LIVE PROTOCOL
EET--:--:-- edition--.--.--

New York City knocks on doors to help SNAP recipients keep benefits after work-rule deadline

New York City knocks on doors to help SNAP recipients keep benefits after work-rule deadline

With the deadline to meet new SNAP work requirements now passed, New York City's Mamdani administration has sent teams door-to-door, including in the South Bronx, to help recipients avoid losing food assistance, according to News 12. The federal rules, changed in March, require those aged 18 to 64 and able to work to log 80 hours a month, and city outreach workers are racing to make sure households know.

New York City is racing to keep residents from losing their food assistance, after the deadline to meet new mandatory work requirements for SNAP benefits passed. News 12 reported that the Mamdani administration deployed a team to knock on doors across the city, including in the South Bronx, in an effort to reach people who are at immediate risk of being cut off.

Among those hitting the streets was Kathy Perez-White, who is canvassing for the Mayor's Office of Public Engagement Unit. She explained the basics to residents simply, telling them there are changes to the food stamp rule and that people who receive the benefits now need to meet new requirements in order to keep them.

The outreach is being run as an emergency effort. Using a list provided by the Department of Social Services, Perez-White and her team went door-to-door in the afternoon, with the goal of notifying people at immediate risk of losing their supplemental nutrition assistance and offering to help them submit a new application.

The changes driving the push came from the federal level. Back in March, according to the report, the Trump administration made changes to regulate the program, setting new conditions that recipients must satisfy to continue receiving help with the cost of food.

The new rules apply to people who are between 18 and 64 years old and physically able to work. To keep their benefits, those who are eligible must clock 80 hours a month in either paid or unpaid work, volunteering, school, or a job training program, a threshold that some recipients may not realize applies to them.

For the outreach workers, awareness is the whole point. Officials stressed how important it is that people know the changes are happening, because the rules can affect their households, and a great many people depend on the benefits simply in order to get by from month to month.

Part of the job, Perez-White said, is making sure people know how to navigate the system and where to turn for help, pointing residents to a dedicated SNAP helpline. With not everyone home to answer the door, the teams have been leaving flyers behind, part of an around-the-clock effort to spread the word before more families slip through the cracks.

Loading article...