Alabama, SNAP and Electronic benefit transfer
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Alabama SNAP benefits will not go out on Nov 1, leaving thousands at risk. How many will be affected? Here's what to know.
If SNAP, the federal food stamps program, is suspended in November, about 750,000 people in Alabama are expected to need help finding food. A judge ruled Oct. 31 that the federal government should fund the program, but it is unclear whether November benefits might arrive on time -- or at all.
The Montgomery Advertiser on MSN
Alabama SNAP recipients to not receive benefits Nov.1, says USDA. Here's what to know
The USDA has announced that SNAP benefits will not be issued Nov. 1. How many Alabamians will be affected? What to know.
WVTM Channel 13 on MSN
752K people in Alabama rely on snap: Map shows which counties will be hardest hit by shutdown
Alabama families are facing uncertainties as the loss of SNAP benefits and the government shutdown mean they are losing critical access to food.
16hon MSN
Alabama food banks brace for ‘disaster situation’ as 750,000 people face losing SNAP benefits
First came the federal cuts, which ended programs connecting farmers with food banks and others that helped senior citizens, resulting in the loss of three million pounds of food for Central Alabama alone.
With the government still shut down, SNAP benefits are at risk for hundreds of thousands of people in Alabama. That’s why some families may be scrambling to do what they can to put food on the table.
WVTM Channel 13 on MSN
SNAP in Alabama: Interactive map shows percent of population receiving benefits in each county
Americans uses the SNAP program to buy groceries, but this week, according to *** memo put out by the Department of Agriculture, Federal food aid will not go out beginning November 1st. *** post on their website reads the well has run dry and blamed Senate Democrats for demanding health care concessions amid the now nearly month-long government shutdown.
Food assistance for more than 40 million people – including 750,000 in Alabama – will stop Nov. 1 as the government shutdown continues.