As the shutdown enters November, roughly 42 million Americans many lose their SNAP benefits. Here are three things recipients should do as the courts look to step in.
Demonstrators gathered outside the Georgia State Capitol, urging Gov. Brian Kemp to use state funds to support SNAP ...
On Nov. 1, over 922,000 low-income Oklahomans, mostly kids, will get kicked while they’re down. It will cost between $130 million and $142 million to fund a month of SNAP, according to Gov. Stitt. On ...
"I'm wondering how I'm going to be able to afford everything" if federal food aid is halted, one single mom said.
Hundreds of thousands of people on SNAP are still in limbo, while November also marks the start of free universal childcare ...
The Post Bulletin Editorial Board typically chooses an editorial topic on Tuesday, and by close of business on Thursday that editorial has been written, edited and is ready for publication in Saturday ...
People of all racial and ethnic backgrounds participate in SNAP. Roughly 42% of the heads of SNAP households are white, 25 percent are Black, 23 percent are Latino, and 4 percent are Asian. SNAP ...
On Saturday, some 42 million low-income Americans, including 16 million children, lost access to benefits through the SNAP program as the government shutdown continues.
D.C.-area leaders expressed relief and agreement after two federal judges ordered President Donald Trump’s administration to ...
Judges in Massachusetts and Rhode Island ruled Friday afternoon that the Trump administration must fund SNAP during the ...
Judge Talwani gave the Trump administration until Nov. 3 to decide if it will pay full or partial benefits. Another judge said SNAP is an entitlement.
The nation’s largest anti-hunger program is set to lapse Saturday, but the Trump administration has said it won’t tap emergency funds.