The end of a pandemic-era program to expand federal food stamp benefits in March will mean the loss of an estimated $23 million in Cuyahoga County, or nearly half of all the benefits now being distributed locally under the SNAP program
County officials say 212,000 people, or about 1-in-6 county residents, will be affected. About $53 million in food stamp benefits under the SNAP program are distributed each month in Cuyahoga County, but that will drop to about $30 million per month in March, according to the county.
Cuyahoga County’s Department of Job and Family Services has started sending letters to SNAP recipients to notify them about the reduction in benefits. The last emergency allotment payment will be in late February.
Kevin Gowan, deputy director of the county’s Department of Job and Family Services, said the county has been working with community partners, like the Greater Cleveland Food Bank and the United Way, preparing for the change.
“It is not something that is easily replaced,” Gowan said.
The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, sometimes referred to as EBT for Electronic Funds Transfer, got a boost from the federal government when the COVID-19 pandemic began.
Many people were facing the threat of food insecurity. Programs that normally got food to people, like free lunch at schools or food pantries, were also forced to change the way they operated during the pandemic.
For example, many seniors on fixed incomes usually get the minimum of $23 a month. The federal money increased their benefit to $281.
People received their normal benefits early each month, and the second payment later in the month. Only the second payment at the end of the month will be stopping in March, the county said.d assistance will soon see a drop in their monthly allotments.