There’s already a court fight over the data
The administration began requesting data about SNAP recipients from states soon after President Donald Trump returned to office early in the year, saying it’s essential to catch fraud and abuse.
Since then, 28 states have sent the data; all of them except for North Carolina have Republican governors.
Twenty-two plus the District of Columbia — all with Democratic governors or attorneys general — have sued to block the request. A San Francisco-based federal judge put enforcement of it on hold for now. The states that are suing argue that there’s a privacy problem with sharing recipient information with the federal government.
“Even if you’re on SNAP and getting nutrition benefits, like 42 million Americans do, does that mean that your privacy should be invaded now or that you should be giving out this information unrelated to this program?” New York Gov. Kathy Hochul told Fox 5 New York on Wednesday.
One state — Nevada, which has a Republican governor and Democratic attorney general — has both complied and sued. Kansas, with a Democratic governor and Republican attorney general, has neither complied nor sued.
Whether the administration’s latest effort will be allowed is another question likely to be resolved by courts, too.
The USDA contends fraud is a big problem in SNAP
Rollins has said findings from the states that complied with the request have shed a new light on fraud.
She has said that it revealed 186,000 deceased people receiving benefits and about 500,000 getting them in more than one place. It’s not clear just how many of those instances represent fraud versus people dying or moving and the systems not catching up immediately — or how many are cases involving fictitious people created by criminal operations to receive benefits illegally.
“Any abuse of federal funding is an issue, no matter how big or small because it means that the people that need the program are not directly receiving it,” said U.S. Rep. Jahana Hayes, a Connecticut Democrat who is the ranking member of the subcommittee that deals with SNAP. “It is the most effective anti-hunger program that we have and it operates with a great deal of efficiency and transparency.”
Other SNAP requirements are ramping up
Under the sweeping tax and policy law Trump signed in July, more recipients will have to work, go to school or volunteer to get benefits for more than three months every three years. Adults ages 55 to 64, homeless people and people with children between 14 and 17 are among those affected.
Starting in 2028, states will have to chip in for benefit costs if they make mistakes in more than 6% of the payments.