SNAP hangs on by a thread
SNAP hangs on by a thread

SNAP hangs on by a thread

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Diverging Reports Breakdown

Chicago Restaurants Offering Free, Discounted Meals During SNAP Freeze

About 2 million Illinoians receive SNAP, according to a state news release. Federal funding for the benefit is on pause during the shutdown. Food pantries are increasing their efforts to help, and Chicago restaurants are offering free or discounted meals.Want your Chicago restaurant added to this list? Email Newsroom@BlockClubChi.org with details about your offer.

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CHICAGO — Local restaurants are offering free and discounted meals to households affected by the funding pause on SNAP.

Listen 🎧 Why Are Chicago Men So Afraid To Go To The Doctor?

About 2 million Illinoians receive SNAP, according to a state news release. But federal funding for the benefit — which ensures people in need can buy food — is on pause during the shutdown.

Food pantries are increasing their efforts to help, and Chicago restaurants are offering completely free or discounted meals.

Here are some of the offers from restaurants:

Want your Chicago restaurant added to this list? Email Newsroom@BlockClubChi.org with details about your offer.

Keep Local News Going! While we’re proud of what we’ve accomplished this year, we want to do more —a lot more — in 2026. We’ve set a goal of raising $30,000 to support the growing costs of operating a nonprofit newsroom with reporters living and working in Chicago’s neighborhoods. As an added bonus, all donations up to $30,000 will be matched — that means every dollar you donate will be doubled! Chip in today.

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Source: Blockclubchicago.org | View original article

As SNAP benefits hang in limbo, Newport community rallies to feed the hungry

Nearly 1,800 households in Newport depended on SNAP to feed themselves, according to the most recently available report from the Department of Human Services. Over the past decade, there was a 500% uptick in people coming to the center for food aid. The center runs two school food pantries, a mobile food pantry that goes out to 17 neighborhoods throughout Newport County, delivers food to homebound seniors and provides hot breakfast and lunch during the week. Thanks to generous donors who pledged to give $2 per pound, the center will be able to stretch those donations farther. But the center’s executive director, Heather Strout, worries it could take days or even weeks before SNAP funds kick back into people’S accounts. It is unclear when SNAP benefits will resume and it is unknown when they will resume, Strout said. The food drive was as much a response to need as an opportunity to teach her three-year-old son about social responsibility, Liz Kilzi said. “It was super important for us to show him how important it is to help our community when our community needs us more than ever,” she said.

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On a chilly October morning, Roby Farin pulled up in her red Ford truck in front of the Martin Luther King Jr. Community Center with a truckload of winter squash from her farm in Middletown. Like clockwork, a gaggle of volunteers wearing neon bright shirts circled around the truck and started unloading the gourds onto shopping carts.

Farin was one of dozens of community members who have felt compelled to donate food to the center as SNAP benefits – known as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program – hang in limbo due to the ongoing federal government shutdown. In 2021, nearly 1,800 households in Newport depended on SNAP to feed themselves, according to the most recently available report from the Department of Human Services.

Roby Farin drops off a load of winter squash from a bumper crop from her farm in Middletown at the MLK Community Center in Newport on Sunday, Nov. 2.

Newport may not be the first place to come to mind when one thinks of poverty. The Cliff Walk, the Gilded Age mansions and sailing competitions are more likely to come to mind than long queues at food pantries.

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But Heather Strout, the center’s executive director, said Newport’s wealth masks the city’s need.

“The people who work in our restaurants, in our hotels, in our hospitals, teacher assistants in the schools, those are the kinds of people – the working poor – that we help,” Strout said.

The center runs two school food pantries, a mobile food pantry that goes out to 17 neighborhoods throughout Newport County, delivers food to homebound seniors and provides hot breakfast and lunch during the week.

Strout has seen the need rise sharply over time. Over the past decade, there was a 500% uptick in people coming to the center for food aid.

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“We all hope that there’s a day where we are not needed, but we are going much in that other direction and have been for some time,” Strout said.

A volunteer pushes a grocery cart loaded with food up a ramp at the MLK Community Center in Newport on Sunday, Nov. 2.

