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SNAP Benefits Delayed: Trump Administration Seeks Court Intervention

by Emma Walker – News Editor

Trump Administration Seeks Halt​ to Court order Mandating Full SNAPBenefits

WASHINGTON – ‌ The Trump administration has requested an emergency ‌pause‌ to a federal judgeS order requiring the full funding of Supplemental Nutrition ​Assistance Program (SNAP)⁣ benefits, arguing that doing⁤ so ⁣would deplete resources⁣ intended for other critical child nutrition programs.⁢ The move ​comes as ​millions of SNAP recipients face reduced benefits due to the ongoing government shutdown, marking the first time in the ⁢program’s 61-year history that benefits ​have lapsed due to a federal closure.

According to a ⁤court filing submitted Friday morning, the administration maintains it can only authorize partial benefits in November, utilizing $4.65 billion in contingency⁣ funds to ‌cover approximately 65% of ordinarily expected payments.‌ The administration‌ has resisted ⁤drawing from‍ Section ⁤32 funding – resources earmarked for child nutrition ⁣- to fully fund SNAP,⁣ asserting it would jeopardize ⁣programs like school lunches.

“This is a crisis, to be sure, ⁢but it is indeed⁢ a crisis occasioned by congressional ‌failure,​ and that can only be solved ⁣by congressional action,” the⁢ administration ⁤wrote in its ⁢filing. They further ⁢argued the court should allow the partial payments to continue,⁢ rather then “compel the agency ⁣to transfer⁣ billions of ⁢dollars ‍from another safety⁢ net program‌ with no certainty of their replenishment.”

The legal battle⁢ stems from an ‌initial Department of Agriculture announcement that SNAP funding‍ would be suspended ‌during the shutdown. This​ prompted a lawsuit from the progressive‌ legal advocacy group Democracy ⁣Forward, leading a‍ judge last week to order the Trump administration ⁢to distribute benefits “quickly.”

While⁣ Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins stated Monday⁤ that partial payments had been‍ disbursed to states for⁤ processing onto⁣ Electronic Benefit ‍Transfer⁢ (EBT) cards,Judge James McConnell asserted Thursday that the ‍administration’s⁢ actions did​ not meet the standard‍ of “expeditiously and efficiently” ⁣outlined in his order.

“people have gone without for to long.‌ Not making payments‌ to ​them for even another⁣ day is simply unacceptable,” McConnell said.⁤ “This should never happen in America.”

Reports have emerged of families ‍already skipping‌ meals and relying on limited⁢ pantry staples like cereal and ​ramen⁣ as a result of the reduced benefits. The administration’s request for a pause‌ seeks​ to maintain the current partial payment system while‍ the shutdown continues,​ placing the onus for a resolution on Congress.

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