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May 29, 2026

SNAC Newsletter: May 2026

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  1. Florida Advocacy Organizations Respond to the Attorney General’s Public Assistance Task Force
  2. SNAP Farm Bill Update
  3. New Blog: H.R. 1’s Expanded Work-Reporting Requirements for SNAP Participants Hurt Floridians and the Economy
  4. ACA Marketplace Enrollment Declines 
  5. The Department of Health and Human Services Issues 2024 TANF Data
  6. Webinar: Property Tax Updates on June 4
  7. Florida Policy Summit: Register Now!
  8. Action! Request Your Petition to Put Medicaid Expansion on the Ballot in Florida 
  9. SNAC Resources and Latest Research from FPI

Florida Advocacy Organizations Respond to the Attorney General’s Public Assistance Task Force 

Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier and the Agency for Health Care Administration announced the creation of a new task force to investigate fraud in public assistance programs, despite existing oversight bodies like the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit already serving that function. Many advocates are concerned that undue investigations into these claims will result in pauses to critical programs like Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). Florida advocates are urging state and federal leaders to refrain from reducing access to Medicaid and SNAP under the guise of combating fraud, as it may harm the very people these programs are intended to serve. 

SNAP Farm Bill Update

The Senate may release its version of a Farm Bill in June 2026. Nicknamed the “skinny farm bill,” some members have expressed a desire for the Senate version to include a fix for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) cost sharing of grocery benefits mandated by H.R. 1. The Food Research & Action Center (FRAC) is spearheading a push for people to urge their senators (in Florida, Sen. Rick Scott and Sen. Ashley Moody) to reverse the cuts made by H.R. 1 to SNAP both by email and, if possible, in person during the Memorial Day recess (May 22–June 1). Please consider joining that effort.

New Blog: H.R. 1’s Expanded Work-Reporting Requirements for SNAP Participants Hurt Floridians and the Economy

H.R. 1, the federal budget reconciliation bill passed by Congress in July 2025, cut the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) by $187 billion. One of these cuts expands the categories of people who will only be able to receive food assistance for three months in a three-year period if they do not meet a mandatory 20-hour-per-week work-reporting requirement. This cut extends work-reporting requirements related to the three-month time limit to older participants up to age 65, people experiencing homelessness, parents of children at least 14 years old, veterans, and former foster youth. 

Continue reading the blog here

ACA Marketplace Enrollment Declines 

Last year, the federal government failed to extend enhanced premium tax credits in the Affordable Care Act (ACA) Marketplace. Over 4.7 million Floridians relied on these tax credits to keep their premium costs low and their health care affordable. KFF released a preliminary analysis this month showing that premium payments increased by an average of 58 percent. Florida’s Marketplace coverage has dropped 4 percent this year so far, with increases likely to come. Over 1 million people did not re-apply for coverage, and overall data about enrollment likely will not be available for another year due to the fact that people will lose coverage for not paying their new, higher premiums. During this time, it will be important to advocate for Medicaid expansion to “catch” individuals who fall off of the health care coverage cliff — meaning these Floridians will not make enough to afford marketplace coverage, but will make too much to qualify for Medicaid. 

The Department of Health and Human Services Issues 2024 TANF Data

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) issued its “Characteristics and Financial Circumstances of TANF Recipients” for Fiscal Year 2024 on April 24, 2026. The 2024 data show that 58,960 people in Florida were participating in the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program, down from 71,995 in 2023. Of these, 38,972 (66 percent) were children and 19,988 were adults in 2024.

Participation has declined even more since 2024: Florida’s TANF caseload dropped to 28,084* in December 2025. This decline is  attributable to Florida’s harsh TANF policies, such as family cap, which makes many newborns ineligible; full family sanctions, which take away the entire family’s benefits for perceived noncooperation with work requirements even though studies suggest that many families who are sanctioned have significant barriers to employment; Florida’s shortened time limit for participation; and, an inadequate TANF payment level that has not been revised by the Florida Legislature for over three decades.

*Note: The hyperlink opens a download of a spreadsheet

Webinar: Property Tax Updates on June 4

The Governor proposed a ballot question that would eventually eliminate homestead property taxes. This would have devastating impacts on local services, schools, emergency response, libraries, and more. On Thursday, June 4 at 12:30 PM, Florida Policy Institute's Director of Research, Esteban Santis, PhD, and Chief Strategy & Development Officer, Holly Bullard, will share insights about the fallout of the special session on property taxes, the impacts on communities, and how you can be involved in what is next.

Register Now

Florida Policy Summit: Register Now!

Florida Policy Institute (FPI) is hosting the second Florida Policy Summit on September 16 and 17 at Lido Beach Resort in Sarasota FL. Our theme for this year's summit — Solidarity · Courage · Hope — reflects our commitment to using our collective strength and resolve to build a brighter future, and our programming will be grounded in these values. We will explore topics like policy research and advocacy, strategic partnerships and coalition building, creative communications and narrative strategies, and more! 

For more information and registration, visit FloridaPolicySummit.org

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

Get Your Petition

SNAC Resources and Latest Research from FPI

Essential Resources

Research from Florida Policy Institute (FPI)

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