The COVID-19 pandemic presented challenges to people depending on food aid, but thanks to generous government support, communities were able to weather the drought.

The hiatus of SNAP benefits, however, presents an unprecedented situation, Strout told the Journal recently.

“People would rely on their SNAP benefits and then they would come to us towards the end of the month to fill the rest. Now those people who typically would have seen money in the SNAP cards yesterday are going to be coming to us in big amounts tomorrow and through this week,” she said.

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On Sunday, Nov. 2, the center held an emergency food drive to prepare for the expected surge in demand. Community members pulled into a makeshift drive through to drop off peanut butter, canned goods, vegetables and sundry edible items.

Liz Kilzi and her three-year-old son Weston, who live up the street from the center, rolled by on an electric bike with a bag of goods.

For Kilzi, supporting the food drive was as much a response to need as an opportunity to teach her son about social responsibility.

“It was super important for us to show him how important it is to help our community when our community needs us more than ever,” Kilzi said.

Liz Kilzi and her son Weston drop off food at the MLK Community Center in Newport on Sunday, Nov. 2.

Farin, who was accompanied by her two chatty dogs, had a bumper crop of winter squash, which she saw as an opportunity to help the food drive.

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“I am obviously not a rich person, but I can eat because I can grow some of my food. I do okay. And there are people that can’t do that, and that’s sad,” Farin said.

“In this country, nobody should go hungry,” she added.

By 1 p.m. the center had collected over 8,000 pounds worth of food. Thanks to generous donors who pledged to give $2 per pound collected, the center will be able to stretch those donations farther.

But Strout acknowledged the food will likely last a week – and it is unclear when SNAP benefits will resume. On October 31, a federal judge in Rhode Island ruled that the federal government should use its contingency money to fund SNAP benefits during the shutdown. But Strout worries it could take days or even weeks before SNAP funds kick back into people’s accounts.

A staff member stacks food on a shelf at the MLK Community Center in Newport on Sunday, Nov. 2.

For Strout, the situation is evidence of people’s willingness to step up during moments of crisis. At the same time, she is disappointed the government shutdown has forced food pantries to resort to emergency food drives to help those in need.

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“Although it’s incredible to watch, it’s really disappointing that this is what we have to do to feed people,” Strout said.

This article originally appeared on The Providence Journal: Newport community rallies to provide 4 tons of food

Source: Yahoo.com | View original article

Here’s how people in North Carolina are coping with the SNAP freeze

Bollinger: “Parents like me are doing everything we can to survive, and sometimes it becomes a daily struggle” “My biggest worry is keeping food on the table for my children,” Bollinger said. “The kids start to worry and stress fills the house, It is not just about hunger,’ Bollinger says. � “We have no choice, but because she has no choice. She said her landlord has already agreed to let her pay half her rent at the start of the beginning of the month.’ “She said, “Yeah, you will have what you need,�” even though she’s turning to community resources and local food pantries.”“We’re going to have to find a way to make this work for us, and we don’t know how to do it,  Bollinger adds. ” ‘I’m not going to lie to you. I’ve been through this before. I know what to do, but I don’t know how’

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Rev. Ernie Mills of the Durham Rescue Mission shows donated food item’s in the nonprofit’s food pantry. It is one of many food pantries across the state trying to respond to increased need due to the disruption to SNAP benefits amid the ongoing federal government shutdown. (Ashley Fredde / NC Health News)

“My biggest worry is keeping food on the table for my children,” said one North Carolina parent of the SNAP freeze. “Parents like me are doing everything we can to survive, and sometimes it becomes a daily struggle.”

Jessica Bollinger, a single mother of two from McDowell County, spent Saturday poring over her family budget and trying to make the numbers work. On the third of each month, she usually receives $318 in federal food assistance to buy groceries.

But this month, as the federal shutdown continues, Bollinger and many North Carolinians are anxiously waiting — uncertain when, or if, those funds will arrive.

Jessica Bollinger with her 5-year-old daughter. She is one of more than 1.4 million low-income North Carolinians who depend on SNAP benefits to help put food on the table.

