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Tag: Florida SNAP

  • Orange County to give $1M to Second Harvest Food Bank to meet rising need

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    Orange County leaders are poised to approve an extra $1 million for the region’s largest hunger relief organization this week, in light of the recent uncertainty surrounding federal food assistance and the impact of the 43-day government shutdown that ended last week.

    Most federal government employees, including tens of thousands in Central Florida alone, were furloughed for the duration of the shutdown or forced to continue working without pay for the duration of the shutdown. (The status of back pay for those workers is yet to be determined, although a document reviewed by Semafor shows the administration is working on getting payments out by Nov. 19.)

    On Tuesday, Orange County’s board of county commissioners and Mayor Jerry Demings will vote on whether to approve the extra funding for Second Harvest Food Bank, which serves seven counties (including Orange) across Central Florida. 

    Based in Orlando, Second Harvest already has a three-year $7.75 million contract with the county, approved by county commissioners in August. But after the Trump administration pretended they didn’t have the money to fund Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits for millions of low-income families during the government shutdown, Mayor Demings proposed an additional $1 million investment from the county to support food assistance efforts.

    Especially since Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, unlike governors in other states, refused to step up and commit state resources for food aid.

    “One thing I like about living in Orange County is that we are a compassionate community,” Demings said at a press conference in late October, organized just days before funding for SNAP was expected to run out. “We come together when we need to during a crisis, and that’s what we’re asking us to do today, is as a community, let us come together.”

    Demings can’t approve extra funding for Second Harvest unilaterally. That’s why he’s set it up for a vote this Tuesday, in front of the full board of county commissioners.

    Although the federal government officially reopened this past Wednesday, ending the longest shutdown in U.S. history, Demings defended his proposal to provide additional support Friday when questioned by hosts of WMNF Radio’s Tampa-based news program, “The Skinny.”

    “At the end of the day, my central job is to look out for the people in my community, and we have countless federal employees who now went well over 30 days without any pay,” Demings said, when pressed on the issue. “Then we have the temporary suspension, if you will, of SNAP benefits that has impacted residents in my community.”

    “What we’re simply saying here in Orange County [is] if we have the ability to assist those who may need food, we’re going to do that.”

    Demings, a former county sheriff first elected mayor in 2018, recently launched a campaign for Florida governor. With DeSantis term-limited from seeking re-election next year, Demings will face a tough campaign ahead against Republican opponents, including the Trump-endorsed Republican Congressman Byron Donalds.

    Demings formally announced his bid for governor, setting up a Democratic primary fight next year against former Congressman David Jolly

    The federal SNAP program, formerly known as food stamps, serves nearly 42 million Americans, including 175,000 households in Orange County earning up to 200 percent of the federal poverty level. That’s equal to just over $31,000 for a single childless adult, or $64,300 for a family of four. 

    Stephanie Palacios, director of advocacy and government relations for Second Harvest, told Orlando Weekly last month that most of the people they serve are working families. Florida has work requirements in place for most adults who receive SNAP benefits.

    “These are people who are working one and two jobs, and they’re struggling with high rent and challenges at the grocery store, so they are turning to our pantry network to help fill in those gaps,” Palacios said in an interview.

    Her organization works with a network of 870 community partners across Orange, Osceola, Brevard, Lake, Volusia, Brevard and Marion counties to distribute food to those in need. Although the government has reopened, it’s still unclear when SNAP benefits will be distributed by the Florida Department of Children and Families, the state administrator of the program. U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Brooke L. Rollins said Thursday that most should receive their payments by Monday, Nov. 17, at the latest.

    According to Axios, Florida hasn’t publicly released a timeline for this, unlike more than a dozen states — red and blue — that have already confirmed their release of November SNAP benefits. The Tallahassee Democrat reports that some Florida residents have started to receive their benefits or have received partial benefits for the month. Others are still waiting.

    On average, Florida SNAP recipients receive about $186 per month for food, or $6.12 per person, per day. With about 2.9 million Floridians receiving federal food assistance each month, Florida has the fourth-largest enrollment of SNAP recipients in the country.

    If you need help finding food for yourself or your family, search for your nearest food pantry through Second Harvest’s Food Finder Tool.


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    Expiring Affordable Care Act tax credits have been central to the funding fight behind the federal government shutdown

    The debt relief initiative, made possible through funds from the Biden administration, has relieved medical debt for 302,000 people.

    Nearly 3 million people are expected to lose access to the federal food assistance program



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    McKenna Schueler
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  • Where in Orlando to find food banks or donate amid SNAP cuts

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    Credit: Second Harvest Food Bank of Central Florida/Facebook

    Nearly 3 million Floridians lost access to federal food assistance Saturday, Nov. 1, as the ongoing government shutdown has resulted in the temporary cessation of SNAP funding. 

    Florida has the fourth largest SNAP enrollment in the country, with 2.94 million relying on the program for food security — that includes veterans, the elderly and more than 1 million children. Nationwide, 41.7 million people rely on SNAP benefits, August 2025 data show.

    In and around Orlando, a number of food banks, pantries, nonprofits and other organizations are continuing to provide food and resources to those in need while SNAP benefits are suspended. What follows is a developing list of Orlando-area food banks and pantries working to support their fellow community members. 

    Several of the following are accepting (and in need of) food donations and/or volunteers. Check individual websites or contact the location to find more information on which goods are needed most. Orlando organizations accepting donations also include United Against Poverty and  Second Harvest Food Bank of Central Florida

    Pet food bank finder:
    PetHelpFinder.com

    Orlando-area food banks and pantries:

    (Courtesy Second Harvest Food Bank of Central Florida food locator and additional reporting)

    Salvation Army Food Pantry Orlando
    416 West Colonial Drive, Orlando
    Monday-Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., with a lunch break from noon to 1 p.m.

