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Federal SNAP Reform: Expanded Work Mandates and Funding Reductions

The federal government has implemented sweeping reforms to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, raising the work requirement age to 65 and shifting administrative burdens to states. These changes, coupled with reduced funding and the removal of key exemptions for vulnerable groups, represent a significant tightening of food assistance eligibility.

2 stories·5 total items·Updated 2 days ago
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Key Points

  • Federal legislation raises the SNAP work requirement age to 65 for all recipients.
  • New regulations shift 50 percent of administrative costs from the federal government to individual states.
  • Key eligibility exemptions for veterans and refugees have been officially removed.
  • The policy overhaul is accompanied by a reduction in overall federal nutrition funding.
  • Enhanced anti-fraud measures and stricter standards have been integrated into the program's framework.
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