logo
McDowell County, West Virginia, birthplace of food stamps, faces a disappearing safety net

McDowell County, West Virginia, birthplace of food stamps, faces a disappearing safety net

CBS News25-07-2025
For nonprofits in McDowell County, West Virginia, the federal cuts in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act threaten a lifeline.
Many of McDowell's 17,000 residents rely on federal programs and the nonprofits they fund to get by. The county's tax base and population have significantly declined since 1950, when McDowell was the top coal-producing county in the nation and had about 100,000 residents.
Now, more than half the children in the county receive federal Children's Health Insurance Program benefits, and about one-third of seniors are on Medicaid, the federal health insurance program for the poor. Decades after the Kennedy administration made the county a first test of food stamps, nearly half the county's residents receive supplemental nutrition assistance, or SNAP, the Food Stamp Program's successor.
The strains created by new eligibility restrictions on SNAP as a result of the passage of President Trump's domestic policy bill will be especially dire in places like McDowell County, where more than one-third of the population lives below the federal poverty line, said Rosemary Ketchum, executive director of the West Virginia Nonprofit Association.
"These federal cuts are starving people," she said.
Since the interruption in federal support tied to President Trump's January executive orders barring grants related to "gender ideology"; diversity, equity, and inclusion; and environmental justice, Ketchum said many of the 9,000 or so nonprofits in her state have laid off staff. Others, she said, are dipping into whatever reserves they have to pay their employees.
Those reserves are slim, if they exist at all. Taken together, the seven nonprofits that receive federal grants in McDowell County run on a 3 percent operating margin, according to data tabulated by the Urban Institute's National Center for Charitable Statistics. If all federal support disappeared, the center found, all the county's nonprofits would be at risk of going under unless other funding was provided.
In a poor state like West Virginia, which is already facing a budget deficit and lacks the legions of philanthropic donors who got rich on Wall Street or in Silicon Valley, nonprofits don't have a plan B, said Kathy Gentry, executive director of Safe Housing and Economic Development, or SHED, a McDowell nonprofit housing provider.
The nonprofit's clients, many of whom are elderly or disabled, rely on U.S. Housing and Urban Development support to cover the rent at the 94 housing units SHED manages.
Gentry's pay was temporarily cut for six weeks this spring because part of her salary comes from a HUD capacity-building grant that the administration deemed at cross-purposes with Trump's anti-DEI policy agenda. Her full paycheck resumed, but Gentry worries further cuts will force her to lay off staff.
Already, the nonprofit operates at a loss. In its 2023 tax filing, the most recent available, SHED's $663,000 in expenses outstripped its revenue by nearly $200,000.
"We're in a quandary here — all nonprofits are," Gentry said. "Are we going to exist? Will we have to dissolve?"
Since 2015, Heidi Binko and her team at the Just Transition Fund have worked with economic development agencies and nonprofits in areas where the coal industry once flourished. That can mean helping a local organization identify or write a grant or provide a matching grant.
The fund was created by the Rockefeller Family Foundation and Appalachian Funders Network to help coal towns capture some of the dollars provided in the 2015 Clean Power Plan, or POWER Act, passed during the Obama administration. Since then, the fund says it has helped coal communities in West Virginia and throughout the nation secure more than $2 billion in federal grants.
Binko hopes the fund can continue to attract federal resources to towns with high poverty rates.
"There are still federal dollars available," she said. "They haven't all been zeroed out."
The recently passed domestic policy bill, for instance, contains $50 billion in health care grants over 10 years for rural providers, though it is unclear whether that money will keep hospitals and clinics that rely on Medicaid dollars afloat.
Two hallmarks of the Biden administration's infrastructure and stimulus acts — transitioning away from a carbon-based economy and providing federal resources among different populations equitably — are not a focus of the Trump plan. As a result, Binko fears recent progress will be dimmed.
For instance, Generation West Virginia, a Just Transition Fund grantee, worked with McDowell County to apply for funds from the Biden administration's Digital Equity Act to run an elementary and middle school digital literacy program. Programs under the act were terminated in May.
The cancellation of the Digital Equity Act is a setback for McDowell, where 20 percent of households don't have a broadband internet connection, according to a Generation West Virginia report.
Other, more basic infrastructure is lacking in the county. According to DigDeep, a nonprofit that assists with clean water access and wastewater systems and is primarily funded by private institutions, corporate partners and grassroots donations, there may be hundreds of people in the county without a dependable water supply. The exact number is unknown because information on whether existing water systems provide safe drinking water is not gathered by the U.S. Census.
DigDeep works with the McDowell Public Service District utility provider to identify residents who need a water hookup and helps secure grants from the U.S. Department of Agriculture's rural development program to extend water trunk lines to hard-to-reach areas. In some cases, the nonprofit helps pay to connect the federally supported water lines directly to people's homes. It is also helping to install wastewater treatment facilities for more than 400 residents who either have inadequate systems or flush waste into nearby creeks.
The water supply throughout the county is unreliable because of the area's close historical ties to the rise and fall of the coal economy, said George McGraw, DigDeep's chief executive.
When coal operations came to McDowell, businesses operated in a "closed loop" environment. Coal companies paid workers to build and work in the mines, they owned the houses where miners lived, and they built the water lines that served those houses, McGraw said.
When the coal industry began to peter out, companies exited the county, leaving behind an aging system of pipes and drains.
To secure water in the county today, hundreds of people fill plastic jugs from roadside springs or mine shafts, McGraw said. To get drinking water, they may use the bathroom in a store, a neighbor's house, or a school.
DigDeep has several projects in the planning stages in McDowell. But the Trump USDA budget proposal would chop the rural water program by two-thirds, meaning some public works projects may never get completed. Someone else will have to foot the bill or the system will continue to crumble, leaving many people in McDowell County without a basic necessity.
"It's not like the burden goes away," McGraw said. "The burden just shifts, and utilities are forced to raise rates on customers, many of whom are below the poverty line."
______
Alex Daniels is a senior reporter at the Chronicle of Philanthropy, where you can read the full article. This article was provided to The Associated Press by the Chronicle of Philanthropy as part of a partnership to cover philanthropy and nonprofits supported by the Lilly Endowment. The Chronicle is solely responsible for the content. For all of AP's philanthropy coverage, visit https://apnews.com/hub/philanthropy.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US and China extend trade truce for another 90 days
US and China extend trade truce for another 90 days

