Rachel BS
bennettsteury.bsky.social
Rachel BS
@bennettsteury.bsky.social
Kidney Donor. Cancer Survivor. Lover of Mother & Mathew. Housesitter. Jazzy Pescatarian. Unitarian Universalist. Union. Minimalist. Sicilian Buckeye. Professional Volunteer. And, I write about it all on Substack https://rachelbs.substack.com/
Reposted by Rachel BS
Federal workers stock food banks, as judges step in to ensure SNAP payments
Federal workers stock food banks, as judges step in to ensure SNAP payments
Federal courts are temporarily blocking the Trump administration from pausing Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) payments during the ongoing government shutdown. But without a long-term solution in place during the second-longest congressional funding lapse, federal employees, many of them furloughed or working without pay during the shutdown, are ensuring food pantries remain stocked. The Federal Unionists Network, a coalition of federal workers and their allies, led a food drive Thursday outside the Agriculture Department’s headquarters. The initiative raised over $10,000 for the Capital Area Food Bank. The food drive comes as some federal workers who have missed one full paycheck and a partial paycheck during the shutdown are tightening their belts. Some are also turning to food banks and financial aid programs. Kalynda Gonzales Stokes, a furloughed program officer at the National Institutes of Health volunteering at the food drive, said she sympathizes with colleagues in the federal workforce who are having to show up to work without being paid on time. “The thing that’s the most frustrating is that the government can do the right thing. They could pay people right now,” Stokes said, speaking in her personal capacity. “It’s in their power. But it’s on us, the people who are furloughed, to come up with all the solutions.” The Trump administration has repurposed funds to keep active-duty military and 70,000 federal law enforcement personnel at the Department of Homeland Security from missing a paycheck. But it has not used these same extraordinary measures to ensure civilian federal employees get paid on time. “We got the people that we want paid, paid,” President Donald Trump told reporters at the White House earlier this month. Stokes said her husband, who doesn’t work for the federal government, is being paid on time and covering day-to-day household expenses — including daycare for the youngest of their two children. Despite the belt-tightening, Stokes said the furlough has been a “break from the trauma” that federal employees have experienced during the Trump administration. “It was so traumatic every day at work, being worried if you’re going to be fired, if you’re saying the wrong thing, if you’re saying the banned words,” she said. A federal court earlier this week put an indefinite hold on the administration proceeding with widespread reductions-in-force for about 4,000 federal employees, or issuing new RIF notices, while the case proceeds through the court. Alexis Goldstein, a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau employee, said she understands the precarious nature of federal employment under the Trump administration. Her agency has been targeted for elimination, and she said she’s been fired and rehired twice. “We are worried that what happened to us may happen to every other agency, if there aren’t demands that are met as a condition of ending the shutdown,” she said. Goldstein is an exempt employee, and is working and being paid on time during the shutdown. But other federal employees aren’t sure when they’ll receive their next paycheck. “This is a pretty fundamental issue, when people don’t eat. I wanted to be out here, because I really wanted to do something about it. I was fortunate enough that I’m not furloughed at the moment. That could change tomorrow,” Goldstein said. “We are all really motivated to do everything that we can to help the public, and that’s why we became government workers in the first place.” Goldstein, a member of the National Treasury Employees Union Chapter 335 and a FUN volunteer, said she left a nonprofit job to join the federal government more than three years ago. “The reason I joined government is it’s the entity that can do the most good,” she said. But in the absence of funding for these programs, she said it can “also do the most harm. “SNAP is one of the examples of those programs that people can’t live without, or at least, we’ll go hungry without. That’s exactly the kind of staff that motivated me to go to government,” Goldstein said. Judges in two federal courts blocked the Trump administration from halting SNAP benefits for November. A ruling Friday from the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts is requiring USDA to use its contingency funds or whatever resources are available to ensure there is no disruption to food assistance. Judge Indira Talwani did not formally grant the temporary restraining order sought by 25 attorneys general and governors. But her ruling directed the Trump administration to take immediate steps to deploy funding and report its plan to the court by Monday, Nov. 3. In a separate case, a federal judge in Rhode Island granted a nationwide TRO requiring the administration to restore SNAP benefits as soon as possible. