Expanded food support announced for Kansas families through pandemic EBT program

Gov. Laura Kelly, in collaboration with the Kansas Department for Children and Families (DCF) and Kansas State Department of Education (KSDE), has announced the continuation of the Pandemic EBT (P-EBT) program for Kansas families who missed out on school lunches during the 2020-2021 school year.

“Expanding the P-EBT program to childcare facilities will address food insecurity and make sure all Kansas children have reliable access to healthy foods as we overcome COVID-19,” Gov. Laura Kelly said in a news release. “Keeping young Kansans safe and healthy is critical, and I’m glad to see this program reaching the families who need it most.”


Through this program, P-EBT will provide a nutritional resource to families who lost access to free or reduced-price school meals or childcare meals due to school closures or reduced in-person attendance hours for at least five consecutive days.


P-EBT funds are being issued for the 2020-2021 school year beginning in late June 2021.


Children that attended a school that reported days missed due to COVID-19 are eligible for P-EBT. A child qualifies for P-EBT if:


• They qualified for free or reduced-price meals under the National School Lunch Program, and,
• The child did not receive free or reduced-price meals at school because the school was closed or operated with reduced attendance or hours for at least five consecutive days due to COVID-19.


School children do not have to be on the food assistance program through DCF to receive this special P-EBT benefit.


Additionally, children under the age of 6 in a household that received food assistance in Kansas at any time since Oct. 1, 2020, are eligible for P-EBT benefits if they live or attend a childcare facility in an area where one or more schools were closed or operating with reduced attendance or hours.


“This year, the P-EBT benefit has been expanded to include youth in childcare facilities who were affected by the pandemic,” Kansas DCF Secretary Laura Howard said. “This program is essential to families who are experiencing food insecurity and don’t always know where their next meal will come from.”


P-EBT benefit amounts will vary by child based on that child’s learning situation. The specific benefit amount per child will be provided to the household on the approval notice received in the mail. Families will receive their benefits on a new or their existing Kansas Benefits Card (EBT Card).

• For households that already receive public assistance through DCF, the P-EBT benefit will be automatically issued to the household’s Kansas Benefits Card (EBT Card). Benefits will be issued in one lump sum, staggered over 10 days in June 2021 for the months of August 2020 through May 2021. An application through DCF is not needed.

• Households that do not receive public assistance must apply through the DCF self-service portal, https://cssp.kees.ks.gov/apspssp/sspNonMed.portal, using a unique identifier received from their school. The application process is estimated to start July 12.


Recipients can use their P-EBT funds to purchase eligible foods from approved retailers that accept food assistance benefits, like grocery stores and online at Aldi, Amazon or Walmart.


P-EBT for the summer months of 2021 will be issued as a supplemental benefit in the fall.

Flags at half-staff today to honor late Kansas sergeant

Flags have been lowered to half-staff today in Kansas to honor Staff Sgt. Wesley W. “Wes” Kubie of Salina, Kansas.

Sgt. Kubie was involved in a military vehicle accident June 8 at Smoky Hill Air National Guard Range, 10 miles southwest of Salina.

Staff Sgt. Kubie was a Joint Terminal Attack Controller instructor for the Kansas Air National Guard, assigned to the 284th Air Support Operations Squadron at Smoky Hill. He was deployed to Afghanistan from 2019 to 2020 as an active guard reservist in the Air Force.


“Staff Sergeant Kubie lost his life in the line of duty serving his state and nation,” Gov. Laura Kelly said. “I share my condolences with the Kubie family, loved ones, and fellow Kansas Guardsmen. His commitment to our state will not be forgotten.”

Help for college, rent and more now available for former foster kids into their mid-20s

Some of the new opportunities for support expire in September. Others extend a year beyond that. People can contact DCF to inquire about their eligibility.

by Celia Llopis-Jepsen, Kansas News Service

Stormy Lukasavage wanted to go to college. So he did his homework on what steps he needed to make it happen, from scholarships to tuition waivers.

“It’s always an extra step when you’re in foster care,” the 25-year-old recalled. “There’s so much more paperwork that you have to go through.”

Lukasavage spent part of his childhood in foster care, an experience that continued to shape his life as he entered college.

“My barriers came from the fact that I don’t have a strong family background,” he said. “One of my biggest things was always on the holidays. Just having to be there by myself in an empty building — that kind of totally sucked.”

Lacking a family network is just one way that instability and trauma during childhood can carry into adulthood and complicate the transition.

Thousands of young adults in Kansas who experienced foster care and similar disruptions to home life as children can apply for help paying rent, buying food and covering college tuition and child care through a new pandemic relief program.

One key change to law makes people eligible until they turn 27 for supports that previously ran out at age 21.

Lukasavage thinks that could help more of his peers get their footing and pursue their goals.

“People in foster care weren’t given all the same chances,” he said. “They need that little help up to become prominent members of society. And if we can encourage that growth in a nurturing way, that benefits all of us down the road.”

Congress passed the law late last year to help young adults who have experienced trauma weather the financial storm brought by COVID-19.

Those who were removed from their homes at age 14 or later and placed in custody of state foster care, juvenile corrections or tribal authorities can apply for support through the Kansas Department for Children and Families.

Eligible young adults can get cash assistance (the application for that goes live on July 1), as well as help affording housing, child care and other daily needs.

The maximum needs-based award for college tuition or other training rose from $6,250 a year to $12,000.

Some of these changes expire at the end of September. Others continue a year beyond that. The Department for Children and Families can help young adults know their options.

Even without a pandemic — which cost many young adults their jobs — life can be tough for people who’ve experienced childhood trauma.

The National Foster Youth Institute says children placed in state care switch schools and fall behind academically more often than their peers. Half don’t finish high school and only 3 percent earn bachelor’s degrees, it says.

Research commissioned by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services found adults in their mid-20s who aged out of foster care at age 18 earn significantly less than their peers without that background.

Lukasavage now does advocacy work for improving the foster system and long-term outcomes.

In 2019, he earned his bachelor’s in criminal justice from Washburn University. Now he’s taking the entrance exam for law school.

Editor’s note: This story was reported in memory of KCUR reporter Aviva Okeson-Haberman, a dedicated journalist who began the research for it shortly before her death.


Celia Llopis-Jepsen reports on consumer health for the Kansas News Service. You can follow her on Twitter @celia_LJ or email her at celia (at) kcur (dot) org.
The Kansas News Service is a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio focused on health, the social determinants of health and their connection to public policy.

Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished by news media at no cost with proper attribution and a link to ksnewsservice.org.
See more at
https://www.kcur.org/news/2021-06-11/help-for-college-rent-and-more-now-available-for-former-foster-kids-into-their-mid-20s.