Changes to SNAP benefits will affect nearly 2 million in Illinois


Starting Feb. 1, SNAP recipients ages 18-64 without dependents will be required to work for at least 80 hours a month. If work/volunteer requirements aren't met in any month, it will count against the SNAP recipient.


by Judith Ruiz-Branch
Public News Service


New work-reporting requirements for SNAP recipients in Illinois take effect next month and groups fighting hunger said they are working hard to ensure the nearly 2 million Illinois residents who rely on SNAP food assistance are prepared for the changes.

Starting Feb. 1, SNAP recipients ages 18-64 without dependents will be required to work, volunteer or participate in a qualified education or training program for at least 80 hours a month to maintain their benefits. There's widespread concern the stringent reporting requirements will cause some to be denied benefits or go without.

Camerin Mattson, communications manager for the Greater Chicago Food Depository, explained those who fail to meet the requirements will be limited to three months of SNAP benefits within a three-year period, which could begin as early as May 1.

"Ostensibly, if they're unable to meet those requirements in February, in March and in April, as of May 1st, they would lose their benefits," Mattson pointed out.

She noted it does not have to be consecutive. If work requirements aren't met in any month, it will count against the SNAP recipient but there are exemptions, and she urged anyone who may qualify for them to alert the Illinois Department of Human Services immediately to avoid losing benefits, which can be done online.

Mattson emphasized the critical role SNAP plays in food security, noting for every meal provided by food banks, SNAP benefits provide nine meals. She cautioned the November government shutdown was a sobering preview of the effects of benefit disruption. Her organization served a record high of more than 240,000 households across Cook County. She anticipates they will see another increase as new work requirements take effect.

"Food pantries and food banks like ours are meant to supplement," Mattson underscored. "We were not designed to fill the gap of this big federal program that has been around for decades, that has been operating so successfully in helping people not experience food insecurity."

She stressed the broader economic implications: Every dollar in SNAP benefits generates $1.50 in local economic activity at grocery stores through job creation and tax revenue generation. She thinks the effects could especially be felt in areas where grocery stores are already scarce, potentially leading to store closures and fewer community resources.




Viewpoint |
When history is denied, democracy is put on trial


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President Trump claimed these violent felons did not attack anyone after issuing a blanket pardon to Daniel Rodriguez and others after the attack of Michael Fanone.

by Terry Hansen
      Guest Commentary


Jack Smith, the former special counsel who oversaw the investigation into President Donald Trump’s attempts to overturn the 2020 election, recently testified publicly for the first time before the House Judiciary Committee.

Committee member Joe Neguse (D-CO) warned: "Mr. Smith...Republicans are trying to rewrite history. ... Perhaps the Chairman could muster the courage to call the four witnesses who I see...standing behind you, Mr. Smith. The four police officers who risked everything, life and limb...to protect the Republican members on the dais."

Former D.C. police officer Michael Fanone was one of those protectors present in the hearing room. On January 6, 2021, Daniel Rodriguez repeatedly drove a stun gun into Fanone's skull, causing him to lose consciousness and suffer a heart attack. Rodriguez was sentenced to over 12 years in prison. The judge called him “a one-man army of hate."

After issuing his blanket pardon of Rodriguez and his fellow cop-beaters, President Trump claimed these violent felons did not attack anyone, and that, in fact, they were the ones who had been attacked. He further stated that pardoning them was "a great thing for humanity."

Timothy Snyder, author of On Tyranny, argues that democracy cannot exist without history because it depends on citizens who can recognize patterns from the past, accept responsibility for what their nation has done, and choose better paths for the future.

Today, we are watching the Trump administration distort the facts surrounding the fatal shootings of Minneapolis residents RenĂ©e Good and Alex Pretti by U.S. Border Patrol agents. This revisionism isn’t just cynical—it’s dangerous. When politicians deny what happened in plain sight, they erode the public’s ability to tell truth from propaganda.

And when the truth is lost, so is our capacity to hold power to account.


Terry Hansen is a retired educator from Grafton, WI, who writes frequently about climate change and on human rights. He lives in Grafton, WIsconsin.




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