Connect with us

News from the South - Georgia News Feed

U.S. Senate GOP tries to ease the pain for states in sharing costs of SNAP benefits

Published

on

georgiarecorder.com – Jacob Fischler, Jennifer Shutt – 2025-06-11 19:25:00


U.S. Senate Republicans propose more moderate changes to SNAP than the House GOP, aiming to reduce states’ financial penalties starting in 2028. Under the Senate plan, states would share up to 15% of SNAP benefit costs based on error rates, compared to the House’s 25% and a mandatory 5% minimum. States with error rates below 5% could avoid costs entirely. The Senate’s version is expected to save about \$52-53 billion—\$20 billion less than the House plan—which would likely impose closer to \$14 billion annually on states and cut benefits for over 3 million people. Additional provisions include stricter work requirements for single parents of children under 10. The legislation is part of a larger GOP tax and spending bill moving through budget reconciliation.

by Jacob Fischler and Jennifer Shutt, Georgia Recorder
June 11, 2025

WASHINGTON — U.S. Senate Republicans will propose more moderate changes to the major federal food assistance program than their House counterparts, Senate Agriculture Chairman John Boozman said Wednesday, detailing a provision in a giant tax and spending cut bill that would penalize states less harshly than the House GOP version.

The Agriculture section of the Senate’s budget reconciliation bill, like the House version that passed last month 215-214, would create the possibility that states for the first time would shoulder some of the cost of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, benefits starting in 2028.

But unlike the House version, the Senate’s language would allow states an opportunity to avoid paying anything if they hit an efficiency benchmark, Boozman, an Arkansas Republican, told reporters at the Capitol.

The highest share states would be responsible for would be 15% under the Senate’s proposal, down from 25% in the House version.

Boozman said Senate Republicans sought to temper the House proposal, which would impose a minimum 5% cost-share on all states, with most states paying for 25% of the benefits.

The House approach would saddle states with at least around $5 billion per year for the program that provides about $100 billion per year in benefits, but the actual costs to states would likely be much higher.

“A lot of people were concerned about the significant bill to the states with the 5% cost-share,” Boozman said. “So this was an effort that’s the best of both worlds in the sense that it allows the states, through efficiencies, to make it such that they don’t have to worry about that, but we still recoup the money.”

In practice, the House plan would likely impose closer to $14 billion per year in new costs to states because most would not qualify for the lowest cost-share, according to an analysis from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office that also projected that more than 3 million people would lose benefits under the House plan.

The changes to SNAP are part of Republicans’ “big, beautiful bill” that would also extend the 2017 law that provided individual and corporate tax cuts, bolster federal spending on border security and defense, overhaul and cut portions of the Medicaid health care program, and much more.

GOP leaders are moving the package through the complex reconciliation process, which has strict rules in the Senate and will likely include a marathon amendment voting session later this month, known as a vote-a-rama.

Lower savings

The federal government currently pays for all costs of SNAP benefits. House Republicans argued that left states without an incentive to reduce errors in payments and proposed the requirement that states share some of the cost in proportion to their error rates in administering SNAP benefits.

The Senate would also peg a state’s cost-share to its error rate, but would make states’ costs lower across the board.

States with error rates at 5% or lower would continue to not pay anything for their SNAP benefits, and states with error rates from 10% or higher would pay for 15% of benefits. The Senate bill would also create two intermediate levels, Boozman said.

The national error rate in 2023, the most recent year for which data is available, was 11.7%, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. More than two dozen states had error rates of 10% or more.

The Senate’s proposed changes to the cost-share would result in a lower federal savings than the House version, Boozman said. His version would save about “$52 or $53 billion,” about $20 billion less than the House version, he said. It’s not clear where those savings might occur instead.

The Senate would also exclude a provision of the House bill that would have changed the cost-share of administering SNAP. States currently pay for 25% of administrative costs, with the federal government picking up the rest of the bill. The House bill would change that rate to 50% each.

A smaller tweak on the Senate side would require single parents of children younger than 10 to meet work requirements. The House bill would set that age at 7 years old. No age limit currently exists.

Reconciliation

The differences between House and Senate Republicans are among several issues the chambers will negotiate in the coming weeks as Republicans seek to pass the massive legislative package through the procedure known as budget reconciliation.

The process involves several committees writing bills that the Senate Budget Committee then packages together before sending it to the floor.

Full language of the Senate Agriculture Committee’s instructions would be published late Wednesday, Boozman said.

The reconciliation process allows Senate Republicans to skirt the chamber’s usual 60-vote threshold for legislation.

But with razor-thin majorities in each chamber — and a host of policy disagreements among Republicans — GOP leaders face a delicate task in crafting a bill that can pass both chambers.