The delay has left a sizable gap in Bollinger’s food budget and caused mounting anxiety about how to keep her 14- and 5-year-old daughters fed.

“My biggest worry is keeping food on the table for my children,” Bollinger said. “Parents like me are doing everything we can to survive, and sometimes it becomes a daily struggle.”

To cover the funds caught up in the federal government’s gridlock, Bollinger plans to shift money she’d normally use for other bills — rent, electricity, her phone — toward groceries. Not because she has extra to spare, but because she has no choice. She said her landlord has already agreed to let her pay half her rent at the start of the month and the rest at the end of the month.

The sudden loss of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits — which Bollinger calls a lifeline — has left her in a precarious position. Even with her full-time job as a case manager at The Friendship Home for Women and Children, a homeless shelter in Marion, she said she has little margin to make ends meet as a single parent.

“The insecurity hits fast,” Bollinger said. “Food runs low, the kids start to worry and stress fills the house. It is not just about hunger.”

Her 14-year-old daughter recently asked, “Mom, what are we gonna do? Are we gonna have food?”

Bollinger told her, “Yeah, you will have what you need,” even though she wasn’t certain herself. To help fill some of the gap, she’s turning to community resources and local food pantries.

Bollinger’s experience mirrors that of more than 1.4 million low-income North Carolinians who depend on federal assistance from SNAP to help put food on the table — including more than 580,000 kids and 151,000 seniors across the state.

SNAP payments average about $175 a month per North Carolinian recipient — more than $200 million total for the state — each month to help cover food and nutrition needs.

For several weeks, though, SNAP participants, food pantries and other social service providers and county and state officials have been bracing for that money to stop flowing amid the government shutdown that moved into its second month over the weekend.

It was a weekend of confusion for many in the food assistance world.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture, which administers the SNAP program, has about $5 billion in a contingency reserve, but questions over whether those funds can be or should be used during this shutdown are being weighed in two lawsuits pending in federal court.

Federal agriculture department officials announced Oct. 24 that they would not tap the emergency reserves to keep payments flowing to the 42 million SNAP recipients across the country, contradicting earlier communications from the agency. In other government shutdowns, SNAP was always a constant, something that was true during a shutdown in Trump’s first term.

North Carolina Attorney General Jeff Jackson joined one of the federal lawsuits last week, seeking to compel the Trump administration to continue the funding.

On Friday afternoon, Oct. 31, federal judges in Massachusetts and Rhode Island both ordered the Trump administration to provide SNAP recipients with benefits in November, either through a contingency fund at the Department of Agriculture or through continuing SNAP benefits. Trump had not announced by Sunday afternoon whether he planned to appeal those decisions.

Trump posted to his social media platform on Oct. 31 that “government lawyers do not think we have the legal authority” to continue paying for SNAP, despite the fact that his administration has tapped multiple accounts to pay military troops during the shutdown.

Amid the uncertainty, SNAP benefits didn’t flow for the first time in the program’s 60-year history. Once a plan is in place to resume SNAP funding, it will still take time for federal and state officials to distribute the benefits.

Providers face an influx of need

Even before the Nov. 1 lapse, food pantries across the state saw more demand. Many reported fielding a flood of phone calls and inquiries from community members desperate to piece together ways to feed themselves and their families.

Amy Stevens, program manager at McDowell Access to Care and Health, a nonprofit dedicated to providing people with the resources they need to be healthy, found more than 50 voicemails waiting — all people asking about food resources — a week ago when she arrived at work. More than one-third of McDowell County residents report experiencing food insecurity, according to the county’s 2024 Community Health Assessment, and about 15 percent of the county relies on SNAP.

The organization operates a food box delivery program in partnership with Foothills Food Hub. Usually, they deliver about 70 boxes a week, but Stevens said they distributed more than 100 boxes on their first delivery day last week.

“The pause hadn’t even started,” Stevens said. “People are trying to prepare.”

“We’re getting calls every day about, ‘Where can I go to get food? What can you guys do to help?’” Stevens added. “People are scared, and we’re scared because the resources are slim.”

