$2M Michigan lottery winner defends use of food stamps

rockin'robin

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A Michigan man who won $2 million in a state lottery game continues to collect food stamps 11 months after striking it rich.

And there's nothing the state can do about it, at least for now.

Leroy Fick, 59, of Auburn won $2 million in the state lottery TV show "Make Me Rich!" last June. But the state's Department of Human Services determined he was still eligible for food stamps, Fick's attorney, John Wilson of Midland, said Tuesday.

Eligibility for food stamps is based on gross income and follows federal guidelines; lottery winnings are considered liquid assets and don't count as income. As long as Fick's gross income stays below the eligibility requirement for food stamps, he can receive them, even if he has a million dollars in the bank.

Food stamps are paid for through tax dollars and are meant to help support low-income families.

"If you're going to try to make me feel bad, you're not going to do it," Fick told WNEM-TV in Saginaw on Monday.

Wilson said Fick told the DHS officials he'd won $2 million but was told he could keep using the Bridge Card issued to him to buy groceries.

Fick could not be reached for comment Tuesday.

Al Kimichik, director of the office of inspector general for DHS, said the department could not comment on individual cases but that it this week began the process of requesting a waiver from the federal government to close the lottery loophole. If it is granted, assets would be counted in determining food stamp eligibility.

Though the food stamp program is federal and states must follow U.S. guidelines, states sometimes request waivers of rules. Michigan was granted a waiver recently to stop college students from qualifying for food stamps.

"For Leroy Fick to continue to use a Bridge Card, paid for by the taxpayers, after winning the lottery, is obscene," said Sen. Rick Jones, R-Grand Ledge. "What a waste of taxpayer money."

Jones contacted DHS officials Monday about Fick's case, and was told the department's hands were tied by federal regulations.

"There is no liquid asset requirement for getting food stamps," Jones said. "The department is asking the federal government for an immediate change (in policy). They're hoping this case will help the federal government act."

Until then, Fick can collect food stamps and keep his lottery winnings in the bank.

"I am not going to sit and debate the ethics of this," Wilson said. "But from his standpoint, he did what he was supposed to do -- he informed the state, and the state said he could keep using the card. The problem is with the state."

$2M Michigan lottery winner defends use of food stamps - Yahoo! News
 
Like I have told you guys.... there are ways around the system and people don't believe me. Oh well.

'Course there is!...Some people know "how to work the system"...Inasmuch, I've heard that Black people "know how to make $$....whites don't"....Not sayin' that is true...just what I've heard....
 
'Course there is!...Some people know "how to work the system"...Inasmuch, I've heard that Black people "know how to make $$....whites don't"....Not sayin' that is true...just what I've heard....

:iough:
 
'Course there is!...Some people know "how to work the system"...Inasmuch, I've heard that Black people "know how to make $$....whites don't"....Not sayin' that is true...just what I've heard....
Nice callout.......
 
Hmm...are liquid assets the kind you drink? :dunno:

It just generally means money in the bank that you can withdraw. Assets you can't spend quickly is like CD, houses, stock holdings. When you hear the term "liquidated" you know it means everything is being sold.
 
God bless him! He got it right!

It's the state's problem, not him. He's clearly eligible for food stamps.
 
'Course there is!...Some people know "how to work the system"...Inasmuch, I've heard that Black people "know how to make $$....whites don't"....Not sayin' that is true...just what I've heard....

Well, my hubby is black and he has no clue how to work the system because we keep owing so much taxes year after year due to making too much damn money. I will tell my hubby "You damn black man..you should know how to cheat the system so what is the problem?":lol:
 
It just generally means money in the bank that you can withdraw. Assets you can't spend quickly is like CD, houses, stock holdings. When you hear the term "liquidated" you know it means everything is being sold.
I know. I was being facetious. ;)
 
Typical greedy Michigan people. Only thinking of themselves.

btw: I know whereby I speak. I was born and raised in Michigan. Praise the Lord for the Selective Service draft which got me out of MI before I became one of "them".

"Northern by birth, Southern by choice" :cool:
 
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what?! geez..that really hurts to hear people working the system. as for the lotto winner saying its not his problem.. soon it will be. why?! KARMA!! karma always has a way to catch up to you no matter what- even if you don't think so.
 
Typical greedy Michigan people. Only thinking of themselves.
Generalize much?

I know of many hard working Michigan residents that would never consider taking the welfare road. Thankfully, I have never met the "typical greedy Michigan people" during my lifetime.
 
Generalize much?

I know of many hard working Michigan residents that would never consider taking the welfare road. Thankfully, I have never met the "typical greedy Michigan people" during my lifetime.

Since TCS is from there, I think he was being facetious....
 
Generalize much?

I know of many hard working Michigan residents that would never consider taking the welfare road. Thankfully, I have never met the "typical greedy Michigan people" during my lifetime.

Okay, I'll bite: who have you met? :)
 
Generalize much?

I know of many hard working Michigan residents that would never consider taking the welfare road. Thankfully, I have never met the "typical greedy Michigan people" during my lifetime.
We also know many hard working Michiganers--they've moved here to the South. (Hard working Ohioans, too.)

Hubby's family worked hard in Michigan, too, but now they're either retired or dead. His dad worked all his adult life at the Fisher Body automotive plant until he retired. He's deceased now. The plant is now just an empty lot.

BTW, there's nothing wrong with using food stamps when necessary. There is something wrong with continuing to use them when it's not necessary. Just because the state allows it doesn't mean it is morally right to do it.
 
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