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins told reporters on Friday that USDA’s contingency funds cover less than half of the $9.2 billion required for full SNAP benefits in November. Rollins said USDA’s contingency fund is “only allowed to flow if the underlying program is funded.” “It’s called a contingency fund, and by law, a contingency fund can only flow when the underlying fund is flowing,” she said. Rollins said some of USDA’s furloughed staff are taking second jobs to pay their bills during the shutdown, and applauded employees who are working without pay during the shutdown. “As the shutdown continues, hundreds of thousands of federal employees are not receiving a paycheck,” she said. House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) called the lawsuits a “frivolous piece of litigation,” and called on Senate Democrats to vote on the House-passed continuing resolution to end the shutdown. “The administration has done all it can to keep this program afloat, but the limits have been reached here,” Johnson said. Rep. Don Beyer (D-Va.) said on Thursday that the Trump administration’s attempted pause of SNAP benefits “is heartbreaking and is totally unnecessary.” “The shutdown protocol is clear. All the guardrails, even in previous shutdowns, like the one when Donald Trump shut down the government in his first administration, all the SNAP benefits stayed in place. There’s no reason they can’t be paid right now,” Beyer said. Rep. James Walkinshaw (D-Va.) said his constituents see the pain of the shutdown in the context of the pain the Trump administration has inflicted on the federal workforce this year. He said many federal employees in his district have been fired or laid off this year, while others have been impacted by the mass cancellation of federal contracts and the shuttering of agencies like USAID. “I take it very seriously for federal workers who are missing their paychecks, and I want to see a bipartisan negotiation to end the shutdown, address the health care issue — which will also impact federal workers, especially if Trump fires them — and secure some protections to prevent more illegal firings of federal workers moving forward. I think we have to find a way to do all of those things in this moment,” Walkinshaw said. Jessica Shaheen, a former associate administrator for SNAP at USDA’s Food and Nutrition Service, said SNAP is the “heart and soul of our food assistance program.” “Many community-based organizations work together with SNAP, but SNAP, that’s where the core is. Somebody’s got to do the heavy lifting, and that is SNAP,” she said. Shaheen, who spoke to federal employees gathered for the food drive, applauded their efforts. “I know that most of you are public servants,” she said. “You want to meet the mission, don’t you? That’s all you want to do.” George Nwanze, a volunteer with the Northwest Community Food Pantry in D.C., said his organization has been distributing food aid for the past four years, “but we’ve never been busier than we are right now.” Nwanze said the group distributed food aid to about 50 recipients when the food pantry was first launched. Now, it’s grown to over 400 recipients. “The need is tremendous, and it is urgent,” he said.The post Federal workers stock food banks, as judges step in to ensure SNAP payments first appeared on Federal News Network.
federalnewsnetwork.com
October 31, 2025 at 10:18 PM
In this 2025 #BreastCancerAwarenessMonth, a look back. "For me, it took... somewhere around 60 seconds of feeling like I was going to explode, to get the entire dose (of radiation) that I was prescribed each time I laid on the table." #substack #writer #cancer rachelbs.substack.com/p/another-da...
Another Day Another Centigray
A Look Back on My First Days of Radiation During Breast Cancer Awareness Month
rachelbs.substack.com
October 25, 2025 at 6:22 PM
Reposted by Rachel BS
Big Brothers Big Sisters celebrated its newly rebuilt Maui garden on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025, by planting vegetable seedlings together with volunteers from Bayer Hawaiʻi who had donated their time and farming know-how to help bring the youth mentoring space to life.

