March 2, 2026

Testimony on SB 1758 Provided to the Florida Senate Appropriations Committee

FPI provided the oral testimony below to the Florida Senate Appropriations Committee on Senate Bill (SB) 1758.

Thank you very much, I’m Cindy Huddleston from Florida Policy Institute.

The bill (SB 1758) would impose SNAP Employment and Training (E&T) requirements — having to do with work — among older Floridians up to age 65, which is not allowed by H.R. 1 or any other federal law.

H.R. 1 changed the federal law that governs something called “Able Bodied Adults Without Dependent Time-Limits" (ABAWDs) to expand those time-limit work requirements to people up to age 65. But H.R. 1 did not change the federal law that governs mandatory SNAP E&T work requirements.

SNAP E&T work requirements and ABAWD work requirements are two completely different requirements with different rules that govern those work mandates. USDA is unequivocal, saying that H.R. 1 does not change the upper age limit for the general work requirements. Individuals aged 60 or older remain exempt from mandatory participation in SNAP employment and training.

The bill would also require photos on SNAP EBT cards, which would increase administrative costs that could otherwise go toward reducing the SNAP error rate in Florida. And this SNAP error rate looks at only inadvertent mistakes that have been made by the household or the state agency; it does not attempt to measure any kind of fraud, it’s just inadvertent mistakes.

Photo EBT cards are not mandated by H.R. 1, and have been shown by studies to exacerbate the difficulty using the card by family members who are entitled right now to use their household’s EBT card even if their photo isn’t on it, in places that have photo IDs.

So, that photo EBT card mandate would make it harder for family members to use the card to shop for their family. And it would also, studies have shown, increase the stigma that we all sadly know is attached, in many cases, to people who are using SNAP. At the same time, studies show that these photo IDs have very little effectiveness.

So the bottom line is that, the mandate to have a photo EBT card will clearly add administrative costs to a program that is already faced, as we have heard, with potentially cataclysmic grocery costs in the coming years.

Thank you.

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