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    In the midst of SNAP uncertainties, local organizations are pivoting to meet community needs

    From mutual aid deliveries to emergency funds, neighborhood groups are bracing for a surge in food need and confusion over SNAP pauses.

    Volunteer at the Northwest Mutual Aid Collective packs bags for distribution. (Photo: Rasheed Z. Ajamu)

    Northwest Mutual Aid Collective‘s Linda James-Rivera says she’s seeing some of the highest levels of food insecurity in her Philadelphia communities due to lingering issues around SNAP for the past couple of months.

    “I just signed up five families in two days,” Co-Founder James-Rivera says of the group’s free delivery service, providing fresh produce and pantry essentials to seniors, disabled residents, and low-income families across Northwest Philly. “That is the first time that has ever happened.”

    Ahead of the government shutdown, she was one of many organizational leaders preparing for Nov. 1, when approximately 42 million citizens across the nation were expected to lose Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, food benefits. 

    The SNAP stoppage compounds the effects of Trump’s H.R. 1 Bill, which cut funds for state food and health assistance programs that have either halted or reduced benefits for low-income families.

    Of the 2 million people in Pennsylvania receiving SNAP, nearly 472,000 reside in the Philadelphia area. Before lingering issues caused by the shutdown, there were already new work requirements and health exemptions that people across the state would have to meet to maintain assistance, as reported by GIH.

    Following the shutdown, Pennsylvania became one of 25 states suing the Trump administration over the suspension of SNAP food benefits, claiming that it is illegally withholding funds essential to fighting food insecurity.

    Since then, the Trump administration has announced that it’ll fund 50% of SNAP food benefits after two federal judges ordered the administration and the United States Department of Agriculture to cover food assistance during the shutdown.

    Locally, Mayor Cherelle Parker has signed an executive order to allocate $7 million for communities that have had their SNAP impacted, deriving from a $14 million plan designed to help residents and businesses during the shutdown. 

    In the plan, funds will help nonprofit agencies deliver food assistance for locals in need in collaboration with community-based organizations.

    Organizations serving families across the Northwest and the city as a whole were already feeling the impact. Those at the forefront of food justice have not only observed similar trends among the locals who use their services but were already preparing for an unprecedented time.

    Sign at the Crossroads Women’s Center. (Photo: Rasheed Z. Ajamu)
    Terms for engagement of the Germantown Community Fridge. (Photo: Rasheed Z. Ajamu)

    “There’s times that our volunteers aren’t really able to put food into the fridges because people are just there waiting for someone to come fill it up,” said Shannon Sims, communications coordinator. A family of four recently told Sims their SNAP benefits were being cut in half.

    She also noted a decline in donations to the fridge from other organizations, prompting the fridge organizers to find other resorts to keep an abundance of food for community members.

    “We’re figuring out little scrappy ways to do this, like doing canned food drives at places,” Sims added. “We’re looking into fundraising options for us, potentially dine and donate type of stuff, so we can raise funds to get more grocery shops into our fridges.”

    She mentioned that organizers are still working on a more strategic plan to keep locals fed, stating that they’re doing what they can “to put full throttle into resources, [while talking] with neighbors to see what needs  are necessarily meant.”

    To accommodate an even heavier spike after Nov. 1, Sims is also working to compile a list of other food pantries and fridges in the area that neighbors can use as a resource if their fridges are empty at a given time.

    “Neighbors are definitely feeling it, and they’re making it known that they’re feeling it. We hear stories from parents and elders about their life situations,” Sims said.