SNAP, should it be Paid, or Replaced?

1 day ago

As of October 31, 2025, the U.S. faces an unprecedented SNAP funding crisis due to a month-long government shutdown. The USDA has halted November benefits for 42 million recipients, citing a lapsed FY2026 appropriation and refusing to tap a $5–6 billion contingency reserve—despite prior guidance allowing its use. Two federal judges ordered emergency funds released, but appeals loom. Without action, families averaging $187/month in aid face immediate hunger.States are responding unevenly. Virginia’s Gov. Youngkin pledged $37.5M weekly to fully cover 850,000 residents. New York’s Hochul declared an emergency, allocating $65M plus $11M earlier for 2.8M people. Illinois, Vermont, Connecticut, Hawaii, North Carolina, Delaware, and Guam also committed millions in state or redirected funds. Louisiana seeks $150M; Massachusetts launched a United Way fund. Over 20 Democratic governors sued the USDA and urged President Trump to release reserves.Republican-led states like Texas (3.5M recipients) and Nebraska remain silent, while Kentucky warns of delays. Food banks brace for surge demand. Experts warn of skipped meals, economic ripple effects, and long-term health impacts, especially for children (39% of SNAP users). This marks the first SNAP lapse in 60 years. Congress returns Monday; judicial rulings may force partial payments by then.#SNAPcrisis #FoodStamps #GovernmentShutdown #HungerInAmerica #USDA #EmergencyFunds #SNAPfunding #November1Deadline #FoodInsecurity #StateAid #VirginiaSNAP #NewYorkHunger #IllinoisFoodBanks #VermontAid #ConnecticutRelief #HawaiiSupport #NorthCarolinaFood #FederalJudges #ContingencyReserve #EndTheShutdown

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