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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).

Email Your Members of Congress

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).

Email Your Members of Congress

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

Apr 30, 2026
Dory Thrasher, PhD, Senior SNAP Policy Analyst

FRAC often encourages people and organizations to submit public comment to the federal government, either in support of policies that improve nutrition, food security, and well-being, or against initiatives or rule changes that will cause harm. For example, FRAC has urged advocates to submit comments to protect school meal access, oppose changes to SNAP stocking rules, and restore food security data collection.

Apr 24, 2026
Gina Plata-Nino, JD, Director, SNAP, Food Research & Action Center

The budget reconciliation law, H.R. 1, imposes the most severe cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) in its history. Its impact is already measurable: More than 2.5 million people have lost access to benefits. These losses are yet the beginning as the law dramatically expands administrative burdens on state agencies. Beyond the policy changes it makes to the program, it introduces two major cost shifts. First, it reduces the federal share of administrative funding from 50 percent to 25 percent, forcing states to absorb 75 percent of costs. States are already responding by freezing hiring or laying off staff, precisely when agencies must implement complex new requirements. Second, the law ties state financial penalties to payment error rates, pushing states to prioritize error reduction under constrained capacity, directly affecting SNAP access.

Apr 16, 2026
Gina Plata-Nino, JD, Director, SNAP, Food Research & Action Center

The proposed House Farm Bill provides no meaningful avenue to restore or strengthen the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). Instead, it advances provisions that weaken long‑standing statutory protections by undermining merit‑based staffing requirements and opening the door to privatization. Section 4103, titled “SNAP Staffing Flexibility,” if approved, will amend Section 11 of the Food and Nutrition Act (7 U.S.C. § 2020) to authorize states to contract with private entities to perform SNAP certification and other core administrative functions. As the Farm Bill heads to a floor vote, advocates should stay informed and actively oppose the current proposal.

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