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SNAP Benefits to Be Cut

USDA

As of Friday, November 1st, more than three and a half million food stamp recipients in Florida will see a reduction in that benefit. The initial reduction in SNAP, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, comes with the end of the federal stimulus spending package which was passed in 2009 to boost the economy during the Great Recession.

For a family receiving the maximum benefit of $668 per month, that translates to about $432 less per year.  DCF is bracing for a flood of calls from recipients caught off guard by the decrease, despite an extensive campaign to notify them.

While bracing for the SNAP cuts, other food programs are also watching as U.S. House and Senate conferees prepare to negotiate a federal farm bill which could have much more far-reaching consequences for the program.

Congressman Jeff Miller says the cut on November 1st will be, “very modest.” He’s among many Republicans who contend the food stamp budget,  which has ballooned since the onset of the recession, needs to be cut further.

The GOP-led House of Representatives passed a bill in mid-September that would eliminate about 39 billion dollars from the SNAP budget over the next decade. Democrats forming the majority in the Senate have supported about four billion in cuts.

Food banks and other programs that help Florida's food-insecure residents have known for years that the cuts this week were coming, but advocates say that won't make them any easier.