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February 25, 2026

SNAC Newsletter: February 2026

Menu:

  1. Register Now! 2026 Legislative Session Updates
  2. Action! Request Your Petition to Put Medicaid Expansion on the Ballot in Florida
  3. Legislative Update: SNAP Provisions in SB 1758 and HB 693
  4. Legislative Update: Medicaid Provisions in SB 1758 and HB 693
  5. Legislative Update: SB 1462 and CS/HB 1267
  6. FNS Clarifies Role of Online Retailers in States with Food Restriction Waivers
  7. OFA Posts TANF Spending Tables for Fiscal Year 2024
  8. OFA Posts Updated TANF Caseload Data
  9. Launching the Tampa Food Security Project
  10. Save the Date! Florida Policy Summit: September 16–17
  11. SNAC Resources and Latest Research from FPI

Register Now! SNAC Legislative Session Updates

Florida’s legislative session runs from January 13 through March 13. Join us as we hold this space for SNAC to share information more frequently during session. Coalition members can share updates, challenges, questions, calls to action, or other information related to safety net programs, policy, or advocacy. The meetings will not have formal presentations or planned agendas. Florida Policy Institute (FPI) will share updates when applicable, but meeting discussions will primarily be determined by the coalition members who participate and share. SNAC members are also welcome to join and learn from others if they do not have updates to share.

Meetings will be held every other Thursday at 10 AM during session:

  • Feb 26
  • Mar 12

Register Here

Action! Request Your Petition to Put Medicaid Expansion on the Ballot in Florida

Banner: Sign the petition to help expand Medicaid in Florida

Florida Decides Healthcare is a ballot initiative campaign that aims to expand Medicaid eligibility in Florida and close the coverage gap. The campaign is collecting over a million signatures by January 31, 2028, to qualify for the 2028 general election ballot.

Florida voters can help expand access to affordable healthcare by requesting a Medicaid Expansion petition. When you ask for a petition, it will be mailed to you with a prepaid return envelope. Just sign it and send it back. After you request yours, please share the link with friends, family, and your community, and encourage them to do the same. Every petition brings us closer to putting healthcare on the ballot.

Note: If you signed the petition prior to 2026, you will need to request a new petition. Due to changes in state law, the campaign had to restart petition collection efforts on February 1, 2026.

Pd. pol. adv. provided in-kind by Florida Policy Institute, 1001 N. Orange Ave., Orlando, FL 32801

Legislative Update: SNAP Provisions in SB 1758 and HB 693

Both SB 1758 and HB 693 would impose Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) Employment and Training (E&T) work requirements on more people than is allowed by H.R. 1 or any other federal law.

  • H.R. 1 changed the federal law that governs “able-bodied adults without dependents” (ABAWD) to expand time limit work requirements to people up to age 65, as well as to parents or other members of a household with a dependent child who is 14 years old or older (among others).
  • H.R. 1 did not change the federal law that governs mandatory SNAP E&T work requirements. However, the bills in the state legislature attempt to impose mandatory SNAP E&T work requirements not only onto people up to age 65 — which violates federal law — but also onto people with children 14 years old or older in their household, which is contrary to how Florida has previously chosen to run its SNAP E&T program.

The bills also mandate that the Department of Children and Families (DCF) develop and implement a food assistance payment accuracy improvement plan to reduce Florida’s SNAP error rate (i.e., non-fraud mistakes) to below 6 percent.

  • The required components for the improvement plan in these bills may reflect a common sense first step to lowering the error rate (e.g., improved training and data sourcing). However, other measures such as additional staffing, workload management, and technological upgrades — which will require funding from lawmakers — will also be critical to reducing errors.

Both bills would tighten verification of shelter and utility costs — which DCF says are a source of errors made in SNAP — by prohibiting self-attestation and requiring documentation.

  • Although the bills would require DCF to adopt policies that accommodate participants who are unable to provide documentation of shelter or utilities because they have recently moved to their new residence, they neglect to address the other barriers that some participants may have that make it difficult for them to provide documentation.
  • Both federal and state law require that state agencies assist households in obtaining required verification when they need help, so long as the household is cooperating with the state agency. The bills should be amended to reflect that duty.

SB 1758 would also require a photo on the SNAP EBT card, which has been shown in other states to impede the ability of people with disabilities and family members to use benefits. One in seven Floridians already face hunger, and these policies will only make it harder for hungry people to access food.

Both bills may actually exacerbate the likelihood of SNAP errors through, among other things,

  1. A requirement for a photo EBT card (SB 1758), which will likely have little effectiveness and only add administrative costs to a program already faced with potentially increased grocery costs.  
  2. Increased verification requirements imposed on participants (SB 1758 and HB 693), which may result in "failure to assist" errors committed by the state and errors that are caused by faulty or inadequate technology (e.g., not enough call agents to speak with participants, difficulties uploading technology).

To date, HB 693  should move to the floor of the House while SB 1758 is in Senate Appropriations (no date set yet).