The scarcity has been exacerbated by the termination of the Medicaid-funded Healthy Opportunities Pilot, or HOP, which Stevens said had been “robust” in McDowell and provided a way to get local, fresh food to community members.

“There was this beautiful variety of fresh foods, and [we] really saw some incredible benefits, healthwise,” she said. “The cessation of HOP had already driven up the need.”

Some help is coming from the state. On Friday, Gov. Josh Stein announced that North Carolina would reallocate $10 million from the Department of Health and Human Services to local food banks across the state. Another nearly $8 million is being contributed by philanthropic foundations and other private donors.

And on Sunday afternoon, Mecklenburg County government officials said they will announce plans to devote $740,000 to support food resources for more than 126,000 SNAP recipients in the county.

That’s a drop in the bucket compared with the more than $200 million that’s needed each month in North Carolina to keep SNAP going. Private philanthropy won’t be able to fill the growing need for all the residents experiencing food insecurity, food program directors have said.

Even a short interruption of benefits has an impact, multiple providers across the state told NC Health News. Food assistance providers are anticipating a surge of individuals and families like Bollinger’s looking for sustenance without their monthly SNAP dollars.

“It may seem that one day or one week or even one month is not a big deal or not extremely impactful, but for the child, for the senior, for the adult who’s trying their best, one day is very long if you’re hungry,” said Brianna Goodwin, executive director of Robeson County Church and Community Center, which operates the county’s largest food pantry that serves at least 600 households a week.

Almost a third of Robeson County’s 116,000 residents rely on SNAP funding, the largest percentage of SNAP recipients in any county in the state.

In Forsyth County more than 56,000 residents (14 percent) rely on SNAP. At The Shalom Project, one of Winston-Salem’s longest-operating food pantries, Jeffrey Foster, program director and manager of food distribution, said they saw one of its biggest turnouts in a decade recently when they served close to 150 families in the span of three hours.

Jeffrey Foster is program director managing food distribution at The Shalom Project, a food pantry in Winston-Salem. He’s worked there for 10 years and said last week he saw some of the highest need.

‘A gaping hole’

Jason Kanawati Stephany, vice president of communications and public policy at the Food Bank of Central and Eastern North Carolina, said SNAP is the nation’s “first line of defense against hunger” because it “puts money directly into families’ pockets to buy food.”

Research shows that SNAP increases food security, improves health outcomes, reduces poverty and decreases health care costs.

Stephany knows this well. He grew up in a food-insecure household and used food stamps — the precursor to SNAP — to feed himself as a college student. Now he spends his days working for an organization that supports more than 500,000 food insecure participants across a 34-county region of the state.

Food banks and pantries like The Shalom Project are working to scale up — but there’s a limit to what they can do. The reality is that despite best efforts, there will still be a “gaping hole” in resources, according to Monique Farrell, executive director of The Shalom Project.

That’s because for every one meal a food bank provides, SNAP provides nine, according to data from Feeding America, a nationwide network of food banks, pantries and feeding programs.

Farrell said food pantries are intended to be the safety net underneath SNAP, not to replace it. As it already stands, Farrell said many families supplement their food needs at a food pantry, as SNAP funds do not last the entire month, especially amid rising grocery prices.

Volunteers at Foothills Food Hub prepare food distribution for residents who are food insecure in the county.

“Trying to scale to 10 times is obviously unreasonable for any operation,” added Goodwin, executive director of Robeson County’s largest food pantry.

Goodwin used federal food assistance as a child growing up in Robeson County, calling it the “tie that kept us afloat” as her parents hustled between jobs to make ends meet, enduring layoffs from a loss of manufacturing jobs in the county.

“Where would I be if we hadn’t had that thread to hold that entire story together?” she wondered.

The increased demand at food banks comes as they are already reeling from federal cuts to the USDA Local Food Purchase Assistance Cooperative Agreement Program, which allowed food banks to buy directly from local farms, ranchers and producers.

“Over the last nine months, we have lost millions of dollars in federal funding to purchase food,” Stephany said. “The resources that we use to meet the rising need have been cut at a time when that need is increasing significantly.”