#BayerHawaii #BBBS
Big Brothers Big Sisters inaugurates Maui garden with veggie planting
Big Brothers Big Sisters celebrated its newly rebuilt Maui garden on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025, by planting vegetable seedlings together with volunteers from Bayer Hawaiʻi who had donated their time and farming know-how to help bring the youth mentoring space to life.
mauinow.com
October 20, 2025 at 8:28 PM
Reposted by Rachel BS
Shutdown impact: What it means for workers, federal programs and the economy
Shutdown impact: What it means for workers, federal programs and the economy
WASHINGTON (AP) — The federal government shutdown is quickly approaching the second longest on record with no end in sight. Some lawmakers are predicting it could become the longest, surpassing the 35 days from President Donald Trump’s first term. The Trump administration is using the current shutdown to buttress priorities it favors while seeking to dismantle those it doesn’t. Nevertheless, Democrats are insisting that any funding bill include help for millions of Americans who will lose health insurance coverage or face dramatically higher monthly premiums if Congress does nothing. The shutdown began Oct. 1. Here’s a look at its impact so far on workers, the economy and the services the government provides. Furloughs and firings The federal government employed nearly 2.3 million civilian employees as of March 31. The Congressional Budget Office estimated that about 750,000 of those employees would be furloughed each day during a shutdown. That means they don’t report to work until the shutdown ends. Others are considered “excepted” and do go to work, helping to protect life and property and perform other essential services. Both groups of workers will get paid, but on a retroactive basis. That means they are facing the prospect of missing a full paycheck later this month after receiving a partial one earlier for work performed in late September. The nation’s 1.3 million active-duty service members got a temporary reprieve. They were looking at missing a paycheck on Wednesday. But Trump directed the Pentagon to redirect money. A second reprieve looks unlikely. Of note for taxpayers, the government tab for paying furloughed workers while they are at home comes to roughly $400 million a day, according to a CBO estimate provided at the request of Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa. The administration is also trying to fire thousands of federal workers in agencies that don’t align with its priorities. Republican leaders in Congress have said that’s part of the fallout from a shutdown. Past presidents, however, did not use shutdowns to engage in mass firings. The Republican administration has announced one reduction in force affecting 4,100 workers, with the biggest cuts happening at the departments of Treasury, Health and Human Services, Education and Housing and Urban Development. White House budget chief Russ Vought said in an interview on “The Charlie Kirk Show” that many more are planned. “I think we’ll probably end up being north of 10,000,” Vought said. “We want to be very aggressive where we can be in shuttering the bureaucracy,” Vought said. “Not just the funding, but the bureaucracy, that we now have an opportunity to do that.” A federal judge has temporarily blocked the firings, saying the cuts appeared to be politically motivated and were being carried out without much thought. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Thursday that the administration was “100%” confident that it will prevail on the merits in subsequent legal action. Lawmakers acknowledge that many federal workers live paycheck to paycheck and will face some financial stress during the shutdown. Food banks in some communities have boosted efforts to help them. The Capital Area Food Bank, for example, said it would hold additional food distributions in the Washington region beginning Monday to support federal workers and contractors. Economic Impact Past shutdowns have had slight impacts on the economy, reducing growth in the quarter during which the shutdown occurs, but growth increases slightly in the following three months to help make up for it. One estimate from Oxford Economics said a shutdown reduces economic growth by 0.1 to 0.2 percentage points per week. A shutdown that lasts the entire quarter, which has never occurred, would reduce growth for those three months by 1.2 to 2.4 percentage points. Some industries are hurt worse than others. The U.S. Travel Association said the travel economy is expected to lose $1 billion a week as travelers change plans to visit national parks, historic sites and the nation’s capital, where many facilities such as Smithsonian Institution museums and the National Zoo are now closed to visitors. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce noted that the Small Business Administration supports loans totaling about $860 million a week for 1,600 small businesses. Those programs close to new loans during the shutdown. The shutdown also has halted the issuance and renewal of flood insurance policies, delaying mortgage closings and real estate transactions. The Federal Aviation Administration has reported air controller shortages in cities across the United States, from airports in Boston and Philadelphia, to control centers in Atlanta and Houston. Flight delays have spread to airports in Nashville, Tennessee, Dallas, Newark, New Jersey and more. Political fallout The party that insists on conditions as part of a government funding bill generally doesn’t get its way. That was the case in 2013 and 2018 for Republicans. It remains to be seen how things will shake out this time, but neither side appears to be budging. So far, the public is rather split on who is to blame for the impasse. Roughly 6 in 10 U.S. adults say Trump and Republicans in Congress have “a great deal” or “quite a bit” of responsibility for the shutdown, while 54% say the same about Democrats in Congress, according to the poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. Perceptions could change depending upon how much the White House uses the shutdown to eliminate Democratic priorities and Democratic-leaning states and cities. The administration has put on hold roughly $18 billion to fund a new rail tunnel beneath the Hudson River between New York City and New Jersey and an extension of the city’s Second Avenue subway. It canceled $7.6 billion in grants that supported hundreds of clean energy projects in 16 states, all of which voted for Democrat Kamala Harris in last year’s presidential election. The administration cited reasons apart from the shutdown for the funding changes. In the end, there does not appear to be an easy way out of the shutdown. Republicans insists any negotiations on health care occur after the government is fully open for business. “We’re not conducting negotiations in a hostage situation,” said Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D. Across the Capitol, House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York said Democrats “are not going to bend and we’re not going to break because we are standing up for the American people.”The post Shutdown impact: What it means for workers, federal programs and the economy first appeared on Federal News Network.
federalnewsnetwork.com
October 20, 2025 at 9:18 PM
Reposted by Rachel BS
Today we celebrate all who are coming out—sharing your truth, living it out loud, or still finding the right moment. Coming out takes courage, honesty, and hope. However your journey unfolds, you are loved and held in community.

