ETB Advertising Banner Header Terrie 2
Hess Lawn Mower Header
ETB Advertising Banner Header Terrie 1
Hess Gravely Sales Event Header
Sandlin Header 2022
Better View Tree Trimming Header Ad
Cypress Basin Hospice 2023 Header

Food Aid Changes Will Bring $1.5B To Texas Families

The USDA announced a 27% increase to SNAP benefits for Texas residents, equivalent to $1.5B annually.

Austin, TX – Food banks welcomed USDA’s Monday announcement of a long-overdue update to the calculation of federal food aid that will result in a 27% increase to SNAP benefits for Texas residents, equivalent to $1.5B annually.

The Thrifty Food Plan, a baseline diet used to calculate benefit levels, had not been updated since 1975 and failed to capture shifts in food costs and consumers’ circumstances. They also expect an update to increase the amount of USDA commodities available to food banks.

“This is long overdue and sorely needed relief for families who are stretching to put enough food on the table,” said Celia Cole, CEO of Feeding Texas. “Everyone knows the cost of living is very different than it was in 1975. These adjustments, which are based on years of scientific research, will have an important impact on the families we serve.”

Research has shown that most families participating in SNAP exhaust their benefits in the first half of the month. It results in food insecurity and associated health problems in the second half of the month, including a documented increase in hospital admissions for diet-related diseases like diabetes.

They mandated a review of the Thrifty Food Plan by a bipartisan farm bill passed in 2018. The updated Plan seeks to reflect better how families live today and dietary guidelines that advise a wider variety of healthy foods, which can be more costly. Despite the sizeable overall impact in Texas, the average Texan receiving SNAP will see an increase of just forty cents per meal.

“Our food banks have been struggling to meet increased food needs in their communities,” said Cole. “We know SNAP can reach many more people and offer food assistance on a much larger scale than we can. This change will rebalance the program in favor of healthier diets and reduced hunger in Texas.”