    Catholic Charities of Central Florida
    1771 N. Semoran Blvd., Orlando
    Agape Mission Markets food pantries take place at several locations found online

    Christian Service Center
    808 W. Central Blvd., Orlando
    Monday-Thursday from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. and Friday from 9 a.m. 11:45 a.m.
    Soup kitchen is available Monday-Friday and every Saturday but the second 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; first and second Sunday, 4 p.m. to 5 p.m.; dinner starts at 5:30 p.m. Monday-Friday

    Community Baptist Church
    651 Campanella Ave., Orlando
    Regular distribution, 2nd Saturday of month from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. and 4th Saturday of month 7 a.m. to 10 a.m.
    On call for emergencies at 407-293-3100
    Deliveries are available.

    International Harvest
    2740 Old Winter Garden Road, Orlando
    Wednesdays 3 p.m. to 4 p.m.
    On call for emergencies, 407-849-2226

    Knights Pantry
    UCF Student Union, 12715 Pegasus Drive, Orlando
    UCF students with a valid student ID can check out food items once per day. 

    Jewish Family Services of Greater Orlando
    2100 Lee Road, Winter Park
    Pearlman Food Pantry
    Operates weekly Monday through Thursday 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
    Appointment only. Call 407-644-7593 and dial 0.

    Good Samaritan Outreach
    5802 Makoma Drive, Orlando
    Monthly the 3rd Wednesday of the month from 2-4 p.m.

    Recover Orlando
    800 N. Pine Hills Road, Orlando
    Every second and fourth Monday, 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. and 3rd Saturday every month, 9 a.m. to noon
    On call for emergencies Mondays through Thursdays, 9 a.m. 3 p.m.
    Call 407-293-4277

    Beracah French Seventh Day Adventists Church
    1517 Mercy Drive, Orlando
    Friday from noon to 1 p.m.

    Loaves and Fishes Food Pantry
    206 E. Eighth St., Apopka
    Monday through Thursday from 9:00 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Call for appointment/delivery at 407-886-6005.
    Non-TEFAP clients are required to show proof of address and proof of income. Offers general case management.

    Olive Branch Community Development Corporation
    2525 W. Church St., Orlando
    Bi-weekly, Mondays from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.

    Washington Park Church
    4455 W. Conley St., Orlando
    First and third Thursday from 11:30 a.m. to 12:45 p.m.

    Hope Community Center
    800 S. Hawthorne Ave., Apopka
    Emergency Food Pantry will operate only on Thursdays at the South Building.

    True Vision
    1704 Mercy Drive, Orlando
    Third Saturday monthly, 10 a.m. to noon

    Mt. Sinai Missionary Baptist Church
    5200 W. South St., Orlando
    Tuesdays 10 a.m.-noon. Please use the entrance on Ring Road.

    Revelations II
    4305 Lennox Blvd., Orlando
    Weekly Tuesdays, from 10 a.m – 2 p.m.
    On call for emergencies, 407-346-9498

    El Bethel Temple of Jesus at Orlando
    3000 Bruton Blvd., Orlando
    Thursdays from 3:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.

    4C Pine Hills
    2804 Belco Drive, Orlando
    Nearest bus stop is on Belco Drive and Pine Hills Road
    Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Nearest bus stop is on Belco Dr. and Pine Hills Rd.

    Covenant Charities, Inc.
    2210 S. Rio Grande Ave., Orlando
    Thursdays from noon to 3 p.m., or until food is gone.

    Rhema Breath of Life Ministry
    750 S. Orange Blossom Trail, Orlando
    Third Saturday of each month from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

    Shiloh Baptist Church
    604 W. Jackson St., Orlando
    Fourth Friday of the month, 9 a.m. to 11 a.m., or until food runs out

    4C Ivey Lane
    5151 Raleigh Street, Suite C, Orlando
    Monday-Friday, from 8 a.m. to 4:30 pm.
    Nearest bus stop is at intersection of Raleigh and Deerock
    streets

    St. Andrew Catholic Church
    801 Hastings St., Orlando
    Tuesday-Friday, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., by appointment only
    Call 321-319-0063, leave a message and you will get a call back to schedule.

    Covenant Builders Ministries Inc.
    44 Coburn Ave., Orlando
    Second Saturday monthly, 10 a.m.-noon
    On call throughout the month, 407-792-8768

    First Haitian Baptist Church
    4701 Lenox Blvd., Orlando
    Weekly Tuesdays from 11 a.m. – noon

    National Tabernacle
    1100 Bethune Drive, Orlando
    Every third Friday of the month from noon to 2 p.m., or until food runs out.
    Please call 407-490-7727
    to confirm

    If You Foundation
    1723 Bruton Blvd., Orlando
    Food distribution is every other Friday.
    Call for updated schedule at 407-962-9988

    Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA)
    701 S. Kirkman Road, Orlando
    Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.

    Majestic Life Ministries
    821 S. Kirkman Road, Orlando
    Tuesdays from 9 a.m. to noon

    Pine Hills Community Church
    1305 N. Pine Hills Road, Orlando
    Wednesdays weekly from 9 a.m. to noon, except the first Wednesday each month.
    On call for emergencies on a case-by-case basis. Call 407-295-5932

    Haven of Hope Ministries
    1310 W. Colonial Drive, Suite 25, Orlando
    Wednesdays and Thursdays, from 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.

    Grace Charity Foundation Inc.
    6220 S. Orange Blossom Trail, Suite 500, Orlando
    Distribution is in back of building
    Monday from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.

    Church of the Good Shepherd Food Bank
    331 Lake Ave., Maitland
    Second and fourth Saturday from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.
    Clients can drive up or walk up for emergency food distribution. Clients may return each time the food bank is open.
    Limited deliveries available. Call 407-644-5350

    Serenity’s Grace Inc.
    Certified Nutritious Pantry 2024
    716 W. Robinson St., Orlando
    Tuesdays from 3 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.

