SNAP benefits won't go out next month, USDA says
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The Trump administration has confirmed it would not use $5 billion in contingency funds to keep benefits flowing into November.
USDA announces federal food aid won't be distributed Nov. 1 due to government shutdown, affecting SNAP benefits for 1 in 8 Americans nationwide.
As the federal government shutdown drags on, 42 million Americans, including 3 million Floridians, brace for the possibility that their SNAP benefits won’t arrive in November.
Without SNAP benefits, one of the only options is food shelves, which many SNAP recipients already use. The average SNAP benefit per person in Minnesota is $157 a month, or just over $5 a day. But food shelves are already struggling to meet demand. The Food Group reports visits to Minnesota food shelves rose 18% between 2023 and 2024.
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Potential SNAP benefit delay could heighten growing hunger crisis in Texas
The potential SNAP benefit delay could increase growing hunger crisis in Texas, a state which has the highest population of food insecure people in the U.S.
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Gov. Walz to unveil $4 million for MN food shelves as shutdown could halt SNAP benefits
Gov. Tim Walz is set to announce emergency funding for Minnesota food shelves as the ongoing government shutdown threatens to cut off SNAP benefits for hundreds of thousands of Minnesotans.
House Speaker Mike Johnson announced on Monday that contingency funds are "not legally available" to cover SNAP benefits amid the government shutdown.
A USDA notice says no SNAP benefits will be issued on November 1 unless lawmakers end the shutdown. The standoff, now the second-longest in US history, threatens food support for the most vulnerable Americans as Congress struggles to reach a funding agreement.