counties, while refusing to do so in other areas where persons are at least as needy, finds no basis in any rational reading of the language and intent of the Commodity Distribution legislation.
7. The denial of federal food assistance, on the basis of county of residence, is a violation of President Kennedy’s first executive order. Pursuant to the Commodity Distribution legislation (7 U.S.C. § 612c), he ordered that:
The Secretary of Agriculture shall take immediate steps to make available for distribution, through appropriate state and local agencies, to all needy families a greater variety and quantity of food out of our agricultural abundance.
26 Fed.Reg. 639, Exec. Order No. 10914 (Jan. 23, 1961) (emphasis added).
8. There is, and has been, no legal obstacle to using .the substantial Section 32 (7 U.S.C. § 612c) funds — that have been returned to the Treasury or carried over to the next fiscal year — for the implementation of a Commodity Distribution Program in all 109 Texas counties without Federal food assistance.
9. The Federal defendants originally named herein are no longer in office and have been succeeded and replaced, and due .to reorganization of the Department of Agriculture the following named defendants are substituted in the place of the Federal defendants originally named herein, to-wit: Clifford M. Hardin, Secretary of Agriculture, and Edward Hek-man, Administrator of the Food and Nutrition Service of United States Department of Agriculture.
1. The United States Department of Agriculture, together with the other Federal defendants herein, their successors, agents and employees, shall immediately put into effect, in the shortest time feasible and at Federal expense, the Commodity Distribution Program in every Texas area that has no Food Stamp Program. If a Family Food Assistance Program has been voluntarily implemented by county or state officials in the past, or if a Family Food Assistance Program is implemented by county or state officials in the future, this would relieve the Federal defendants of any further responsibility of implementing a Family Food Assistance Program under this Order, in that county. As an outside limit, the Federal defendants, in every Texas area that has no Food Stamp Program, must put into effect the Commodity Distribution Program within sixty (60) days from January 5, 1970.
2. The Federal defendants, starting thirty (30) days from the signing of this Order and continuing for one-half year after the signing of this Order, shall monthly report to the Court and the plaintiffs on the number of Texas persons monthly assisted under the Family Food Assistance Programs. In addition, starting on January 16, 1970, the Federal defendants shall monthly report to the Court about the progress that is being made in establishing a Food Stamp or Commodity Distribution Program in .the Texas counties presently without Federal food assistance.
3. So long as the State of Texas chooses to participate in the Family Food Assistance Programs, the State defendants must include every Texas area in either the Food Stamp or Commodity Distribution Program.
. Those Texas counties are: Cass, Cherokee, Comanche, DeWitt, Freestone, Goliad, Gonzales, Grimes, Hill, Jasper, Lee, Leon, Madison, Tyler, Walker, Waller, Washington, and Willacy. Slaughter Affidavit, Id,
. As plaintiffs cited from tlie Department of Public Welfare Annual Report of 1968, Table 49, the State defendants’ own statistics show that there are more public assistance recipients — ergo, more poor people — in many of the counties without food assistance than there are in counties which presently have either a Food Stamp or a Commodity Distribution Program.
Counties With a Federal Food Program Persons on Public Assistance Counties Without a Federal Food Program Persons on Public Assistance (1968)
Brewster 221 BeU 2107
Carson 90 Bowie 3203
Cochran 111 Brazoria 1666
Coke 90 Brazos 1932
Culberson 59 Collin 2161
Foard 150 Denton 1420
Hemphill 61 Ector 1230
Hudspeth 37 Ellis 1998
Irion 37 Fort Bend 1389
Jeff Davis 57 Gregg 2625
King 3 Harrison 3088
Kinney 117 Hunt 2153
Lipscomb 33 Kaufman 1554
Martin 112 Lamar 3353
Moore 112 Navarro 2016
Motley 142 Rusk 2601
Presidio 303 Taylor 2631
Real 121 Victoria 1353
Stonewall 99 Wharton 1923
Terrell 42 Wichita 3234
Total 1997 43,637
. Fiscal 1959 1960 1961
Total money available 531,651,134 547,118,882 615,441,670
Amount unused and carried over into next fiscal year 300,000,000 300,000,000 300,000,000
Additional amount left unused and returned to the U. S. Treasury 72,837,054 91,222,327 7,894,108
Fiscal 1962 1966 1967
Total money available 622,527,516 614,125,619 664,469,685
Amount unused and carried over into next fiscal year 300,000,000 300,000,000 300,000,000
Additional amount left unused and returned to the U. S. Treasury 109,698,614 143,093,354 3,757,463
Fiscal 1965 1966 1967
Total money available 673,658,976 697,725,547 787,314,308
Amount unused and carried over into next fiscal year 298,758,226 300,000,000 300,000,000
Additional amount left unused and returned to the U. S. Treasury 8,575 208,682,970 181,467,480
Fiscal 1968
Total money available 871,488,088
Amount unused and carried over into next fiscal year 300,000,000
Additional amount left unused and returned to the U. S. Treasury 229,038,999
. Presently, there are 89 Texas counties that are uncommitted to either a Food Stamp or Commodity Distribution Program.