    Access Connection
    2150 Brengle Ave., Orlando
    First and fourth Wednesdays from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Pantry is closed every January.

    Fountains of Living Water Ministries
    2200 Silver Star Road, Orlando
    First and third Saturdays from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.
    Closest bus stop at Silver Star Road and Orange Blossom Trail
    On call available. Call 407-297-5770

    St.Vincent de Paul/Holy Family
    5125 South Apopka-Vineland Road, Orlando
    Tuesday from 9:30 a.m. to 11 a.m.; Wednesday from 9:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. and 6 p.m. to 7 p.m.; Thursday from 9:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.
    By appointment, call 407-481-3223. Leave message, and you will get a callback to schedule.

    First Baptist Church-Pine Castle
    1001 Hoffner Ave., Orlando
    The closest bus stop is on the corner of Orange Avenue and Hoffner Road
    Second Friday from 9 a.m. to noon

    Pentecostal Tabernacle Apostolic
    3965 Silver Star Road, Orlando
    Thursdays from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., or until food is gone.
    On call for emergencies. Call 407-432-7703

    First Haitian Free Church of the Nazarene
    220 S. Orange Blossom Trail, Orlando
    Wednesdays from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m.

    St. John Baptist Church
    30 Fred L. Maxwell Blvd., Orlando
    Every third Tuesday from noon to 2 p.m. In April and November, it will be the fourth Tuesday from noon to 2 p.m.
    On call for emergencies and deliveries on a case-by-case basis, 407-781-0700.

    New Covenant Church of Jesus Christ
    5002 Cortez Dive., Orlando
    Third Saturday monthly from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.
    On call for emergencies on a case-by-case basis; must call and schedule appointment outside of distribution hours, 407-532-4811

    Emmanuel Seventh Day Adventist
    6350 Arundel Drive, Orlando
    First and third Sunday from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.


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    Expiring Affordable Care Act tax credits have been central to the funding fight behind the federal government shutdown

    The debt relief initiative, made possible through funds from the Biden administration, has relieved medical debt for 302,000 people.

    Nearly 3 million people are expected to lose access to the federal food assistance program



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    Chloe Greenberg
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  • Floridians get a preview of skyrocketing healthcare premiums as Democrats hold the line

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    Nathan Boye, a father of three from Orlando, doesn’t usually like being in the spotlight. “But I’ve been told my story matters,” he told reporters at a press conference Monday. See, Boye is currently enrolled in a health insurance plan he bought through the Affordable Care Act Marketplace, like roughly 4.7 million others in Florida and upward of 24 million Americans nationwide. 

    It’s more affordable for him than employer-provided insurance, currently costing just $28 a month. As someone living with diabetes, a chronic and potentially life-threatening illness, Boye relies on health insurance that’s affordable in order to maintain access to the medications he needs to stay alive. “To be blunt,” he explained, with a shrug.

    But that could change very soon, if the ACA tax credits that are currently at the center of a federal funding showdown expire at the end of the year. Boye showed reporters a letter he received from his insurance provider Florida Blue over the weekend, warning him of upcoming changes to his health plan.

    If he keeps the same health plan that he currently pays $28 per month for, in a couple of months’ time, his monthly premium could skyrocket to more than $700, according to the letter. “I’m going to be forced to make impossible choices that, I mean, essentially means that I could survive another day,” said Boye. “No family should have to face that.”

    Nathan Boye, a father of three with diabetes, speaks at a press conference organized by Congressman Maxwell Frost on expiring ACA tax credits and the government shutdown. (Nov. 3, 2025) Credit: McKenna Schueler

    Boye spoke at a press conference organized by U.S. Congressman Maxwell Frost, a Democrat from Orlando, who has for weeks called on U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson to summon House members back to Washington, D.C., so they can negotiate a funding agreement on healthcare like adults. 

    “We can even step away from the policy disagreement or agreement, just talk about the fact that Congress has been out of session for over 40 days. … We don’t even have to talk about blame,” said Frost, referring to the consistent finger-pointing that has taken place between Republicans and Democrats.

    Johnson, a Republican from Louisiana, has argued it’s in Senate Democrats’ hands to reach a deal on federal funding and allow the government to reopen. Frost believes that line of thinking “makes zero sense.”

    “Mike Johnson says the House of Representatives will not go to work until the government opens. The government will not open unless we go to work to open up the government,” Frost said. “I mean, it makes absolutely zero sense.” His far-right colleague, Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, has similarly called Johnson’s failure to bring them back to work “embarrassing.”

    “I have no problem pointing fingers at everyone. And the worst thing that I, that I just can’t get over, is we’re not working right now. And I put that criticism directly on the speaker of the House,” Greene said during an appearance on ABC News program The View.

    According to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a nonpartisan think tank, an estimated 93 percent of Americans who buy insurance through the ACA marketplace — roughly 22 million — currently benefit from these enhanced tax credits that are set to expire at the end of 2025. 

    Without those tax credits, health insurance costs for ACA plans (also known as Obamacare) are expected to go up hundreds or even thousands of dollars for low- and middle-income earners per year, just in premiums alone. The Orlando Sentinel reported over the weekend that locals like Boye are already getting “sticker shock” from health insurance renewal letters they’re receiving in the mail.

    Eric Rollings, another Orlando local who’s self-employed (and the former chair of the Orange County Soil and Water Conservation District board), told reporters Monday that he faces a roughly 113 percent healthcare premium hike to his Florida Blue health plan — from $581.25 per month to $1,238.97 per month come Jan. 1. “Just six weeks ago, I joined 1.2 million people who have received a heart stent in the past year. I don’t have an option to go without insurance,” he said.