Yahoo

time11 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

US and China extend trade truce for another 90 days

US President Donald Trump has extended a trade truce with China for another 90 days, delaying once again a dangerous showdown between the world's two biggest economies. Mr Trump posted on his Truth Social platform that he signed the executive order for the extension, and that 'all other elements of the Agreement will remain the same'. Beijing at the same time also announced the extension of the tariff pause, according to the Ministry of Commerce. The previous deadline was set to expire at 12.01am on Tuesday. Had that happened the US could have ratcheted up taxes on Chinese imports from an already high 30%, and Beijing could have responded by raising retaliatory levies on US exports to China. The pause buys time for the two countries to work out some of their differences, perhaps clearing the way for a summit later this year between Mr Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping, and it has been welcomed by the US companies doing business with China. China said on Tuesday it would extend relief to American companies who were placed on an export control list and an unreliable entities list. After Mr Trump initially announced tariffs in April, China restricted exports of dual-use goods to some American companies, while banning others from trading or investing in China. The Ministry of Commerce said it would stop those restrictions for some companies, while giving others another 90-day extension. Reaching a pact with China remains unfinished business for Mr Trump, who has already upended the global trading system by slapping double-digit taxes – tariffs – on almost every country on earth. The EU, Japan and other trading partners agreed to lopsided trade deals with Mr Trump, accepting once unthinkably US high tariffs (15% on Japanese and EU imports, for instance) to ward off something worse. In June, the US and China reached an agreement to ease tensions. The US said it would pull back export restrictions on computer chip technology and ethane, a feedstock in petrochemical production, and China agreed to make it easier for US firms to get access to rare earths. 'The US has realised it does not have the upper hand,' said Claire Reade, senior counsel at Arnold & Porter and former assistant US trade representative for China affairs. In May, the US and China had averted an economic catastrophe by reducing massive tariffs they'd slapped on each other's products, which had reached as high as 145% against China and 125% against the US. Those triple-digit tariffs threatened to effectively end trade between the US and China and caused a frightening sell-off in financial markets. In a May meeting in Geneva, America's tariffs went back down to a still-high 30% and China's to 10%. Ms Reade does not expect much beyond limited agreements such as the Chinese saying they will buy more American soybeans and promising to do more to stop the flow of chemicals used to make fentanyl and to allow the continued flow of rare-earth magnets. But the tougher issues will likely linger, and 'the trade war will continue grinding ahead for years into the future', said Jeff Moon, a former US diplomat and trade official.

