On a state level, we can apply for food stamps but food stamps require having a job. An article by Monica Potts talks about a woman that struggles to feed her family. The less money you earn, the less money you will receive in food stamps. The woman in the article, Gail lost hours at her job and was only getting up to 28 hours of work each week, which gave her a cut in food stamp benefits by $100. The number of people receiving food stamps has increased during the Great Recession from 20 million to 47 million last year and has remained high (Potts 43). On the national level it only gets worse, the senate passed a bill which would cut the benefit of receiving food stamps by 40 billion. Working harder to qualify for food stamps is what Gail must do in the article and many women as well. The number of women holding jobs once they receive aid is 96% (Potts 43). As many believe, women are not freeloaders, rather they work just as hard as men do to earn their wages. Most women though are working at places like Walmart or a fast food restaurant because women do not have the education to obtain other jobs that have requirement boundaries. But, for women to get an education, also requires states to fund their education. To get full scholarships to obtain an education, women have requirements to meet to receive aid. Most often this goes by your marital status, if you have children by yourself or not and the amount of money you make. Some colleges have standards that if you make more than $15,000 dollars its seen as making too much and can allow you to only receive partial scholarships instead of a full. Nationally, the SNAP program ties into education and hunger. The Snap program is there to assist you when your hours each week fluctuate and there are period where you make more or less