The so called "Big Beautiful Bill" signed into law on July 4, 2025, introduces sweeping changes that will significantly impact local food banks—both immediately and in the coming years.
Key Changes Affecting Food Banks
1. Cuts to SNAP (Food Stamps)
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Over 5 million people are expected to lose some or all of their SNAP benefits.
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Work requirements expanded to adults up to age 65, including caregivers of children aged 14+.
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Stricter eligibility for noncitizens and new penalties for states with high payment error rates.
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Impact: Food banks anticipate a surge in demand as more people lose access to federal food assistance3.
2. Cuts to Medicaid
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Nearly 12 million people could lose Medicaid coverage over the next decade.
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Work requirements for Medicaid recipients begin January 1, 2027.
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Impact: Loss of healthcare may increase economic hardship, driving more people to seek food aid.
3. Elimination of Federal Support Programs
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The LFPA farm-to-food bank program was discontinued, cutting $1.4 million from some food banks’ fresh produce budgets.
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SNAP-Ed grants (nutrition education) will end after fiscal year 2025.
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Impact: Food banks must shift focus from education and shelf-stable items to sourcing fresh food independently.
How Food Banks Are Responding
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Prioritizing fresh food: Shifting budgets toward produce with longer shelf life like stone fruits and root vegetables.
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Local sourcing: Launching independent farm-to-food bank programs to replace federal support.
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Fundraising push: Emphasizing “double impact” donations that help both farmers and families.
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Calling for empathy: Leaders urge lawmakers to understand the lived experiences of food-insecure population.
Timeline of Changes
Change |
Effective Date |
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SNAP work requirements |
2025–2028, phased in |
Medicaid work requirements |
January 1, 2027 |
SNAP-Ed grant termination |
End of FY 2025 |
State cost-sharing for SNAP errors |
Starting FY 2028 |
LFPA program discontinued |
FY 2026 budget cuts already in effect |
Robbin Peterson with the West Seattle Foodbank released a statment on the situation:
"Area food banks are still determining how best to continue to meet need and be there in support of our communities.
As the full effects of the Big Beautiful Bill unfold, we’re deeply concerned about the cascading impact on our community. The need for food assistance never slowed after the height of the pandemic—families are still struggling under the weight of rising food and fuel costs. Cutting benefits now will only make things worse. We expect to see more people turning to food banks for help, just as the pipeline of federally supported food and resources is being reduced. That means more people to serve, and less food to serve them.
And the impact won’t stop at food—when people lose access to basic benefits, the need for rent assistance and other emergency support also rises. Meeting that need is part of WSFB’s purpose, but it stretches already limited resources even further.
Food banks like ours are bracing for a surge in need with fewer tools to meet it. Community support will be the difference between stability and crisis for many of our neighbors."