#NationalComingOutDay #UnitarianUniversalist #LGBTQ+ #Pride
October 12, 2025 at 2:40 AM
Reposted by Rachel BS
Researchers found that moisture lost to evaporation and drought, plus runoff from pumped groundwater, now outpaces the melting of glaciers and the ice sheets of either Antarctica or Greenland as the largest contributor of water to the oceans.

By @abrahm.bsky.social
“Staggering” Water Loss Driven by Groundwater Mining Poses Global Threat
A new study finds that freshwater resources are rapidly disappearing, creating arid “mega” regions and causing sea levels to rise.
www.propublica.org
August 20, 2025 at 12:00 AM
Reposted by Rachel BS
It’s International #YouthDay!

Today, we celebrate the incredible young people who are at the heart of our Red Cross and Red Crescent movement.

Your dedication and passion are making a lasting change in communities around the world.

Thank you for inspiring us all and driving real impact.
August 12, 2025 at 8:50 AM
Reposted by Rachel BS
Thirteen years ago, union organizer Rachel Bennett Steury walked into a UU Labor Day service—and found her idea of church turned upside down.

📖 Read her #FaithJourney in UU World:
www.uuworld.org/articles/fai...

#UUWorld #LaborJustice #UnitarianUniversalism #UU #Organize
Faith Journey: A Union Organizer Finds Unitarian Universalism
Author Rachel Bennett Steury says she first heard of the faith when a Teamster invited her to a Labor Day service.
www.uuworld.org
August 12, 2025 at 2:12 PM
Reposted by Rachel BS
🌍 Immigrant rights are disability rights. Many immigrants are disabled—and both communities face racism, ableism, and classism. Embracing intersectionality moves us toward honoring everyone’s dignity. 🔗 Read more at bit.ly/40VDpdr #DisabilityJustice #ImmigrantJustice #Intersectionality #UU
August 7, 2025 at 2:31 PM
Jazzed my poem is featured with Coping Magazine! How many of you cancer survivors, or overcomers of any illness for that matter, relate to this? copingmag.com/it-takes-a-v...
It Takes a Village
This survivor's poem on appreciating her "village."
copingmag.com
July 11, 2025 at 12:55 AM
Reposted by Rachel BS
An undocumented refugee raised and protected by a farmer and his wife, who forged adoption papers, and later grows up to become a reporter who uses his reporting to help the marginalized and exploited. Oh then marries an American citizen and has a queer son.

