US judge blocks Trump administration from suspending food aid benefits
- On Friday, two federal judges ordered the Trump administration to continue funding SNAP using contingency funds and directed the USDA to distribute money owed as soon as possible before November 1, 2025, with reports due by Monday, November 3, 2025.
- On October 24, the U.S. Department of Agriculture told states it was suspending all November 2025 benefit allotments after typical funding sources ran out amid the government shutdown that began Oct. 1, prompting lawsuits and temporary restraining orders from states, municipalities and nonprofit plaintiffs.
- Around 42 million low-income households rely on SNAP, which costs about $8 billion monthly, while the federal contingency fund of roughly $5 billion cannot sustain it long, judges noted.
- Payments may be delayed or partial, as it remains undecided whether November benefits will be full or reduced, and it is unclear how quickly Electronic Benefit Transfer debit cards can be reloaded for SNAP beneficiaries.
- With the administration signaling a possible appeal, Food Bank for NYC said it is `grateful to the courts for recognizing the urgent need to ensure funding`.
576 Articles
576 Articles
SNAP dodges the knife; Trump to work on solution
Two judges, one in Boston and the other in Providence, told the Trump administration to keep serving up SNAP. That means 1 million people who rely on food stamps in Massachusetts, and 40-plus million nationwide, won’t have their benefits run out today. Friday’s decisions follow the lawsuit 25 Democratic-controlled states — including Massachusetts — filed this week in Boston federal court after the USDA agriculture agency warned that “the well ha…
SNAP families worry over program's uncertain future
When the federal government shut down at the beginning of October, there was enough funding reserved for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), the nation’s biggest food aid program, to last until Nov. 1. On Friday, according to reporting from the Associated Press, two federal judges ruled that President Donald Trump’s administration must continue to fund SNAP using contingency funds during the government shutdown. Rowan County D…
Courts Order Government to Fund SN What Does it Mean For Georgia?
Judges in two federal lawsuits Friday ordered President Donald Trump’s administration to continue funding its food assistance program during the government shutdown, but it was unclear how quickly payments would resume to recipients, who had been warned that no more money would be coming starting Saturday. The news created some measure of relief — but […] The post Courts Order Government to Fund SN What Does it Mean For Georgia? appeared first o…
A U.S. judge has ordered the continuation of food aid to needy U.S. citizens in the midst of the budget ban. On Friday, he instructed the Department of Agriculture to use an emergency aid fund of five billion dollars (about 4.3 billion euros) to finance the food aid of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (Snap), which was supposed to expire on Saturday. Despite the verdict, it was initially unclear whether U.S. citizens would receive t…
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