Federal government shutdown threatens SNAP food aid
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SNAP recipients in Maine and across the country did not receive benefits Saturday as the government shutdown, now the second-longest in United States history, rolls on. In Maine, there are more than 170,
In total, Maine DHHS says nearly 12.5 percent of Maine’s population receive SNAP benefits, with several counties – Androscoggin, Aroostook, Piscataquis, Somerset, and Washington – approaching or surpassing 20 percent of their populations.
With roughly 170,000 Mainers about to lose federal food assistance and, in the absence of a state contingency plan, dozens of legislators are calling on the federal government to release emergency funds.
Federal food assistance for nearly 170,000 Mainers is likely to halt next week due to the government shutdown. Some local businesses are stepping in to provide free food and supplies to fill the gap.
Maine business owners are stepping in to help support community members who are struggling to feed their families with SNAP funds expected to cease Nov. 1.
Seacoast NH and Maine food pantries listed here as Nov. 1 end to SNAP benefits looms amid government shutdown.
Of the total pledged, $1 million will come from the governor's contingency account, with the John T. Gorman Foundation contributing $250,000 to supplement food supplies for Maine households.
The announcement that Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits wouldn’t be distributed in November rippled through Maine, where tens of thousands of households rely on assistance for food. The news has prompted leaders at all levels of government in Maine to call on the federal government to distribute the benefits to avoid a crisis for recipients.
As thousands of Mainers prepare to face a month without their SNAP benefits, area businesses are stepping up to help ensure nobody goes hungry.
1don MSN
Terrified moms speak out, say their kids face starvation as SNAP benefits expire: ‘We have nothing’
Americans are being stripped of their grocery budget benefits — financial support provided by the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) — on Saturday, Nov. 1.
Sen. Craig Hickman, an organic farmer, says the state 'must act quickly' to cover the anticipated loss of federal food assistance for 170,000 Mainers.
Two separate federal judges in New England have ruled that the Trump administration must continue paying federal SNAP benefits, even during the shutdown.