See bill summaries for more information: SB 1758/HB 1453 and HB 693SB 1758/HB 1453 and HB 693

Legislative Update: Medicaid Provisions in SB 1758 and HB 693

Florida’s legislators have proposed SB 1758/HB 1453 and HB 693, which include harmful changes to our state’s Medicaid program. SB 1758 adds work-reporting requirements to Florida’s Medicaid program, which make no sense. Parents meeting these requirements would work their way into the coverage gap. Furthermore, these provisions are misaligned with the federal law, which does not permit work-reporting requirements on non-expansion populations. The bill was reported as favorable by the Health Policy Committee with 8 yeas and 3 nays on February 2nd, and is now in Senate Appropriations — its final stop. This committee will meet on March 2nd, but this bill has not officially been assigned. We echo the sentiment that all of the provisions related to work-reporting requirements should be removed from SB 1758.

HB 693 has been recently amended to remove language that would have stripped health care access from Florida’s lawfully residing children. Its most recent stop in the legislature was the Health and Human Services Committee on February 24th, and it passed with 17 yeas and 7 nays. Broadly, there are still concerns about provisions in the bill; however, the change is a positive step. Florida’s Medicaid Defense Coalition continues to advocate for health care access, highlighting the harms of these bills to both legislatures and the media.

See bill summaries for more information: SB 1758/HB 1453 and HB 693SB 1758/HB 1453 and HB 693

See Statement on Florida House Amending HB 693

Legislative Update: SB 1462 and CS/HB 1267

PCS for HB 1267 and the proposed amendment to SB 1462 would repeal the law denying either Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) or Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) to people convicted of drug trafficking — but only for victims of human trafficking. Limiting the repeal to this small group of people will only contribute to recidivism and cost the state money. Repealing the ban for everyone, in comparison, would have very little cost; the staff analysis (see page 75) of PCS for HB 1267 says: “According to DCF, in 2025, three individuals were denied TCA benefits and 62 individuals were denied SNAP benefits on the basis of a drug trafficking conviction. The number of people otherwise eligible who choose not to apply due to disqualification due to a felony drug trafficking conviction is unknown.”

CS/SB 1462 has been referred to the Appropriations Committee on Health and Human and the Committee on Fiscal Policy. PCS for HB 1267 has two more committees of reference: the Health Care Budget Subcommittee and Health and Human Services Committee.

FNS Clarifies Role of Online Retailers in States with Food Restriction Waivers

The Food and Nutrition Service (FNS) has issued clarification of retailer responsibilities in states with Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) food restriction waivers. Florida is due to implement such a waiver in April 2026. Among other things, the clarification states that groceries purchased with SNAP from online warehouses must comply with the restrictions imposed by the participant’s home state.

OFA Posts TANF Spending Tables for Fiscal Year 2024

On February 10, 2026, the Federal Office of Family Assistance (OFA) posted its annual tables on how states spend funds for the Temporary Assistance for Need Families (TANF) program. The report shows that Florida only spends 14.6 percent of its TANF funds on basic assistance, which is significantly less than the nationwide average of 21.8 percent spent on basic assistance. “Basic assistance” refers primarily to actual cash assistance, instead of things like child welfare and childcare. In Florida, where the state’s benefit levels have lost more than 49 percent of their value since 1997, benefits are woefully inadequate to meet the basic needs of children in the program. The most TANF assistance that a family of three can receive in Florida is $303, which is only 17.6 percent of the $1,719 median gross rent in Florida.

OFA Posts Updated TANF Caseload Data

The Federal Office of Family Assistance (OFA) published updated caseload information for the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program on February 5, 2026. It breaks down each state’s TANF population by number of families and adult and child recipients (among other data points).

Launching the Tampa Food Security Project

Florida IMPACT is excited to launch the Tampa Food Security Project, a new initiative in Tampa focused on improving access to healthy food, strengthening nutrition education, and supporting families across Hillsborough County. The initiative will launch in East Tampa at Bible Truth Ministries Academy and reflects our continued commitment to addressing hunger and building stronger, healthier communities through collaboration, education, and equitable access to nutritious food.

Florida IMPACT at Meecham Farm

The Tampa Food Security Project brings together nutrition education, community workshops, and food distribution to support families in meaningful and practical ways. Through an after-school nutrition education program, children will engage in age-appropriate lessons paired with healthy snacks that encourage positive lifelong eating habits. In addition, community-based nutrition workshops will provide families with tools to better understand nutrition, prepare healthy meals, and navigate barriers to food access.

To further strengthen food security, Florida IMPACT will host quarterly community food distribution events in targeted neighborhoods, ensuring families have consistent access to healthy food options. Together, these efforts are designed to increase nutrition awareness, improve food access, and support the overall well-being of families across Tampa.

For more information about the Tampa Food Security Project, contact Asheena Moses, Statewide Outreach and Advocacy Manager, at amoses@flimpact.org.

Save the Date! Florida Policy Summit: September 16–17

Florida Policy Institute is hosting our second Florida Policy Summit. The event will bring together partners from across the state to discuss how we can build on our shared vision for a more equitable Florida.

The summit will be held on Wednesday, September 16 and Thursday, September 17 at the Lido Beach Resort in Sarasota.

Stay tuned for more details!

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