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Tell Your Senators: Support Families and Farmers, Restore Critical SNAP Funding

Urge Senate leadership to proceed with legislation that provides much-needed family and farm relief by passing a Farm Bill or farm relief package that reverses the devastating cuts and other harmful changes to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) that were included in the budget reconciliation law, H.R. 1. Reject the approach taken by the House, which recently passed a Farm Bill that failed to provide any reversal of the devastating SNAP cuts.

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Urge Your Members of Congress to Cosponsor the Universal School Meals Program Act

Urge your Members to join the growing number of cosponsors on the Universal School Meals Program Act (S. 4518/H.R. 8798). This bill would create permanent nationwide Healthy School Meals for All, increase reimbursement rates for school meals, end lunch shaming, reimburse schools for meal debt, provide incentives for local food procurement, expand summer meal access, and expand the Child and Adult Care Food Program.

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SNAP Cuts Mitigation Hub: Responding to H.R. 1

The harmful Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) provisions in the budget reconciliation law (H.R. 1) passed in July threaten to undermine decades of progress in reducing hunger in America, disrupt the food system, strip food away from millions of people, burden already strained state budgets, and threaten the economy.

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Urge Your Members of Congress to Cosponsor the Stop Child Hunger Act

Ask your Members of Congress to support legislation that improves and increases access to the Summer Electronic Benefit Transfer Program (Summer EBT).

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Advocacy Needed to Reinstate USDA’s Food Security Report

Use the FRAC Action Network to urge your Members of Congress to reach out to the U.S. Department of Agriculture and demand it reinstate the Economic Research Service Household Food Security report, the gold standard for measuring hunger in America. Your message matters. Hunger will not end by ignoring it. Congress needs to act now.

Email Your Members of Congress

Urge Your House Representative to Cosponsor the MODERN WIC Act

Ask your Representative to join the growing list of cosponsors for the More Options to Develop and Enhance Remote Nutrition (MODERN) WIC Act (H.R. 1464).

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Banner image displaying four photos of people smiling and enjoying food or picking out produce in the grocery store. It reads: "Solving Hunger in America: Leadership, Action, and Collaboration"
Banner image showing children eating outside at a table in a school setting that reads: "Donate to FRAC"
Polaroid-style image that reads: "This money is supposed to supplement my food budget, but it is really all of my food budget because my income barely covers my rent. Because of SNAP, we are not starving."

FRAC Chat

Jun 04, 2026
LaMonika Jones, Director and Maggie Snow, Anti-Hunger Program Associate, SNAP, D.C. Hunger Solutions

June marks the return of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) time limits (i.e. work requirements). For the first time in close to three decades, SNAP participants in the District of Columbia will be required to prove they are working or volunteering at least 80 hours per month to maintain their SNAP benefits. These changes threaten to deepen hunger and economic hardship for thousands of District residents, including working families, children, older adults, and people with disabilities at a time when many households are already struggling to afford basic needs amid rising prices and economic uncertainty.

Jun 04, 2026
Preina Surti

June 4 marks the 80th anniversary of the passage of the National School Lunch Act, a landmark federal law that established the National School Lunch Program (NSLP). Today, nearly 30 million children participate in the NSLP across 94,000 schools each school day. Research consistently shows that participation in school lunch is associated with positive health outcomes, improved academic achievement, and reduced financial pressure on families. With high food and living costs, and food insecurity affecting far too many children and families, school meals remain a vital public health investment that helps ensure children get the nutrition they need to grow and thrive.

Jun 03, 2026
Crystal FitzSimons, President, FRAC

The Constitution gives Congress the “power of the purse.” How Congress chooses to spend our resources demonstrates their priorities and highlights the direction they want to take our nation. “Appropriations” is the process for developing our nation’s budget each year. Through it, Congress assigns dollars to federal departments, agencies, and programs. See FRAC’s priorities for appropriations.

Recent Publications & Data

See More Resources
  • Report

    State efforts to restrict what people can buy using Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits are spreading across the country. FRAC’s new comprehensive analysis of SNAP food restriction waivers helps advocates and policymakers understand how we got here, what’s happening on the ground, and the implications for families, retailers, and communities. 

    Read the report
  • Best Practice

    Since the first summer of Summer EBT’s nationwide launch, Hunger Free Oklahoma, an anti-hunger nonprofit, has been working alongside Indian Tribal Organizations (ITOs) administering the program to help support implementation. FRAC’s new resource highlights this unique collaborative work, including practical insights into how these partnerships can support successful program administration and expand access to summer nutrition for children. 

    Read the brief
  • Report

    Many large school districts across the country report significant challenges keeping children fed and school nutrition operations running effectively due to rising food and labor costs, inadequate federal reimbursement, and new federal policies, according to FRAC’s latest report, Large School District Report: A Snapshot of Participation and Operations in October 2025.

    Read the report
  • Fact Sheet

    The budget reconciliation law (H.R. 1) made sweeping changes and drastic cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). One of these changes breaks the longstanding link between receipt of Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) fuel assistance and automatic access to the Standard Utility Allowance (SUA) for many SNAP households.

    Read the report