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How Biden Is Impacting SNAP in 2022
jetcityimage / iStock.com
jetcityimage / iStock.com

On June 6, 2019, the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities reported some welcome news regarding America’s largest anti-hunger initiative. Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) rolls had shed 7 million beneficiaries between 2013 and 2018 — a decline of about 16%. Another 5 million people left SNAP in 2019. The program had responded well to the crisis of 2008 and its aftermath and, as a result, food insecurity had declined across the country.

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The report’s authors couldn’t have imagined what the next six months would bring; but, needless to say, the trend was short-lived. Participation had declined from 47.64 million in 2013 to 35.7 million in 2019; but, thanks to the pandemic, the SNAP rolls are now again swollen with more than 42 million beneficiaries.

Not only was this the first pandemic year with no stimulus payments, but inflation forced food prices to rise faster than they had in four decades, stressing low-income households ever further and making 2022 one of the most consequential years in SNAP history.

Here’s how President Biden has left his mark on the program.

SNAP Benefits Grew to Compensate for Inflation

In 2022, SNAP beneficiaries are receiving bigger checks than ever before thanks to the most significant cost of living adjustment (COLA) in the program’s history, which President Biden approved in 2021. The COLA increased average payments by 25%, with the typical beneficiary’s check jumping by $36, from $121 before the pandemic to $157 today.

The maximum payment now runs from $250 for a one-person household to $1,504 for a family of eight. After that, each additional member is $188. Maximum payouts are higher in Alaska, Hawaii, Guam and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

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Biden Extended Emergency Allotments Through the Summer

In April, the president extended the monthly emergency allotments (EAs) that have helped keep SNAP recipients afloat since April 2020. The 90-day extension runs through August because the program’s rules automatically add an extra month.

The allotment gives $95 extra to those already receiving the maximum benefit, but it offers the most assistance to those receiving the least by paying the maximum benefit to those who would otherwise qualify only for partial SNAP payments.

Will You Get Extra? That Depends Where You Live

Although the secretary of Health and Human Services extended the federal COVID-19 emergency declaration, the USDA grants waivers only to states that have issued their own emergency or disaster declarations.