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Trump administration faces a deadline to tell judges whether it will use contingency funds for SNAP

Federal judges ordered the Trump administration to decide on using a $5 billion contingency fund to maintain SNAP benefits for 42 million Americans during the shutdown.

  • On Monday, Nov. 3, 2025, President Donald Trump's administration must tell U.S. District Court judges in Massachusetts and Rhode Island whether it will comply with orders to fund Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program using contingency funds.
  • The U.S. Department of Agriculture planned to freeze SNAP payments starting Nov. 1 due to funding issues amid the shutdown, but the Trump administration reversed using its $5 billion contingency fund, prompting lawsuits by 25 states, the District of Columbia, cities and nonprofits.
  • SNAP serves about 1 in 8 Americans and covered nearly 42 million people last year; the program costs about $8 billion per month, with card-loading delays up to two weeks.
  • Food pantries reported long lines and rising demand, while millions of SNAP beneficiaries face uncertainty and the majority of states expedite food-bank funding or reload cards.
  • Talwani told the government to advise by Monday whether it will use emergency reserve funds, and courts noted additional available funds including an argued $8 billion pool must be considered if contingency funds fall short, with recalculated partial payments due by Wednesday.
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Islands' Sounder broke the news in Eastsound, United States on Sunday, November 2, 2025.
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