澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询

SNAP Cuts Will Acutely Affect State Budgets and Older Beneficiaries, Experts Say

Person shopping in a grocery store, reading a flyer while leaning on a cart near the dairy aisle
A shopper scans coupo🌠ns in a grocery store in Washington, D.C., on May 23, 2024.

Tom Williams / CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

Changes to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) could affect how older Americans get their food, and the effects could potentially reach b🅰eyond the program in some states.

A provision in the 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:proposed budget bill would shift the funding for SNAP benefits, which help lower-income individuals and families purchase food. It would also extend w🦹ork requirements to more adults who currently qualify.

State Budgets Will Come Under Pressure

The proposal would require sꦅtates to foot more of the bill for the benefits and administration of the program.

This could present a problem, as almost all states have legal requirements to balance their budgets. That means they can not run up debt, like the federal government can. So to make up for the new SNAP expenses, the s♓tates would have to divert funding from other expenditures or bring in more income, likely through tax increases, according to the Center on Policy and Budget Priorities, a nonpar🦋tisan policy research group.

Experts said the other alternative is꧒ that states may have to slash the SNAP program.

"In recessionary-like times when they have less revenue coming in, states will have to continue to reduce benefits or even fully eliminate them," said Anne Montgomery, a health policy expert at the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare. "It isn’t entirely out of the realm of possibility that some states might eliminate their SNAP programs."

Work Require🦄ments Will Include More Older Adults

The plan also includes extending its work requirements to older adults. Un🐎der the p🍌roposal, the age limit for those required to participate in 80 hours of work, training, or volunteering each month to receive benefits would rise from 54 to 64.

An estimated 1 million older adults aged 55 through 64 would either have to find work or lose benefits.

"I would imagine that this extended work requirement will be difficult for a lot of low-income older adults because many struggle to find employment," Montgomery said. "Many older adults either face age discrimination in the workforce, or their bodies are more brittle, so they are unable to just work any job."

Those wit𒁏h children under the age of 7 or who can prove they have a disability are exempt from the work requirements.

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  1. House Agriculture Committee. "."

  2. Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. "."

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