Shutdown puts food access at risk in Arkansas

Food assistance benefits could be delayed or disrupted in November if the shutdown continues, Arkansas Department of Human Services spokesperson Gavin Lesnick tells Axios.

Why it matters: About 243,600 low-income Arkansans, including about 8,960 Benton County residents and 9,410 Washington County residents, rely on the federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) to afford food, according to DHS data.

  • This comes as grocery prices have risen. Plus, Arkansas has one of the highest rates of food insecurity in the nation.

Threat level: Private charities and food banks cannot fill the gap if SNAP benefits stop, the Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reports.

  • The Northwest Arkansas Food Bank has seen more people “from more walks of life” coming for food because of increased housing prices and inflation, the newspaper reported.

The latest: The 42 million Americans on SNAP will not receive their benefits starting Saturday unless Congress agrees to a deal. The U.S. Agriculture Department says it can’t use contingency funds to pay for food stamps during the government shutdown — and that states won’t be reimbursed if they cover the expenses on their own, Axios’ Marc Caputo writes.

  • Contingency funds could cover two-thirds of the shortfall, according to Democrats, but the USDA says there’s less money in the fund and it’s only for emergencies like hurricanes and floods.

How it works: SNAP recipients receive benefits once a month. The date varies, and benefits generally begin going out on the 4th, Lesnick confirmed.

  • DHS recommends that those who have accrued benefits from previous months on their account use them to buy shelf-stable foods because the SNAP retail system may not allow purchases beginning Nov. 1.

By the numbers: SNAP benefits in Arkansas, which are all federally funded, total about $41 million a month, Lesnick told Axios…

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