Produce at a Virginia grocery store in 2011. (Photo by Lance Cheung/U.S. Department of Agriculture)
WASHINGTON — The U.S. Department of Agriculture said in a memo Friday the agency’s contingency fund cannot legally be used to provide food assistance benefits for more than 42 million people in November, as the government shutdown drags on.
The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, has about $6 billion in a multi-year contingency fund — short of the roughly $9 billion needed to cover a full month of the program, putting November benefits in jeopardy.
Because of a stalemate in Congress over a stopgap spending bill, the government shut down on Oct. 1 without new SNAP funding enacted.
The agency also said states would not be reimbursed if they use their own funds to cover the

Nebraska Examiner
America News
WGN Radio 720 Business
The Journal Gazette
Associated Press US News
WVLT
WHAS 11
The radio station 99.5 The Apple
Tampa Bay Times Health
Raw Story