    The medication his doctor prescribes for him, a common medication for those who have gone through a heart stent procedure, is “essential,” but costs over $2,600 a month for a 180-day supply without insurance.

    “I think that this is a really insane and hurtful increase,” Rollings admitted. “And for me, for my friends that own businesses and restaurants, I want to apologize in advance, because I’m probably not going to be able to see you, at least for the time being, because I don’t know where this is going.”

    Eric Rollings, a constituent of Congressman Maxwell Frost, faces a 113% healthcare premium spike next year if ACA tax credits expire. Credit: McKenna Schueler

    The federal government shutdown that has highlighted this sharp rise in healthcare premiums began Oct. 1 and is on its way to becoming the longest shutdown in U.S. history. The ACA enhanced tax credits at stake were first established in 2021 during the COVID-19 pandemic and reportedly spurred a significant increase in the number of people enrolled in health insurance.

    Healthcare advocates have warned that, if the tax credits do expire, an estimated 4 to 5 million Americans will lose coverage in 2026, due to unaffordability. Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill,” enacted in July, already started “the destruction of our healthcare system,” Frost shared, referring to the millions of Americans who are expected to lose their Medicaid coverage over the next decade, plus the legislation’s anticipated impacts on nursing homes, hospitals and community health centers.

    Rising health insurance costs also come amid an ongoing affordability crisis, said State Sen. Carlos Guillermo Smith, D-Orlando, who also joined Frost’s press conference. 

    Smith has filed legislation for consideration by Florida lawmakers in 2026 that would cap insulin costs at $35 per month — something a growing number of states have already done — and guarantee 12 weeks of paid parental leave for state employees, if passed. Rental costs in Orange County are also up at least 30 percent since 2020, and lawmakers have filed a slew of bills that aim to address homeowners’ property insurance woes this next year, too.

    “These [ACA] subsidies have been a lifeline to these families,” said Smith. He also renewed Florida Democrats’ call for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to tap into emergency state funding to provide food assistance for Florida’s nearly 3 million SNAP recipients. 

    Benefits for the federal Supplemental Nutrition and Assistance Program, sometimes called “food stamps,” have been frozen this month as the USDA claims that funding for the program has run out.

    And while the Trump administration has been ordered by a federal judge to tap into its own contingency funds to fund SNAP during the government shutdown, the administration has only agreed to pay up to 50 percent of benefits for households, and it’s still unclear when that will actually trickle down to Florida’s recipients.

    Local hunger relief organizations like Second Harvest Food Bank and United Against Poverty are currently scrambling to pick up the slack.

    “Under state law, [DeSantis] can declare a state of emergency on food insecurity, and he can tap into the nearly $5 billion of our state’s rainy day fund to temporarily cover the cost of SNAP benefits that are not currently available,” Smith said. DeSantis has renewed a state of emergency on immigration over a dozen times, and Smith said the governor should recognize the same urgency here, too.

    “When he renewed that state — so-called ‘state of emergency’ — he tapped into over $300 million in public money to build the Everglades detention camp that they called Alligator Alcatraz,” Smith pointed out. “Why can’t he declare a state of emergency on food insecurity to make sure that children across the state of Florida are fed?” He asked. “It is about priorities.”

    DeSantis has rejected Democrats’ calls to declare a state of emergency over the issue. However, on Monday, DeSantis did vaguely commit to mobilizing the state agriculture department to assist in food aid, without providing specifics on how that would work. 

    Florida Democrats on Tuesday, meanwhile, renewed their call for the Republican governor, pointing to the recent action taken by the Trump administration to commit half.

    “Now that the courts have ordered Washington to pay half of SNAP benefits, the governor has even less of an excuse to ignore our calls for a State of Emergency on food insecurity,” said Senate Democratic leader Lori Berman in a statement.

    “Ron DeSantis has always been more concerned with what’s going on in Washington than how he can help the people of Florida,” she added. “He should join us in being more worried about what he can actually control — keeping Florida’s families fed. Now he can do it at half the price.”


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    The debt relief initiative, made possible through funds from the Biden administration, has relieved medical debt for 302,000 people.

    Nearly 3 million people are expected to lose access to the federal food assistance program

    Florida has the fourth largest SNAP enrollment nationwide with 2.94 million relying on the assistance for food security



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    McKenna Schueler
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  • Democrats urge DeSantis to declare emergency, fill Florida food pantries

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    Credit: Shutterstock

    Florida Democrats in the Legislature are imploring Gov. Ron DeSantis to declare a state of emergency and use state money to buy food and direct it to food pantries as nearly 3 million people lose access to a federal food assistance program.

    Led by Senate Democratic Leader Lori Berman, D-Boynton Beach, and her House counterpart Fentrice Driskell, D-Tampa, legislative Democrats sent DeSantis a letter Tuesday asking him to use his emergency powers to ensure the millions of Floridians who rely on the Supplemental Assistance Nutrition Program don’t go hungry when their benefits expire Saturday as a result of the federal government shutdown.

    The letter also asks DeSantis to direct the Department of Children and Families, which administers the SNAP program, to coordinate with local food banks and their community partners to distribute the food immediately.

    “For families already struggling under record food and housing costs, the loss of this critical support would be catastrophic,” the letter reads. “Local food banks and pantries have already reported overwhelming demand and depleted supplies. … We are days away from a full-blown hunger emergency that will leave families without food during the holiday season. The state cannot stand by.”

    Florida Democratic Party Chair Nikki Fried added in a separate written statement: “This moment is bigger than politics. This is about showing up for our fellow Americans and keeping Floridians safe and fed.”

    SNAP provides nutritional support for low-income seniors, people with disabilities living on fixed incomes, and other individuals and families with low incomes. Florida has the fourth largest SNAP enrollment nationwide with 2.94 million relying on the assistance for their food security, behind California, Texas, and New York. Nationwide, 41.7 million people rely on SNAP benefits, August 2025 data show.

