Take Action to Strengthen the Direct Support Workforce

Urging your U.S. Representative to recognize direct support professionals takes less than two minutes.
Lend Your Voice
Capitol Correspondence - 07.29.19

Administration Proposes Significant Cuts to SNAP Program

Share this page

ANCOR is sharing this article by Reuters because many people with disabilities receiving services also rely on food support from the SNAP program, food assistance to lower-income populations. The Administration has not yet formally released this rule but we will keep our members informed once it does. ANCOR has advocated to preserve SNAP benefits in the past for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities..

As written by Reuters:

“The Trump administration on Tuesday proposed a rule to tighten food stamp eligibility that would cut about 3.1 million people from the program, U.S. Department of Agriculture officials said, drawing ire from Democratic senators and advocacy groups.

The administration has been rolling out rule changes related to the food stamps, known as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), after efforts to pass new restrictions on it were blocked by Congress last year. The program provides free food to some 40 million Americans, or about 12 percent of the total U.S. population.

The USDA billed Tuesday’s move as a way to save money and help eliminate what it sees as the widespread abuse of the program. But Democrats and advocacy groups criticized it as an attack on the nation’s poorest.

[…]

Currently, 43 U.S. states allow residents to become eligible for food stamps automatically through SNAP, or if they receive benefits from another federal program known as Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, or TANF, according to the USDA.

The agency wants to change that by requiring people who receive TANF benefits to pass a review of their income and assets to determine whether they are also eligible for free food from SNAP, officials said.

If enacted, the rule would save the federal government about $2.5 billion a year by removing 3.1 million people from SNAP, according to the USDA. Advocacy group First Focus on Children said 7.4% of households with children participating in SNAP would lose their access to food stamps.”