Georgia Recorder is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Georgia Recorder maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jill Nolin for questions: info@georgiarecorder.com.

The post U.S. Senate GOP tries to ease the pain for states in sharing costs of SNAP benefits appeared first on georgiarecorder.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Right

The content reports primarily on Republican-led proposals to reform the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) from a mostly factual perspective, focusing on policy differences within the GOP between the House and Senate. It highlights efforts to reduce federal spending and impose state cost-sharing, which align with conservative fiscal priorities. The language is neutral, but the emphasis on Republican viewpoints and budget cuts places the piece slightly right of center.

News from the South - Georgia News Feed

Warning for parents: This teen trend can prove deadly | FOX 5 News

Published

on

www.youtube.com – FOX 5 Atlanta – 2025-07-28 16:43:11

SUMMARY: The “Door Kick Challenge” is a dangerous viral trend on TikTok where teens kick in front doors on video for social media attention. Originating as a prank, it has escalated to serious property damage and legal consequences. In Hillsborough County, a masked teen wielding an airsoft gun kicked in a door, causing thousands in damages. Police warn that homeowners might respond with force, potentially leading to injury or death. Law enforcement nationwide, including in Volusia County, Florida, are arresting participants and urging parents to discuss the severe risks, including felony charges and violent retaliation, with their children.

A viral TikTok trend has led to children being handcuffed. Why this social media phenomenon is raising concerns among police.

Subscribe to FOX 5 Atlanta!: https://bit.ly/3vpFpcm

Watch FOX 5 Atlanta Live: https://www.fox5atlanta.com/live

FOX 5 Atlanta delivers breaking news, live events, investigations, politics, entertainment, business news and local stories from metro Atlanta, north Georgia and across the nation.

Watch more from FOX 5 Atlanta on YouTube:
FOX 5 News: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLUgtVJuOxfqkmrF1fONNmi8nKI0Z-FPE-
FOX 5 Atlanta I-Team: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLUgtVJuOxfqlb_I16wBwizoAoUsfKEeWB
Good Day Atlanta: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLUgtVJuOxfqlKT5xsbsPFgr5EBzdsWTvG
FOX 5 Extras: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLUgtVJuOxfqli-5MS_2X-i6bNGWvV0RYP
You Decide: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLUgtVJuOxfqnCKb7UkRde2NXuaoPEAXut

Download the FOX 5 Atlanta app: https://www.fox5atlanta.com/app

Download the FOX 5 Storm Team app: https://www.fox5atlanta.com/storm

Follow FOX 5 Atlanta on Facebook: https://facebook.com/fox5atlanta

Follow FOX 5 Atlanta on Twitter: https://twitter.com/FOX5Atlanta

Follow FOX 5 Atlanta on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fox5atlanta/

Subscribe to the Morning Brief and other newsletters from FOX 5 Atlanta: https://www.fox5atlanta.com/email

Source

Continue Reading

News from the South - Georgia News Feed

Suspect caught in Taliaferro shooting, thanks to witnesses

Published

on

www.wjbf.com – D.V. Wise – 2025-07-28 08:42:00

SUMMARY: On July 27th, just before 8 p.m., a shooting occurred near Park Street and Martin Luther King Jr. Drive in Taliaferro County, Georgia. Deputies found a man shot in the foot, treated him on-site, and transported him to Augusta for further care. Witnesses identified the suspect as Tamarcus Callaway Jr. of Thomson, who fled in a burgundy Nissan Altima. A BOLO was issued, and after a brief pursuit by McDuffie County deputies, Callaway Jr. was taken into custody around 9:07 p.m. The victim’s injuries were not life-threatening. The GBI is investigating the incident. Sheriff McWilliams praised the cooperation and swift response.

Read the full article

The post Suspect caught in Taliaferro shooting, thanks to witnesses appeared first on www.wjbf.com

Continue Reading

News from the South - Georgia News Feed

US-EU trade deal will raise costs for companies and consumers

Published

on

www.wsav.com – The Associated Press – 2025-07-28 05:35:00

SUMMARY: President Donald Trump and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced a trade deal imposing 15% tariffs on most European goods entering the U.S., down from Trump’s threatened 30%. The agreement excludes tariffs on strategic goods like aircraft and certain chemicals, with ongoing negotiations for further product coverage. The EU will buy $750 billion in U.S. energy and invest $600 billion more in America. Some tariffs, including a 50% steel tariff, remain. The deal aims to reduce trade tensions but imposes higher tariffs than pre-Trump levels, potentially raising U.S. consumer prices and impacting European exporters. Reactions are cautiously optimistic.

Read the full article

The post US-EU trade deal will raise costs for companies and consumers appeared first on www.wsav.com

Continue Reading

Trending