Comments Needed on Proposed Federal SNAP Rule

from ICHS: 

The Administration proposed a Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) rule on February 6, 2019, that would time limit food benefits for unemployed and underemployed people who can't document sufficient weekly work hours. They would lose SNAP eligibility after three months. The rule would diminish food assistance for unemployed and underemployed people in areas with insufficient jobs; undo long-settled regulations; cynically attempt to end run Congress; and increase hunger and nutrition-related diseases. Advocates are urged to submit a comments from organizations and individuals expressing their strong opposition to the proposed rule during the 60-day public comment period that ends on April 2, 2019.

In 1996 when Congress enacted time limits on SNAP (then called food stamps) for certain adults who were unable to document sufficient hours of work each month, Congress provided that states could request from USDA waivers on the time limits for areas with 10 percent or higher unemployment and for areas with too few jobs. The area waivers are important, albeit insufficient, safety valves for protecting food assistance for persons who are seeking but unable to find sufficient hours of work. In the decades since, USDA has abided by the decision of Congress and processed area waiver requests from governors of both political parties based on accepted economic factors and metrics.

The Administration now proposes to politicize the process at the state level, reduce the ability of states to follow Congress' intent, and arbitrarily narrow states' ability to waive the time limit in areas with insufficient jobs. Its action flies in the face of congressional intent, coming just after Congress passed a new Farm Bill that left the current area waiver provisions in place. The Administration's proposed rule will cause greater hunger and hardship if adopted.

Both Feeding America and the Food Research & Action Center (FRAC) are collectively mobilizing a nationwide effort to collect large numbers of comments from all sectors of society to demonstrate the public's opposition to this ill-conceived rule. FRAC has launched a platform through which the public can submit comments directly to U.S. Department of Agriculture. The deadline to submit comments is Tuesday, April 2, 2019.

Comments