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What Iowa Needs Next
Families who immigrated to the U.S. due to persecution in their home country have historically been able to apply for social services here, such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP).
However, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act eliminated SNAP eligibility for certain non-U.S. citizens, even those granted legal political asylum, according to Georgia Public Broadcasting.
Paedia Mixon is the director of New American Pathways, a nonprofit in Clarkston that helps refugees settle in Georgia. She spoke with GPB News about the impact of the change.
“I read it and saw, ‘Oh my god, they’re cutting SNAP benefits for refugees,’ and just sort of started to feel this panic,” she said.
Congressional leaders say the measure will save the federal government $187 billion over 10 years while states like Georgia with higher than average SNAP payment error rates could have to pay millions more due to a change in requirements.
Around 8,000 refugees, asylees and other legally present immigrants who are served by resettlement agencies were actively receiving SNAP benefits in Georgia as of December.
Kyryll Levterov with New American Pathways told GPB they are seeing an increase of families coming to the agency for help after losing SNAP benefits.
“A couple of months ago it was like maybe one emergency a week, maybe a couple of times,” he said. “Now it’s a few times a day, so now it’s very different.”
SNAP benefits average from $700 to $900 per month for a family of four, and larger families can receive closer to $1,000 per month.
Amid the turmoil with SNAP benefits, Mixon said her team is already preparing for the next emergency approaching this fall. Immigrants without green cards will no longer be eligible for Medicaid.
Written by: Jenna Eason
food insecurity Georgia Georgia SNAP Politics public health SNAP SNAP benefits
National morning drive radio and television star Stephanie Miller hosts The Stephanie Miller Show, reaching over six million listeners weekly on satellite and terrestrial radio, simulcast on FreeSpeech TV. A ratings powerhouse who dominated at KABC, KFI, and stations in New York and Chicago, she's been ranked on Talkers Magazine's "Heavy Hundred" for over a decade and won their Woman of the Year Award. Her sold-out Sexy Liberal Comedy Tour became the fastest-selling comedy tour in history, earning three Pollstar nominations and producing America's #1 comedy album. Praised by Rachel Maddow as "the high priestess of excellent liberal talk" and by Carol Burnett as "the Carol Burnett of radio," this Liberal icon—ironically the daughter of Barry Goldwater's 1964 VP running mate—is known as "The Voice of The Resistance."
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