OMB Change Justification Memo_0584-0682_March 2024

OMB Change Justification Memo_0584-0682_March 2024.docx

Understanding the Relationship Between Poverty, Well-Being, and Food Security

OMB Change Justification Memo_0584-0682_March 2024

OMB: 0584-0682

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Food and

Nutrition
Service


1320

Braddock

Place

Alexandria,

VA

22314

T O: Laurel Havas

OMB Desk Officer

Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs

Office of Management and Budget (OMB)


THROUGH: Rachelle Ragland-Greene

Department Clearance Officer

United States Department of Agriculture

Office of Chief Information Office (OCIO)


Jamia Franklin

Information Collection Clearance Officer

OPS/Planning and Regulatory Affairs Office

Food and Nutrition Service (FNS)


FROM: Michael Burke

SNAP Evaluation Branch

OPS/SNAP Research and Analysis Division

Food and Nutrition Service (FNS)


DATE: March 28, 2024


SUBJECT: Justification for changes to study materials for OMB Control No: 0584-0682 “Understanding the Relationship Between Poverty, Well-Being, and Food Security”.



The Food and Nutrition Service (FNS) is requesting a non-substantive change to the Understanding the Relationship Between Poverty, Well-Being, and Food Security study, approved under OMB Control No. 0584-0682; expiration date of April 30, 2026. FNS made non-substantive edits to the survey questionnaire (Appendix S1) that will be administered to respondents living at sampled addresses. Small changes were also made to SSA, SSB, and Appendix U. Incentive Experiments to remove a previously proposed notification experiment and revise sampling procedures.


The following is a summary of the changes made:


  • Final Selected Counties (SSA, SSB, and Survey)

    • At the time of initial OMB submission, the six counties had not yet been recruited. We have updated the text to indicate that the final recruited counties include: Dougherty County, GA; Estill County, KY; Bolivar County, MS; Ouachita Parish, LA; Dona Ana County, NM; and Dallas County, AL.

  • Incentive Experiment (SSA and Appendix U)

    • The initial submission included an experiment with different presentations of the $5 pre-paid incentive in the advance letter mailing. In the time since the OMB package was written and approved, the literature has more definitively shown that visible pre-pay incentives are more effective in soliciting survey response compared to not showing the incentive.1,2,3 As such, we will display the pre-pay incentive for all respondents and have removed mention of this experiment from SSA and Appendix U: Incentive Experiments.

  • Sampling procedures (SSB)

    • We adjusted the sampling approach slightly to facilitate the identification of areas within each county with a higher probability of SNAP eligible non-participants while ensuring the sample is representative of the county as a whole. Our revised approach starts by pulling the full set of addresses in the county. We will then match the State administrative data to the list of all addresses in the county. We will use the density of SNAP participants by census block to identify areas more likely to contain SNAP-eligible non-participants. This is an improvement from our previous approach, which used ACS data to identify blocks more likely to contain eligible non-participants. The ACS data contains estimates based on limited data as opposed to the State administrative data which contains all current SNAP participants.

  • Survey. We made some small revisions, dropped several questions and added some others. The questions that were dropped offset the burden of added questions, so burden estimates remain unchanged.

    • Updated fills and transition text. We made small updates to the programmatic fills throughout the instrument to 1) account for our final set of selected counties, or 2) facilitate respondent understanding and readability.

    • Survey Screening Section [S]. This section will allow the study team to screen respondents out of the second and third sample releases if necessary (screening process described in SSB). Because three of the selected counties (Estill County, KY; Dallas County, AL; Dougherty County, GA) use different income thresholds based on household disability status, we have added two questions to collect this information. We use disability status to inform the income thresholds presented to the respondent in these counties at question S3.

    • Dropped questions: We removed three questions in section RFE (RFE6a, RFE6d, and RFE6f) to reduce respondent burden.

    • Added questions: We added the following questions to the survey to collect important study data, or to facilitate logical skips that will reduce survey burden for some respondents:

      • RC18 – RC19: These questions were added to collect additional information from respondents who are not currently working. They will only be asked if the respondent reports not working last week.

      • FS2: This question, that asks about household food security, was added to facilitate screening some households out of the food security module (FS4 – FS21). If responses to FS2 and FS3 indicate a high degree of food security, and respondents are at or above 185% FPL, they will now skip out of the food security module (FS4 – FS21). This mirrors the approach taken by the Current Population Survey (CPS).

      • FS22 and FS23: These questions were added to collect information about perceptions of social unacceptability as it relates to food security.

      • FAP5b: This question collects the amount of SNAP benefits last received, if the respondent reports receiving SNAP benefits.



