Millions lose food stamps under Trump cuts. Arizona is hardest hit
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/millions-lose-food-stamps-under-trump-cuts-arizona-is-hardest-hit-2026-06-24/
Millions lose food stamps under Trump cuts. Arizona is hardest hit
WASHINGTON/PHOENIX,
Arizona, June 24 (Reuters) - When Angelica Garcia tried to renew her
food stamps this spring, she said she thought she knew the drill.
The
single mother of three in Tucson filled out the application. She
repeatedly called Arizona’s Department of Economic Security, the state
agency administering the federal aid, often staying on hold until the
line dropped. She visited a thinly staffed DES office and waited hours
for a caseworker.
By
the time Garcia was reapproved in June, she’d missed two months of
benefits while her family got by on food-pantry donations and cheap
staples like beans, rice and tortillas.
“There’s
hoops to jump through — always,” said Garcia, who has used food stamps
in the state for three years. But now the government is “adding more
hoops.”
More
than 4.7 million people nationwide have lost their Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance Program benefits, also known as food stamps, since
President Donald Trump’s signature tax and spending law took effect last
July, according to data through March from the U.S. Department of
Agriculture — about 11% of participants.
Nowhere
have the changes to America’s second-largest social safety-net program
taken hold as rapidly as in Arizona, where the number of SNAP recipients
has fallen by about half, the steepest drop in the country.
That
means lost benefits for more than 457,000 Arizonans, including nearly
196,000 children, according to DES data as of the end of May.
The
law reduces SNAP funding by $187 billion, or about 17%, over the next
10 years, in part by expanding work requirements and barring some
immigrants from receiving benefits.
It
also imposes penalties on states that fail to meet certain performance
standards beginning in October next year. And it shifts more
administrative costs onto states.
Among
the reasons enrollment has fallen so steeply in Arizona is that the
state has moved to implement the federal changes more quickly than other
states, according to two SNAP experts and the DES spokesperson, Brett
Bezio.
"Arizona
has no choice but to meet these requirements," Liliana Soto, press
secretary for Democratic Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs, said in an
email. "If we don’t comply, we will be fined hundreds of millions of
dollars and more vulnerable Arizonans will lose their food assistance."
White
House spokesperson Anna Kelly said the SNAP overhaul “prioritizes
American citizens, and implements reasonable cost-sharing measures with
states to crack down on waste, fraud, and abuse," without offering
examples.
The
USDA’s Food and Nutrition Administration, which administers SNAP,
attributed the decline in enrollment in part to the work requirement
changes.
RECORD FOOD-PANTRY DEMAND
The
SNAP cuts have driven a record number of people to food banks in
Arizona, according to the Arizona Food Bank Network, a statewide
organization that works with local pantries.
About
843,000 Arizonans sought support from a food pantry in April, about an
8% increase over 779,000 in April 2025 — and surpassing the number of
people receiving SNAP, according to AFBN data. Food bank users fell in
May to about 790,000, the data show.
Even so, food pantries are scrambling to fill "a massive gap," said Terri Shoemaker, executive vice president of the AFBN.
DES and the USDA did not comment on the increase in food-bank use.
Myriam
Flores, a mother of seven in Phoenix, said in a May interview she was
unable to renew her access to SNAP and lost $1,100 a month in benefits
in January.
She said she spent hours on hold with Arizona’s DES, only for calls to drop.
At
the time of her interview, she said she visits the St. Vincent de Paul
pantry in Phoenix nearly every day so she can feed her children.
[1/5]Volunteers
assemble food boxes during a daily food distribution at St. Mary's Food
Bank in Phoenix, U.S. May 29, 2026. REUTERS/Rebecca Noble Purchase Licensing Rights
"There
are nights of crying, nights of not sleeping, when I lose sleep at 2
a.m. doing the math, deciding what to pay for and what to put off," she
said.
Reuters could not determine whether Flores has resumed her efforts to get benefits or whether she's currently eligible.
‘FALLING THROUGH THE CRACKS’
Katie
Bergh, a senior policy analyst at the Center on Budget and Policy
Priorities, said that the longer wait times are partly the result of
stricter processes for vetting applicants, introduced by Arizona’s state
agency to meet the new performance standards and avoid financial
penalties.
“They
can’t get through on the overloaded phone line, or they’re being asked
for more and more paperwork that they can’t provide, or they do provide
it but the state doesn’t have capacity to process it,” she said.
Those standards grew out of the state’s SNAP error rate — a measure of overpayments and underpayments of food stamp benefits.
Arizona’s
error rate in 2024 was 8.84%, below the national average of 10.9%, but
still above the 6% threshold that — under the new law — would require
states to cover up to 15% of the cost of SNAP benefits. Historically,
the federal government has paid the full cost of benefits.
That could cost Arizona about $201.5 million next year, according to the DES 2027 budget request.
To
avoid the threat of “significant financial penalties,” DES has
tightened its application process by requiring documentation like pay
stubs or leases, Bezio said.
Cindy
Bernardo, a program manager at the St. Vincent de Paul pantry, said
many of the organization's clients have faced delays or lost their SNAP
benefits as the state enacts the federal changes.
“So
many of them have lost their benefits,” she said. “And they have
reapplied, and most of them can't even get an answer to their
questions.”
The
federal law also expanded work requirements to areas that previously
had waivers because of high unemployment or insufficient jobs.
Fourteen
of Arizona's 15 counties are now subject to work requirements, compared
to just one last year, said Joseph Palomino, director of the Arizona
Center for Economic Progress.
Those
changes, as well as the new demands for documentation, are making it
harder for people to get timely access to benefits, he said, and they’re
“falling through the cracks."
Bezio said the agency is hiring more staff and contracting with a third-party call center to improve wait times.
SNAP CUTS ROLL OUT NATIONWIDE
Other
states are recording steep drops in SNAP enrollment: 17.4% in
Louisiana, 11.6% in Wyoming and 13.7% in Virginia, USDA data show.
The
USDA's FNA said states are responsible for accurately implementing the
federal changes, and that it has issued guidance to help them meet new
requirements.
The Louisiana Department of Health did not respond to a request for comment.
The Wyoming Department of Family Services said "a large portion" of the state's decline was due to the federal changes.
In Virginia, SNAP enrollment fell 12% in the year ending in March, according to the Department of Social Services.
"The
primary impact of this law on the Commonwealth is that now more
families are going hungry when nobody should have to go hungry," said
spokesperson Michael Pulley.
Reporting by Leah Douglas in Washington and Erica Stapleton in Phoenix; Editing by Richard Valdmanis and Suzanne Goldenberg
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.










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