Families feel the impact

Some families are already hurting.

Daysi Hurtado, a young woman in Raleigh who recently learned she was pregnant, said she can’t even process the idea of losing benefits. In the past, when she faced food insecurity, she’d get by skipping some meals. But not right now.

“I have a growing baby to think of,” Hurtado said. “I need to make sure that I’m eating all the time — and the food can’t be fast food, it needs to be good, healthy food.”

Who uses SNAP in North Carolina? SNAP provides food benefits to one in eight North Carolinians.

Four in five families participating in SNAP have either a child, a senior or an adult with a disability. More than 66 percent of participating families have children, and more than 34 percent of participating families include seniors or adults with disabilities.

Between 2019 and 2023, an average of 80 percent of SNAP households across the state included someone who was working.

More than 46,000 military veterans receive SNAP benefits.

One in six North Carolinians living in rural areas or small towns benefited from SNAP, compared to one in nine North Carolinians living in metro areas. Source: NC DHHS

On Saturday — the first day of interrupted SNAP benefits — 20-year-old Lynn, who asked that NC Health News only use her first name, visited the Greensboro Farmers Curb Market, which gave out $80 to every SNAP customer to help them while the federal food benefits are on hold. That help came just in time. She said she only had some noodles and a loaf of bread in the fridge that she wasn’t sure was still edible.

Lynn, a Greensboro resident, said she has just started training for a new job, which only paid enough to cover her rent. She used the $80 to fill up her cart with fresh vegetables, milk and a few pastry treats.

Others, like Bollinger, the McDowell County mom, are contemplating ways to get extra income for a while, such as starting to deliver for DoorDash. But that’s easier said than done for many.

Bollinger already works 40 hours a week, and adding to that would mean more time away from her children and put more wear and tear on her car. She doesn’t have anyone nearby who could watch her kids, meaning she would have to take them with her on delivery routes.

For now, Bollinger won’t go that route. She hopes the SNAP funds will resume sooner rather than later as she works meticulously to stretch every dollar — in a budget that is already stripped down to essentials.

Lynn, too, said she was frustrated by the delay, saying the government has a “priority problem.”

“When they needed to pay the military people, they found a way to do it,” she said. “But when it came to helping with the [food] benefits, they were like, there’s nothing we can do about it.”

Boxes of food donations wait to be loaded into cars to be delivered to a local Freedom Fridge and pantry in Greensboro. Organizer Tami Clayton with Indivisible Guilford said she was surprised by the turnout and how much people donated — enough to fill several cars — at the event on Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025.

‘Impossible choices’

Rachel Keever, president and CEO of the Foundation for Health Leadership and Innovation, helps manage NCCare360, a resource that can connect people to help, including food assistance. She said that her organization has launched a streamlined website that directs people to resources nearby.

“People are already short of dollars,” Keever said.

The timing of when SNAP benefits are paid out to recipients is staggered over the course of the month. Some people receive their EBT recharge earlier in the month, while others get the boost later.

For some low-income families, there’s still some time. But not much.

“There are women who literally have already been out of food stamps for 10, 15, 20 days, depending on how much they have,” said Amy Smith, executive director of the Women’s Center of Wake County.

Because so many of these families live on the edge, even a short delay — as the Trump administration makes its moves — could hurt them.

“Families who were already struggling will face impossible choices between paying for food, rent, medication or gas to get to work,” said Audrey Moore, media and marketing coordinator at McDowell Local Food Advisory Council.

“The reality looks like empty cupboards, increased stress and health impacts that ripple through families, especially children, working parents, seniors. The loss of SNAP could really push many over the edge into a real crisis,” Moore said. “People lose the proper ability to focus at work or school if they’re not fully nourished. Chronic health conditions can worsen. New conditions can arise. We’re concerned about delayed benefits impacting both immediate health and long-term health conditions.”

Even when those funds start to flow again, some SNAP recipients will face new barriers. Starting this month, more people will be required to show they’re working to continue qualifying for benefits.

