SNAP | County-by-County Breakdown of Pennsylvania Recipients
- Pennsylvania faces potential $800 million in food aid cuts from President Trump's federal bill set to finalize in July 2025 impacting SNAP and Medicaid programs.
- The bill proposes sweeping cuts to Medicaid and SNAP, increasing states' administrative costs and imposing new work requirements leading to benefit losses.
- These cuts threaten about 140,000 Pennsylvanians losing SNAP benefits, endangering 12,000 grocery and farm jobs and risking 60,000 healthcare jobs from Medicaid changes.
- Marc Stier cautioned a possible $9.95 billion federal funding loss could cause 139,000 job losses, while disruption to nonprofits and hospitals raises concern over impacts on vulnerable populations.
- The cuts could lead to increased food pantry demand and strain Pennsylvania’s budget, raising urgent questions about the state’s ability to maintain these essential safety net services.
18 Articles
18 Articles


Trump’s cuts leave a million facing starvation in Nigeria – as food aid runs out
Exclusive: Huge cuts to international aid – alongside intensifying conflict and the devastating impact of climate change – are creating a humanitarian crisis across Nigeria and its neighbours. Now, the UN’s food charity is warning of the risk of famine, with supplies of food set to run out next month. Nick Ferris reports
SNAP | County-by-county breakdown of Pennsylvania recipients
Nearly 2 million people in Pennsylvania receive benefits from the Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program, commonly known as SNAP. WGAL broke down the number of SNAP recipients in Pennsylvania county-by-county.


Trump’s Medicaid, SNAP cuts leave Chicago food pantries, community hospitals bracing for hardship
Natasha McClendon worked about three days each week during the school year as a substitute teacher assistant for Chicago Public Schools. But she wasn’t able to land a job for the summer.The 48-year-old Englewood mom worries her struggles to find work could cost her family the public health insurance and food assistance they need. That’s because her current hours may not be enough to satisfy new, more onerous work requirements in President Donald…
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