Governors seek delay on sharing cost of food stamp errors

Spread the love

State and local officials are asking Congress for a delay on sharing the cost of errors in the federal food assistance program, but said they are ready for accountability.

The National Governors Association joined with other organizations in a letter to Congressional leaders on Wednesday seeking the delay. They said states’ costs for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program could increase if Congress doesn’t act.

The letter asks to delay the cost-sharing provision until fiscal year 2030 so all states have a uniform start date. The organizations also asked that the data collected during the federal government’s 43-day partial shutdown not be counted against them.

SNAP, formerly known as food stamps, is a federally funded food assistance program that helps low-income families supplement their grocery budgets. States administer the programs using federal funds. Congress recently said that states must share the cost of payment errors. States unable to reduce their payment error rates below the 6% threshold in time, must cover between 5% and 15% of the cost of SNAP benefits.

Payment errors occur in two ways. Either an applicant is determined eligible when they are not or an eligible participant is certified to receive either more or less benefits than they are entitled to. The United States Department of Agriculture, which oversees SNAP, said SNAP error rates reflect program waste, but not fraud.

Congress said it wants states to have skin in the game.

States and counties are “fully committed to administering SNAP accurately and to being held accountable for performance,” according to the letter.

“Unless Congress gives states more time to implement new requirements, states of all sizes will face massive budget impacts,” said Tiffany Waddell, NGA’s director of government relations. “There is a simple, bipartisan solution, and governors from both sides of the aisle urge Congress to work with them on shared goals of protecting taxpayer dollars and stabilizing SNAP.”

States want both provisions added to an anticipated continuing resolution in January that would fund the federal government.

The groups told legislative leaders that states’ annual SNAP expenditures could increase an average $218 million per state if payment error rate data collected during the shutdown period was not excluded from future cost-sharing calculations.

The coalition asked Congress to delay the SNAP benefit and administrative cost shares for all states until fiscal year 2030, using fiscal year 2027 quality control data and exclude October and November 2025 from the fiscal year 2026 quality control sample.

“These requests are limited in scope, temporary in nature, and designed to support accurate implementation of federal law while protecting program integrity and taxpayer dollars,” the coalition wrote in the letter. “They would allow states and counties to stabilize operations, continue investing in program integrity, and partner effectively with USDA to achieve shared goals.”

The governors were joined by the American Public Human Services Association, the National Association of Counties, the National Conference of State Legislatures, the National Association of County Human Services Administrators, the National League of Cities, the International County/City Management Association, the U.S. Conference of Mayors and the Council of State Governments.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Supreme Court to hear migrant parole case Wednesday

Supreme Court to hear migrant parole case Wednesday

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court will begin its final oral arguments sitting of the current term on Monday. The justices will hear several high profile arguments...
U.S., Iran to resume talks; Trump issues dire threat

U.S., Iran to resume talks; Trump issues dire threat

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Talks to strike a deal with Iran will reconvene this week ahead of Wednesday’s ceasefire expiration as President Donald Trump issued fresh threats Sunday on...
Trump admin seeks health-care price transparency

Trump admin seeks health-care price transparency

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Taxpayer advocates are applauding the Trump administration over its efforts calling for medical price transparency in federal employee health-care plans while health-care industry leaders are...
Energy industry celebrates Supreme Court ruling in favor of Chevron

Energy industry celebrates Supreme Court ruling in favor of Chevron

By Nolan MckendryThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in favor of Chevron is being celebrated by the energy industry, but it does not end Louisiana’s coastal litigation. The...
Casey Westfield Baseball Graphic

Massive Fourth Inning Powers Casey-Westfield Past North Central 13-4

The Casey-Westfield varsity baseball team utilized an eight-run explosion in the fourth inning to break open a tightly contested game, ultimately cruising to a 13-4 non-conference road victory over North...
Illinois proposal aims to improve detection of potentially staged deaths

Illinois proposal aims to improve detection of potentially staged deaths

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – State Sen. Craig Wilcox, R-Woodstock, says too many deaths initially ruled as suicides may actually be...
Analysis: Homelessness predicted to rise despite policy efforts

Analysis: Homelessness predicted to rise despite policy efforts

By Emily RodriguezThe Center Square Homelessness is predicted to rise, while policies predicted to lower the homeless numbers only address part of the cause, according to analysts. The annual Point-In-Time...
Bachelor’s at Illinois community colleges may widen access, affordability

Bachelor’s at Illinois community colleges may widen access, affordability

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Community colleges in Illinois could soon offer Bachelor’s degree programs to Illinois residents. Officials, lawmakers and students...
Iran reverses course, closes Strait of Hormuz

Iran reverses course, closes Strait of Hormuz

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Less than 24 hours after Iran and President Donald Trump touted the Strait of Hormuz open, the Islamic Republic has reportedly reversed course, closing the...
Los Angeles school district seeks state's money for pay hikes

Los Angeles school district seeks state’s money for pay hikes

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square The Center Square) - The Los Angeles Unified School District managed to avoid a strike this week after reaching 11th-hour agreements with three unions. Now...
Congress kicks off government funding process for 2027

Congress kicks off government funding process for 2027

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Six months out from fiscal year 2027, U.S. lawmakers are making progress on the annual 12 appropriations bills that will fund the federal government. The...
Seattle affordable housing goal elusive despite millionaire's tax

Seattle affordable housing goal elusive despite millionaire’s tax

By Randy DiamondThe Center Square (The Center Square) -- Seattle’s own version of Washington State's planned tax on millionaires is aimed at businesses with millionaire employees, but the goal of...
Illinois Quick Hits: Teachers union says CPS to bus students to rally

Illinois Quick Hits: Teachers union says CPS to bus students to rally

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Chicago Teachers Union says Chicago Public Schools leaders have agreed to transform the school day on...
Pritzker says of BUILD Plan for homes would not cost taxpayers

Pritzker says of BUILD Plan for homes would not cost taxpayers

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Gov. J.B. Pritzker has ramped up his campaign for new housing in Illinois, and he expects taxpayers...
Casey Westfield Softball Graphic

Hermann’s Two-Way Dominance Propels Robinson Past Casey-Westfield 3-1

Senior Eva Hermann delivered a dominant two-way performance, tossing a complete-game gem and launching a crucial home run to lead the Robinson varsity softball team to a 3-1 road conference...