    The governor’s office didn’t immediately respond to Florida Phoenix’s request for comment.

    The Democrats’ letter comes after the DeSantis administration posted a notice that SNAP benefits are about to expire.

    The state notice was put up after the U.S. Department of Agriculture posted Friday that it would not tap into $6 billion in contingency funds to keep benefits intact for the coming month. It would take $9 billion to cover the costs of the SNAP program through November. But the federal memo, first reported by Axios, claims that SNAP contingency funds cannot be used to float the program during the shutdown, an assertion that has been disputed.

    Contingency funds “are only available to supplement regular monthly benefits when amounts have been appropriated for, but are insufficient to cover, benefits. The contingency fund is not available to support FY 2026 regular benefits, because the appropriation for regular benefits no longer exists,” the memo says.

    The partisan impasse has resulted in a 28-day government shutdown, which began Oct. 1, the start of the federal fiscal year.

    “SNAP is one of the most effective programs for addressing hunger and food insecurity in the state,” the letter from the Democrats stated.

    “Especially after the recent cuts stemming from President Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill, Floridians cannot afford another day without action by the state. Florida has the fiscal strength to respond. What’s needed now is the moral will to act. No parent should have to choose between paying rent and feeding their kids. No child should go hungry because politicians in Washington can’t agree. We urge you to act immediately.”

    Florida’s Republican Attorney General James Uthmeier, meanwhile, joined 18 GOP state Attorney Generals on Tuesday in signing onto their own letter urging Senate Democrats to concede to Republicans and prevent disruptions to SNAP.

    “This does not need to happen,” the letter, led by Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost, reads. “Congress can stop the threat right now by passing a clean continuing resolution that keeps essential services funded and protects those who rely on them. You have the power to prevent a crisis that is entirely avoidable.”

    “Heartless”

    Berman said in prepared remarks that Florida has $5 billion in its “rainy day” fund that DeSantis could use to avert the food cliff  low-income families face.

    “The sudden loss of those benefits would be an economic and humanitarian nightmare,” she said. “With the stroke of a pen, the Governor can keep food on peoples’ tables. He has a responsibility to the people of this state to put partisanship aside and lead. Refusing to act would be truly heartless.”

    Driskell said in her prepared remarks that the governor “brags” about “maxing out” the amount of savings in the state’s “rainy day” fund.

    “If millions of hungry Floridians isn’t an economic storm, I don’t know what is,” she said, adding, “This is a crisis but an entirely solvable one. We can make sure Floridians do not go hungry. It costs a little more than $6 a day to feed someone. Isn’t every Floridian worth that?”

    The letter also asks the governor to request the state Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services to implement the universal school meals programs for the duration of the emergency.

    Orlando Weekly reporter McKenna Schueler contributed to this story.

    This story has been updated to include comment from FDP Chair Nikki Fried.

    Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Contact Michael Moline for questions: info@floridaphoenix.com. Follow Florida Phoenix on Facebook and Twitter.


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    ‘[There’s] a clinical assistant professor from supposed Palestine. Why are they—is that just social justice that they’re doing?’

    He insisted that voters should be given just one proposed constitutional amendment to overhaul the system instead of multiple proposals.

    Nearly 3 million people are expected to lose access to the federal food assistance program



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    Christine Sexton, Florida Phoenix and McKenna Schueler
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  • Nearly 3 million Floridians set to lose SNAP benefits Saturday

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    Credit: Shutterstock

    The DeSantis administration is warning nearly 3 million Floridians who rely on federal food assistance that their benefits won’t be available in November due to the federal government shutdown. 

    “If the federal government shutdown continues into November, (supplemental nutrition assistance program) SNAP benefits for the month of November will not be issued until federal funding is restored,” the Florida Department of Children Families (DCF) posted on its webpage.

    “You may receive notices about your eligible benefit amount, but you will not receive any benefits deposited to your (electronic benefit transfer) EBT card during this time.”

    DCF posted its notice in close proximity to the U.S. Department of Agriculture declaring in a memo that it would not tap into a $6 billion emergency fund to temporarily finance the program. 

    Florida has the fourth largest SNAP enrollment nationwide with 2.94 million relying on the assistance for their food security, behind California, Texas, and New York.  Nationwide, 41.7 million people rely on SNAP benefits, August 2025 data show.

    SNAP provides nutritional support for low-income seniors, people with disabilities living on fixed incomes, and other individuals and families with low incomes. Although funded by the federal government, SNAP in Florida is administered by DCF’s Office of Economic Self-Sufficiency, which is responsible for determining eligibility.

    USDA —  in a notice it posted Friday — put the blame on Democrats for not agreeing to pass a continuing resolution to keep the government funded. Democrats are against passing a funding plan that doesn’t extend the enhanced premiums tax credits that lower the costs of so-called Obamacare plans purchased through the federal health exchange (healthcare.gov).

    The partisan impasse has resulted in a 27-day government shutdown, which began Oct. 1, the start of the federal fiscal year.

    “The best way for SNAP to continue is for the shutdown to end. If not for Congressional Democrats blocking government funding, November SNAP benefits would be paid on-time,” the memo, first reported by Axios, notes.

    SNAP has about $6 billion in contingency funds; $9 billion is needed to cover the costs of the program through November. But the federal memo says that SNAP contingency funds cannot be used to float the program during the shutdown.

    Contingency funds “are only available to supplement regular monthly benefits when amounts have been appropriated for, but are insufficient to cover, benefits. The contingency fund is not available to support FY 2026 regular benefits, because the appropriation for regular benefits no longer exists,” the memo says.

    Center on Budget and Policy Priorities President Sharon Parrott, a former official with the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), says that’s not the case.