“Experiencing inconsistent access to food is one of the worst feelings ever because food is such a basic need,” said Ashley Tee, executive director of community health at the YMCA of Western North Carolina, which serves Buncombe, Henderson, Haywood, McDowell and Madison counties. “There is so much that stems around being able to access food and what it does for your humanity and your dignity.”

NC Health News reporters Jaymie Baxley, Jennifer Fernandez, Ashley Fredde and Taylor Knopf contributed reporting.

This article first appeared on North Carolina Health News and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Source: Cardinalpine.com | View original article

SNAP hangs on by a thread

The administration says the fund has $4.65 billion available for households, which is not enough to cover the full November benefits, expected to cost upwards of $9 billion. The USDA also didn’t release the funds before the Nov. 1 deadline, meaning benefits for millions of people are already delayed. State agencies were awaiting instructions from the government on Monday about how to calculate the partial benefit.

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The administration says the fund has $4.65 billion available for households, which is not enough to cover the full November benefits, expected to cost upwards of $9 billion.

The administration indicated it will not tap other funds to fill the gap, meaning the more than 40 million people enrolled in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) are set to receive reduced benefits.

The USDA also didn’t release the funds before the Nov. 1 deadline, meaning benefits for millions of people are already delayed. State agencies were awaiting instructions from the government on Monday about how to calculate the partial benefit, leading to even more delays.

USDA in a court filing warned it could take weeks or even months for states to make all the system changes necessary to send out reduced benefits.

California Attorney General Rob Bonta (D) said in a statement Monday the move to partially fund SNAP “is an important development, but the reality is that SNAP benefits won’t become immediately available to recipients. This lag is problematic and the result of President Trump’s failure to follow the law until ordered to do so.”

Several states had rushed to cobble together contingency plans for when SNAP benefits were expected to expire. Many used their own emergency funds, while some received donations from billionaires like Mark Cuban. New York Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) made it clear that no states could continue SNAP benefits on their own.

A few states had no plans finalized by the end of last week, including Oklahoma and Mississippi, with Gov. Tate Reeves (R-Miss.) saying, “there is sadly no simple way for state government to just step in and pay the hundreds of millions of dollars in harm that this shutdown by the Washington Democrats is causing.”

Source: Thehill.com | View original article

Senate GOP blocks Dem effort to fund SNAP

Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) attempted to pass a resolution via unanimous consent on Wednesday. His measure would have forced the Department of Agriculture to fund SNAP benefits for the month of November to the tune of $8 billion. However, that effort was nixed by Republicans as Senate Majority Whip John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) objected, arguing that the simple way of ensuring those benefits go out to 42 million recipients is by reopening the government.

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Senate Republicans nixed an attempt by Democrats to fully fund Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits on Monday after those funds dried up over the weekend amid the government shutdown.

Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) attempted to pass a resolution via unanimous consent on Wednesday that would fund the program amid the shutdown, which is on the verge of becoming the longest in U.S. history. Specifically, his measure would have forced the Department of Agriculture to fund SNAP benefits for the month of November to the tune of $8 billion.

However, that effort was nixed by Republicans as Senate Majority Whip John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) objected, arguing that the simple way of ensuring those benefits go out to 42 million recipients is by reopening the government.

“This isn’t lawmaking. It’s a political stunt by the Democrats. The resolution they’re offering is empty,” Barrasso said. “It is meaningless.”

“Democrats knew their actions threatened food assistance. They were fully aware of it,” he added, noting multiple times that Democrats have voted against the spending bill 13 times. “If Democrats really wanted to help struggling families, they’d stop blocking a clean continuing resolution.”

The Oregon Democrat pitched his measure while being flanked by a green placard that read: “Trump is weaponizing food for the sake of MAHA,” an acronym for “Make America Hungry Again.”

“Let’s all together say ‘fund SNAP’ not weeks or months from now, but right now so America’s families … will benefit,” he said.

The move comes on the heels of the Trump administration saying it would partially fund SNAP via a pocket of money at the Agriculture Department. That would cover $5 billion of those funds.

Source: Thehill.com | View original article

Source: https://thehill.com/newsletters/5587395-snap-hangs-on-by-a-thread/

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