DLP Capital Named to Inc. 5000 List of Fastest Growing Companies for 13th Consecutive Year
DLP Capital Named to Inc. 5000 List of Fastest Growing Companies for 13th Consecutive Year

Yahoo

time11 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

DLP Capital Named to Inc. 5000 List of Fastest Growing Companies for 13th Consecutive Year

ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. & BETHLEHEM, Pa., August 12, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--DLP Capital, a private real estate investment firm headquartered in Florida and Pennsylvania, announced today that it has been named to the Inc. 5000 list of America's fastest-growing private companies for the 13th year in a row. The Inc. 5000, published once per year by the New York City-headquartered Inc. Magazine, is an annual ranking of the nation's fastest-growing companies as measured by cumulative revenue growth over the past three years. To be eligible for the 2025 Inc. 5000, companies must be "privately held, for profit, based in the U.S., and independent." In addition, contenders must have generated no less than $100,000 in revenue in 2021 and at least $2 million in revenue in 2024 to qualify. "To be on the Inc. 5000 for 13 years is a rare and remarkable feat," says Don Wenner, founder and CEO of DLP Capital. "It's an affirmation of the resounding demand for attainable workforce housing across the country, and a testament to the lasting dedication and trust that our investors, sponsors, residents, and employees have put in us." This year, DLP ranked #3,821 on the Inc. 5000, #344 in Florida, and #86 in the real estate category. "Disciplined thought, disciplined people, and disciplined action have led us to where we are today," says Wenner. "Looking ahead, we aim to multiply our impact on America's housing crisis by bringing Thriving Communities to life across our expanding portfolio of multifamily, build-to-rent, manufactured, and short-term vacation rental homes." DLP Capital joins an exclusive cohort of companies that have managed to grow despite inflationary headwinds, high interest rates, and mounting economic uncertainty. This year, the top 500 companies on the Inc. 5000 list achieved a median three-year revenue growth rate of 1,552% and collectively contributed over 48,000 jobs to the American economy during the same period. Inc. magazine will honor this year's awardees at the Inc. 5000 Conference & Gala, which will be held in Phoenix, Arizona from October 22–24, 2025. The Fall issue of Inc. magazine will feature the top 500 companies from the Inc. 5000 list. About DLP Capital: DLP Capital is a St. Augustine, FL and Bethlehem, PA-headquartered private real estate investment firm with over $5.25 billion in assets under management (AUM). Through its four sponsored funds, the firm invests, develops, finances, and operates attainable multifamily and single-family rental housing communities for America's working families. Founded in 2006 by Don Wenner in Pennsylvania's Lehigh Valley, DLP Capital is a thirteen-time Inc. 5000 honoree, most recently in 2025. View source version on Contacts Shannon Danford, Marketing Director(407) Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

US and China extend tariffs deadline again
US and China extend tariffs deadline again

Yahoo

time11 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

US and China extend tariffs deadline again

The world's two largest economies, the US and China, have again extended the deadline for tariffs to come into effect. A last-minute executive order from US President will prevent taxes on Chinese imports to the US from rising to 30%. Beijing also announced the extension of the tariff pause at the same time, according to the Ministry of Commerce. Those tariffs on goods entering the US from China were due to take effect on Tuesday. The extension allows for further negotiations with Chinese Premier Xi Jinping and also prevents tariffs from rising to 145%, a level reached after tit for tat increases in the wake of Trump's so-called liberation day announcement on 2 April. It's the second 90-day truce between the sides. The countries reached an initial framework for cooperation in May, with the US reducing its 145% tariff on Chinese goods to 30%, while China's 125% retaliatory tariffs went down to 10% on US items. A tariff of 20% had been implemented on when Mr Trump took office, over what his administration said was a failure to stop illegal drugs entering the US. Sector-specific tariffs, such as the 25% tax on cars, aluminium and steel, remain in place. Chinese stock markets were mixed in response to the news, with Hong Kong's Hang Seng down 0.08% The Shanghai Composite stock index rose 0.46%, and the Shenzhen Component gained 0.35%.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store