    “Speaking as a former OMB official, I know from experience that the federal government has the authority and the tools it needs during a shutdown to get these SNAP funds to families. Even at this late date, the professionals at the Department of Agriculture and in states can make this happen. And, to state the obvious, benefits that are a couple of days delayed are far more help to families than going without any help at all,” Parrott said in a written statement.

    “It would be unconscionable for the Administration to go out of its way to threaten millions of children, seniors, veterans, people with disabilities, parents, and workers with hunger, rather than taking all legal steps available to provide food assistance to people who need it.”

    Florida Policy Institute senior policy analyst Cindy Huddleston told the Florida Phoenix that more than 70% of Florida SNAP beneficiaries are children, seniors, and people with disabilities. But the cuts impact more than families in need.

    “But it also affects the bottom line of thousands of small businesses in Florida where SNAP participants shop. USDA, which already has the money to provide assistance to every family participating in SNAP for almost all of November, should release those funds immediately and also transfer other available funds so that those in need do not go hungry and local businesses can stay afloat,”  she said in an email to the Phoenix.

    The elimination of SNAP dovetails with the start of 2026 enrollment in the federal health exchange.

    Florida leads the nation in Obamacare enrollment with more than 4.6 million residents.

    Due to the elimination of the enhanced premium tax credits (and the damage that is expected to cause to enrollment) and increases in costs of prescription drugs, health insurance overall costs are going to increase.

    Florida Office of Insurance Regulation Deputy Commissioner for Life and Health Alexis Bakofsy said earlier this month there would be an average 34% increase in premiums effective effect Jan. 1.


    Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Contact Michael Moline for questions: info@floridaphoenix.com. Follow Florida Phoenix on Facebook and Twitter.


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    The judge ruled that a state law barring people under age 21 from carrying concealed weapons violates Second Amendment rights

    The court agreed with the Department of Homeland Security that the case should be paused until government attorneys can work again.

    ‘We must call it what it truly is: the documentation of the sexual abuse of children’



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  • Florida Dems urge state to take action as millions face delayed SNAP benefits due to gov’t shutdown

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    Millions of low-income Floridians who receive food stamp benefits through the federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), including veterans and the elderly, could see their benefits for November delayed if the U.S. government shutdown stretches into November — and Florida Democrats are calling on Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to take action.

    “Nearly 3 million Floridians who rely on SNAP benefits are at risk of going hungry on November 1, including 1.5 million children,” Florida Democratic Party chair Nikki Fried said in a statement.

    “Governor DeSantis can stop this, especially as the holidays approach. For the price of shutting down Alligator Alcatraz, he can ensure that Florida families have food on the table this Thanksgiving,” she added, referring to an immigrant detention camp in the Everglades that has faced harsh rebuke and legal challenges from environmental groups and immigrant rights advocates.

    Florida is one of at least 25 states across the U.S. that have warned of upcoming delays or missing payments to SNAP beneficiaries if Congress doesn’t agree on a federal budget, Politico reported.

    During the last government shutdown in 2018, also under President Trump, the federal government disbursed SNAP benefits early, in order to avoid this potentially-devastating scenario. That’s off the table this time around.

    “If the federal government shutdown continues into November, SNAP benefits for the month of November will not be issued until federal funding is restored,” the Florida Department of Children and Families, the state’s administration of the SNAP program, warns on its website.“You may receive notices about your eligible benefit amount, but you will not receive any benefits deposited to your EBT card during this time.”

    Florida Rep. Anna Eskamani, a progressive Democrat from Orlando, said it’s “easily” within the power of DeSantis to take action.

    “If you are governor, you could easily call for a state of emergency on hunger, on food insecurity, and then allocate your emergency dollars like he’s been doing for immigration,” Dr. Eskamani told Orlando Weekly in a phone call. “It really just comes down to, you know, prioritization.”

    Under Florida statutes, a state of emergency “must be declared by executive order or proclamation of the Governor if she or he finds an emergency has occurred or that the occurrence or the threat thereof is imminent.”

    DeSantis most recently expanded a state of emergency order pertaining to hurricane preparedness to immigration in order to build the immigrant detention camp in the Florida Everglades, dubbed “Alligator Alcatraz.”

    Eskamani said that DCF could also request emergency state funding from the Florida Legislature in order to fill the federal funding gap and, consequently, the bellies of low-income adults and families who benefit from the program.

    “If state government wanted to cover the gap — we absolutely could.”

    Rep. Anna Eskamani

    “I would argue that with the type of money that Florida has already spent on immigration enforcement, we absolutely — if we wanted, if state government wanted to cover the gap — we absolutely could,” she said.

    U.S. Congressman Maxwell Frost, D-FL, similarly penned a letter to Gov. DeSantis Thursday, as well as Florida House speaker Daniel Perez and Senate president Ben Albritton, urging them to call for a special legislative session to come up with legislation that would fund SNAP benefits for Florida families.

    “I am calling on the Trump Administration to continue to provide Supplemental Nutrition
    Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits during the government shutdown. But our residents deserve a plan in the case that President Trump lacks the willingness to deliver,” Frost wrote.

    “With the Republican Congress and Republican President sentencing the nearly 42 million Americans in need of SNAP to food insecurity, it is necessary that Florida’s state government does not second this indifference to the suffering and slow violence of that food insecurity,” he added.

    A ‘precarious position’

    The Florida Department of Children and Families is the state administrator of SNAP, a welfare program funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture that is meant to help low-income families afford food. Critics of welfare have disparaged the program as a costly “handout,” while welfare advocates argue that the benefits are insufficient, since they’ve failed to keep up with rising food costs.

    The federal government shutdown began Oct. 1 when Congress was unable to pass a federal budget. Democrats are demanding Republicans agree to extend enhanced tax credits that have made health insurance through the Affordable Care Act marketplace more affordable for millions of Americans, while Republicans have denied requests to negotiate until the government reopens.

