News

Learn where you can use SNAP benefits—from grocery stores to online—to get nutritious food easily and conveniently.
Kansas refuses to provide personal data of SNAP recipients to the USDA, challenging a federal directive designed to increase interagency data sharing.
State officials say they cannot comply with the request due to personally identifiable information in the data and concerns over privacy and data security.
Attorney General William Tong joined a 22-state coalition Tuesday challenging a USDA mandate for states to turn over sensitive information about SNAP recipients.
Colorado joined a lawsuit against the USDA over a demand for SNAP participant data lawmakers believe will be used to further ...
Pennsylvania won’t share food stamp recipient data with the federal government  – at least for now – citing data security concerns and risking hundreds of millions of dollars in Supplemental Nutrition ...
Changes to federal food assistance programs in Vermont will lead to reduced or eliminated benefits for low-income residents, impacting local communities.
The federal agency has indicated it would withhold food assistance dollars from states that do not comply with its request ...
The USDA, which oversees SNAP, first announced a plan to make states share benefit recipient data in a directive issued in ...
Data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Economic Research Service tells us how much of every dollar spent on food at ...
California Attorney General Rob Bonta and 21 other attorneys general have filed a lawsuit against the USDA for demanding ...
This is the second time Kansas has refused to turn over data requested by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The lawsuit, in ...