The following is a detailed description of the changes made to the survey instrument (Appendix S1):


Table 1. Survey Instrument Updates

Question

Update

Details/Rationale

Overall updates

County fills

Revised to include the final set of selected counties

  • Removed Cocke County, Maverick County, and Pitt County and added in Ouachita Parish, Dona Ana County, and Dallas County

TANF fills

Revised for final counties and readability

SNAP fills

Revised for final counties and readability

Income thresholds

Revised using 2024 thresholds

  • Updated household income thresholds based on the HHS Poverty Guidelines for 2024

Introduction Section [I]

Section I

Revised “your household” with the sampled address

  • Revised for respondent clarity

Screener Section [S]

S2a and S2b

Added questions to determine if anyone in the household has a disability, to facilitate the screen out process

  • We added questions to collect household disability status in States where that impacts income thresholds for SNAP eligibility (Kentucky, Alabama, and Georgia)

S3

Revised response options

  • Updated the question to have two response options, not three.

  • Updated the thresholds that fill (see programmer box S3 thresholds) to account for different SNAP eligibility criteria by state

Respondent and Household Characteristics [RC and HHC]

RC5 & HHC5

Revised question to ask a yes/no question about whether they were born in the US, rather than asking where they were born (with US and Outside the US as response options)

  • Edited to reduce respondent burden and to more directly get at the question we care about

RC18 – RC19

Added questions

  • Added questions to collect information from people who say they are not working

HHC2

Revised question wording

  • Revised the phrasing of the question collecting gender to be consistent with earlier questions

Income [IN]

IN0

Revised intro language to notify respondents that we will ask about several income categories. Removed language about income being reported at the person-level.

  • Revised to provide clearer guidance to respondents

IN1a

Added line to let respondents know not to include income from self-owned businesses or farms.

  • Revised to provide clearer guidance to respondents

IN4a, IN4c, IN5a

Revised “Social Security” to “Social Security retirement benefits”

  • Revised to provide clearer guidance to respondents

IN9c

Final thresholds entered instead of placeholder fills

  • Categories finalized upon review of 2024 data

Food Security [FS]

FS0

Section transition sentence added

  • Revised to provide clearer guidance to respondents

FS2

Added to facilitate screening people out of the food security section if they meet certain thresholds (indicate food secure status at FS2 and FS3 and are at or above 185% FPL), following the CPS model.

  • Reduce respondent burden

FS4-6

FS14-FS16

Revised skip logic to skip households out if they indicate high food security at FS2, FS3 and are above 185% FPL.

  • Reduce respondent burden

FS16, FS18

Changed question wording from “couldn’t afford more/enough food” to “wasn’t enough money for food”

  • Revised to align with 2023 CPS FSS recommendations4

FS18 – FS20

Questions reordered to match CPS FSS

  • Align with CPS FSS module

FS22 & FS23

Added questions to measure perceptions of social unacceptability as it relates to food security.

  • Data item needed for analysis.

Throughout FS

Small Spanish translation updates to facilitate understanding

  • Revised to provide clearer guidance to respondents

Perception of local retail food environment and local food assistance [RFE & FAP]

RFE1

Added a lookup table to allow respondents to search for local stores instead of choosing from a list of only 10 stores.

  • Reduce respondent burden

RFE6a, RFE6d, RFE6f

Removed questions

  • Reduce respondent burden

FAP5b

Added question to collect amount of SNAP benefits for participants receiving SNAP

  • Data item needed for analysis

FAP8, FAP10

Minor wording changes to facilitate understanding

  • Revised to provide clearer guidance to respondents




If you have any questions regarding this request, please contact Jamia Franklin, FNS Information Collection Clearance Officer for the Food and Nutrition Service, Planning & Regulatory Affairs Office at (703) 305-2403.


Attachments:

  • SSA_Persistent Poverty

  • SSB_Persistent Poverty

  • S1. Household Survey (English-Spanish)

  • U. Incentives Experiments

1 Ipek Bilgen, David Dutwin, Roopam Singh, Erlina Hendarwan, Peekaboo! The Effect of Different Visible Cash Display and Amount Options During Mail Contact When Recruiting to a Probability-Based Panel, Journal of Survey Statistics and Methodology, 2023; smad039, https://doi.org/10.1093/jssam/smad039

2 Zhang, Shiyu, et al. "Visible cash, a second incentive, and priority mail? An experimental evaluation of mailing strategies for a screening questionnaire in a national push-to-web/mail survey." Journal of Survey Statistics and Methodology 11.5 (2023): 1011-1031.

3 DeBell, Matthew. "The Visible Cash Effect with Prepaid Incentives: Evidence for Data Quality, Response Rates, Generalizability, and Cost." Journal of Survey Statistics and Methodology 11.5 (2023): 991-1010.

4 Coleman-Jensen, A., & Rabbitt, M.P. (2023). Analysis of the current population survey food security

supplement split-panel test (Report No. TB-1963), U.S. Department of Agriculture, Economic

Research Service

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