    Without the extension of the ACA subsidies, monthly healthcare premiums for Americans who don’t receive insurance through an employer or other government program could more than double. The cost of employer-provided healthcare is also projected to rise at the fastest rate in 15 years, due in part to expiring federal tax credits.

    “At the end of this year, if Congress doesn’t do its job, we are going to see 25 million Americans have their healthcare costs go up anywhere from 50 to 300 percent,” Congressman Frost said at a recent Healthcare Over Billionaires rally at an Orlando union hall.

    That could amount to hundreds, or even thousands of dollars more for health insurance per year, according to a KFF analysis.

    Yet, if the government shutdown continues, the ability of more than 40 million Americans, including 2.8 million Floridians, to buy food through SNAP is also at risk. “We know supports like food stamps and housing subsidies help many low-wage working families to maintain housing stability,” Martha Are, CEO of the Homeless Services Network of Central Florida, told Orlando Weekly. 

    “Families that are facing the loss of one or both of these benefits will absolutely be at greater risk of becoming homeless,” she said.

    Qualifying households for SNAP include individuals and families earning up to 200 percent of the federal poverty level — equal to $31,300 for an individual or $64,300 for a family of four. In Florida, most SNAP recipients are also subject to stringent work requirements, with the exception of people with disabilities, students, and parents or guardians of young children.

    Formerly known as food stamps, SNAP can serve as a lifeline for low-income adults and families who can’t afford to buy groceries (remember the peak cost of eggs?) otherwise. Are worries that the program’s delay could force families into difficult spending decisions. Do I pay my rent this next month, or do I keep my child’s belly full?

    Beneficiaries who are already experiencing homelessness, she said, “will be left in the precarious position of trying to access food pantries and soup kitchens to avoid going hungry — time they could have spent looking for work or housing.”

    Stephanie Palacios, director of advocacy and government relations for Central Florida’s largest hunger relief organization, Second Harvest, admitted that a freeze on SNAP benefits would “have a huge impact.”

    “One in seven Central Floridians is food insecure, and one in six of those individuals are children,” Palacios pointed out in a phone call. “So these are our neighbors, these are families who are working one and two jobs, or seniors who are homebound, or seniors who are on a fixed income and may not be able to adjust to high grocery prices at the grocery store.”

    Second Harvest, an affiliate of Feeding America, has contracted with DCF since 2008 to help low-income Floridians apply for SNAP benefits, so they’re well aware of the stakes. The nonprofit distributes enough food for about 300,000 meals per day through their main warehouse on Mercy Drive and through partner agencies throughout the region.

    Over the course of the government shutdown, Palacios said their partners have seen “a heightened need already,” but emphasized that they’re here to support Central Floridians, including SNAP recipients, who find themselves in need. “We’re committed to sourcing additional food as funds and community resources become available,” she said.

    Will Gov. DeSantis act?

    The Executive Office of the Governor, when asked about the possibility of a state of emergency over the issue, simply told Orlando Weekly that staff had forwarded our questions to DCF. Florida DCF did not respond to our request for comment on whether they planned to request emergency state funding in time  for publication.

    The SNAP program works by delivering benefits electronically to recipients onto an EBT card. Florida DCF notes that there “are no anticipated impacts” to October benefits. 

    The department will also continue to process and accept new applications, even if the government shutdown — the second-longest in U.S. history so far — continues.

    At least 750,000 of the federal government’s 2.1 million workers, meanwhile, have been furloughed without pay, as hundreds of thousands of others — save for a few Trump-favored exceptions — have been forced to continue working, also unpaid. In Central Florida, tens of thousands of federal workers are impacted.

    “The Trump Administration wants every federal worker to be paid — that’s why we have repeatedly urged the Democrats to reopen the government and stop hurting the American people,” a White House spokesperson told the Washington Post, in response to criticism over Trump authorizing funding to pay some, but not all, federal employees during the shutdown.

    “The Trump Administration is working day and night to mitigate the pain Democrats are causing — including by paying the troops and funding food assistance for women and children,” the spokesperson claimed.

    According to the nonpartisan Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, more than half of Florida’s SNAP participants are in families with children, and nearly three-quarters (74 percent) have a total household income below 100 percent of the federal poverty level, equal to $32,150 for a family of four.

    Where to find help

    Second Harvest has an online tool for Central Florida residents who are searching for a nearby food pantry. Here’s what you can do to find a food pantry (and hours of operation) near you:

    • Go to feedhopenow.org
    • Click on the “Find Food” tab. This will direct you to their Food Finder (that’s also available at feedhopenow.org/find-help/food-finder/)
    • Enter your ZIP code and your address to find a food pantry near you, including a phone number to call if you have any questions.

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    The Greater Orlando Aviation Authority is collecting nonperishable food items and gift cards at MCO and the Orlando Executive Airport this week

    An official statement from the airport states that contingency plans are in place should there be a “dramatic decrease” in TSA officers showing up to work

    Some Florida Republicans said Wednesday they’ll have their pay withheld or, in some cases, donate it



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  • Rep. Maxwell Frost slams ‘out of touch’ House speaker at Healthcare Over Billionaires rally in Orlando

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    Democratic U.S. Congressman Maxwell Frost joined federal employees, union representatives and local state representatives Thursday to highlight the impact of the ongoing U.S. government shutdown on Orlando’s federal workforce and what’s at stake if Republicans fail to preserve affordable healthcare costs for millions.

    “At the end of this year, if Congress doesn’t do its job, we are going to see 25 million Americans have their healthcare costs go up anywhere from 50 to 300 percent,” Frost said at a Healthcare Over Billionaires rally, flanked by a couple dozen members of the public and federal employees. 

