As the Trump administration cuts food programs, community-driven organizations keep people fed and cared for.
The 2025 government shutdown drew widespread attention to how many Americans struggle to get enough food. For 43 days, the more than 42 million Americans who receive Supplemental Nutrition Assistance ...
The plight of 42 million food-stamp recipients is the federal-government shutdown’s most inflammatory issue. Federal judges ordered the Trump administration to pay food-stamp benefits regardless. Team ...
The federal government is reopening, but there’s still uncertainty about when one of the most far-reaching impacts of the closure will be resolved and all 42 million Americans who receive SNAP food ...
The federal government is reopening, but there’s still uncertainty about when one of the most far-reaching impacts of the closure will be resolved and all 42 million Americans who receive SNAP food ...
With Indiana set to block food assistance purchases of soda and candy, Gov. Mike Braun’s Smart SNAP initiative revives a fundamental question: What are government food programs really meant to do?
On November 1, when the Trump administration announced it would not disburse benefits through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, due to the ongoing government shutdown, tribal ...
In Ohio, nearly 1.5 million people, including many households with children, rely on SNAP benefits. Regional food banks and the Ohio Department of Jobs and Family Services have resources to help those ...
Federal programs, schools and public messaging are now tools to promote "real" food under the 2025 Dietary Guidelines, shifting Americans away from processed foods, according to HHS.
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