Food Stamps Argument Essay

Words: 767
Pages: 4

It isn’t uncommon for people to go hungry on a day-to-day basis, however here in America it is usually a circumstance the government does what it can to keep from happening. To achieve this Food Stamps are given to those who meet the requirements. Unfortunately, as stated in Gerry Smith’s online article “How A Government Computer Glitch Forced Thousands Of Families To Go Hungry,“ in North Carolina thousands of families went hungry as the state’s computer systems used to process applications crashed. As a result, many families went hungry and the state received a large amount of backlash. The state could have avoided such a massive problem by cutting ties with the chosen contractor, having a backup plan in case something went afoul with their current system, and separating their system programs so a single system ran a single program so as not to strain it further. The author, Gerry Smith, explains in his article about the impact left behind by a lack of Food Stamps in the state of North Carolina just a few years back. Thanks to the company known as Accenture, which won over North Carolina through …show more content…
These are people whose circumstances have presented them with one solid way of getting funding to obtain food. One might think the state would at the very least think of some ways to store information in case a crash was to occur. This would mean having access to important files that could have potentially been lost. Not just that, but it’d mean avoiding a situation where thousands of cases have to be redone. Unfortunately poor people don’t seem to be a priority as quoted by a source within the article “The glitches often take months or even years to fix because technology for poor people is not considered a high priority.” (Smith) It’s a shame some living people are considered less valuable than others solely based on their