    “When the Speaker of the House [Mike Johnson, R-LA] was asked about this, he said healthcare is an ‘extraneous issue,’” Frost pointed out, criticizing the GOP leader as “out of touch.” Johnson recently accused Democrats’ effort to hold the line on healthcare in the current fight over government funding as “trying to grab a red herring.” 

    “Maybe for a billionaire like Donald Trump, a bump in your healthcare isn’t life-changing,” Frost conceded, taking a predictable swing at the Republican president. But for a working family, he said, “That’s a matter of medicine or food. … It’s a matter of life or death.”

    The primary sticking point that led to the federal government shutdown that began Oct. 1 was a fight to preserve federal subsidies that have helped keep healthcare affordable for millions of Americans who purchase insurance through the Affordable Care Act marketplace. Those tax credits, first made available through the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, are set to expire by the end of 2025 unless Congress extends them. 

    If the subsidies do expire, monthly healthcare premiums for those ACA marketplace plans could more than double, potentially costing low- and moderate-income earners hundreds or even thousands of dollars more per year. Frost estimates this could affect 200,000 people in his Orlando-area district alone.

    KFF analysis of how changes to ACA tax credits could affect health plan enrollees. Credit: KFF

    “Republicans have chosen to shut down this government because they don’t want to do anything about healthcare and because they want more room in the federal budget to give their billionaire donors and mega-corporations a tax break,” Frost said. “And it’s disgusting.”

    Impact on the federal workforce

    Also at stake amid the shutdown is reliable paychecks for more than 1 million federal government employees across the country. That group includes thousands of people in Central Florida who work for the Departments of Veterans Affairs, Transportation, Homeland Security and other critical agencies.

    “Every day that this shutdown continues, more families fall behind, more stress builds and more essential services are put at risk,” said Tatiana Finlay, a union representative for the American Federation of Government Employees Local 556, which represents TSA officers at Orlando International Airport. 

    “Federal workers don’t stop showing up,” she said, referring to federal workers who haven’t been furloughed. “But each day without pay chips away at the stability and dignity they earn.”

    Amid the shutdown, many federal government employees are forced to either work without pay, or have already been furloughed (also without pay) until Congress reaches a funding agreement that will allow the government to reopen.

    Federal employees have conventionally been guaranteed back pay once a government shutdown lifts, although a recent White House memo this week floated that, just maybe, they are not entitled to that after all.

    Speaking at the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 606’s union hall in Orlando Thursday, Finlay recalled the last federal government shutdown that occurred during Trump’s first term in the White House in 2018. 

    “I remember the last one — the silence in the break rooms, the fear of opening banking apps, the exhaustion of putting on a uniform knowing no paycheck was coming,” Finlay said. “I remember co-workers carpooling because they couldn’t afford gas, and officers holding back tears because they didn’t know how to feed their kids.”

    “And yet we showed up,” said Finlay. “Because that’s what federal workers do. We serve this country even when it feels like the system is not serving us.”

    The government shutdown, she added, “isn’t just about a missing paycheck,” but priorities.

    “Federal workers don’t stop showing up, but each day without pay chips away at the stability and dignity they earn.”

    The federal workforce has already taken a hit under the Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency, a novel (and controversial) initiative that ordered federal agencies to drastically reduce their workforce.

    The U.S. Department of Education — a prominent target of right-wing forces — is now hanging by a thread, the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) has been dismantled, and the Social Security Administration has reportedly already lost 20 percent of its staff since Trump took office.

    The White House on Friday also reportedly began moving forward with permanent layoffs of employees in various departments, including Homeland Security, as previously threatened by White House budget director and Project 2025 architect Russell Vought. The move has been slammed by the AFGE, the largest union of federal workers, and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees.

    “A budget is not just a financial document. It’s a statement of values,” said Finlay. “It tells workers, families and communities whether they matter.”

    ‘Kicking the most vulnerable to the curb’

    State Reps. Anna Eskamani and Rita Harris, both Democrats, also joined Frost’s rally Thursday, highlighting the stakes of adequate government funding in a state that hasn’t expanded access to Medicaid (even though the federal government, not the state, would fund most of the expansion).

    Florida is also expected to see more low-income Floridians kicked off social welfare programs like SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) moving forward, as a result of eligibility changes made through Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill” signed into law in July.

    “We reviewed the changes here in Florida to Medicaid, to SNAP and to TANF [Temporary Assistance for Needy Families] because of the big, ugly bill, and we learned that more than 181,000 Floridians who currently have exemptions to the administrative burdens to access SNAP are no longer going to have those exemptions,” said Eskamani, who attended presentations on the topic during legislative committee meetings earlier this week. 

    “That includes our veterans, that includes foster youth, and it includes immigrants with legal status, including asylum seekers and refugees and victims of human trafficking,” she added.

    “This comes from the party that says they care about veterans, they care about our survivors of human trafficking,” Eskamani said of the GOP. “They say they care about the most vulnerable, and here they are kicking the most vulnerable to the curb.”

    Congressional Republicans, meanwhile, argue that Democrats are to blame for the government shutdown (although the majority of Americans disagree) and claim Democrats are being unreasonable in their demands.

    “They’re trying to make this about health care. It’s not. It’s about keeping Congress operating so we can get to health care. We always were going to. They’re lying to you,” Republican House Speaker Johnson told reporters on Thursday. “The health care issues were always going to be something discussed and deliberated and contemplated and debated in October and November.”

    Florida Democratic Party chair Nikki Fried, however — who made a surprise visit to Frost’s rally Thursday night — argued that Democrats don’t trust Republicans will meaningfully return to the issue for negotiation. And they want to settle this now, not later.

    “We stand firm with our family members, and we’re asking Republicans to do their damn jobs,” Fried said.


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    It’s the latest indication that DeSantis’ dubious war with Disney is in fact over

    Art² features outdoor seating, local food vendors, craft beverages and more

    Home games will be played at Inter&Co Stadium



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