Yep, nothing political about #Superman.
July 7, 2025 at 12:46 AM
Tomorrow is the anniversary of the Stonewall Uprising. For Pride Month, here are my discoveries on the role the mafia played in the LGBTQ community at the time and new bits of curiosity in my own ancestry.
rachelbs.substack.com/p/stonewall-...
#Pride #substack #sicily #stonewall #writer
Stonewall, the Mafia and… Me?
Reflections of the Stories We Tell
rachelbs.substack.com
June 27, 2025 at 8:38 PM
Reposted by Rachel BS
⚖️ Today’s Supreme Court ruling in Skrmetti endangers trans youth by upholding bans on gender-affirming care.

Trans lives are sacred. Denying care is a moral violation.

🧡 Full statement from the UUA: bit.ly/4455dN1
#ProtectTransYouth #UU #MeetTheMoment
June 18, 2025 at 7:21 PM
Here's my latest essay on Substack y'all...

Nights in Bourbon Country
Emergency Shelters, Household Chores and Meaningful Conversations
rachelbs.substack.com/p/nights-in-...
#writing
Nights in Bourbon Country
Emergency Shelters, Household Chores and Meaningful Conversations
rachelbs.substack.com
May 26, 2025 at 2:42 AM
Reposted by Rachel BS
It’s not too late to see this hilarious and heart wrenching show. I’m stoked to continue my role as Anne Smith and to welcome my understudy, the strong and talented @stacytoyon who will debut 5/24 and continue in my stead while I trot around beautiful Europe for a few weeks. Please join us!
May 6, 2025 at 10:36 PM
Remembering Sicily

By exploring the island of my ancestors, I discovered so much more than an address derived from old birth records on Family Search found with help from the Descendants of Termini Imerese. I envisioned a quaint fishing village but discovered an invigorated bustling city.
Remembering Sicily
Roots Tourism and the Search for Greener Grass
rachelbs.substack.com
April 30, 2025 at 11:51 PM
Reposted by Rachel BS
🗳️ Why should more UUs run for office?

Because when we don’t show up, democracy falters.

This UU World column shares why joining the race—win or lose—can shape our communities and reflect our values.

📖 Read more: bit.ly/3YMwp1b

#Democracy #FaithInAction #UU
April 24, 2025 at 6:04 PM
Keeping Score: Genetic and Genomic Testing for Breast Cancer
As a patient, it’s my job to advocate for myself. As the doctor it's her job to make sure I don’t shoot myself in the foot. That’s how this is supposed to work, right?
rachelbs.substack.com/p/keeping-sc...
Keeping Score
Genetic and Genomic Testing for Breast Cancer
rachelbs.substack.com
April 17, 2025 at 7:26 AM
Rachel in Colchester: Twitter and the Business of Strangers
I was on the receiving end of much of her virtual footprint for years. Finally, I saw an opportunity. Tucked into the message from the local Veterinary office was Rachel’s full name and address. rachelbs.substack.com/p/rachel-in-...
Rachel in Colchester
Twitter and the Business of Strangers
rachelbs.substack.com
April 1, 2025 at 11:17 PM
Reposted by Rachel BS
💖 #TransJoyIsSacred 💖
On Trans Day of Visibility, we honor the fullness of trans lives. As Rev. Phoenix Bell-Shelton Biggs reminds us:
“To affirm trans lives… means celebrating trans joy, trans beauty, trans leadership, and trans love.”
#TDOV #TransLove #UU #UnitarianUniversalist #BelovedCommunity
March 31, 2025 at 8:56 PM
On World Kidney Day, let's talk Abundant the Movie and my pal Harold. Altruisim and kidney donation go hand in hand as seen at the world premiere of a film tackling the question: "How do you see the world?"
rachelbs.substack.com/p/the-origin...
#WorldKidneyDay @onelegacy.bsky.social
The Original Kidney Donor
Abundant The Film: Exploring the World of Altruism
rachelbs.substack.com
March 13, 2025 at 5:18 PM
My latest Substack: I Heart Los Angeles: Vulnerability in an Endearing Big City "Watch Duty went from obscurity to coveted in days. In its first 4 years it boasted 3M users. But in this Southern California moment of need, nearly 3M more joined the ranks."
rachelbs.substack.com/p/i-heart-lo...
I Heart Los Angeles
Vulnerability in an Endearing Big City
rachelbs.substack.com
March 8, 2025 at 6:56 PM