The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) can be tapped to help individuals and communities recover from natural or man-made disasters. Advocates can work with federal and state partners to get temporary Disaster SNAP (D-SNAP) benefits to households not already participating in SNAP, and replacement and supplemental SNAP benefits to current SNAP participants adversely affected by disaster.
Report
Challenges in Researching the Diets of SNAP Recipients – Addressing Methodological Flaws and Emphasizing SNAP as an Anti-Hunger Program