By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
TheLevisaLazer.comTheLevisaLazer.comTheLevisaLazer.com
  • News
    • Regional News
    • Announcements
    • Recollections
  • Sports
    • Big Sandy Sportsman
  • Lifestyles
  • Courthouse
  • Business
  • Education
  • Health
  • Obituaries
Reading: TRUMP ADMINISTRATION MUST PAY FOOD STAMP PROGRAM: APPEALS COURT
Share
Font ResizerAa
TheLevisaLazer.comTheLevisaLazer.com
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • News
    • Regional News
    • Announcements
    • Recollections
  • Sports
    • Big Sandy Sportsman
  • Lifestyles
  • Courthouse
  • Business
  • Education
  • Health
  • Obituaries
Follow US
  • Lazer ad prices and sizes
  • Stay Ahead with Lazer Sports News
  • Regional News Headlines: Daily News Briefing
  • Courthouse
  • Old Website Archives
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
  • Ad-bannerfuneral
  • leader1
  • PMC_CAMPAIGN-3Q-REGIONAL-TRANSFER_LEVISA-LAZER
  • Three-Rivers-HH-digital-ad-A-419x74
  • 1._qualitymetalsus
  • Foothills-Bundle
  • KFB-banner-Wborder
  • terminator-banner-ad
TheLevisaLazer.com > Blog > Editorials/Letters > TRUMP ADMINISTRATION MUST PAY FOOD STAMP PROGRAM: APPEALS COURT
Editorials/Letters

TRUMP ADMINISTRATION MUST PAY FOOD STAMP PROGRAM: APPEALS COURT

Special For The Lazer
Last updated: November 10, 2025 1:11 pm
Special For The Lazer
Share
SHARE
US News

Trump Administration Must Pay Food Stamp Program: Appeals Court

‘We conclude that the government has failed to meet the stay factors as to the enforcement order,’ the court ruled.

Zachary Stieber

Senior Reporter
11/10/2025|Updated: 11/10/2025

The Trump administration cannot withhold money from the federal food stamp program, known as SNAP, an appeals court ruled late Nov. 9.

The government is not likely to succeed in its appeal of an order that required the government to fully fund SNAP amid the government shutdown, a panel of judges on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit said.

“We do not take lightly the government’s concern that money used to fund November SNAP payments will be unavailable for other important nutrition assistance programs,” U.S. Circuit Judge Julie Rikelman wrote for the panel.

“But we cannot conclude that the district court abused its discretion in determining that the overwhelming evidence of widespread harm that a stay would cause right now, by leaving tens of millions of Americans without food as winter approaches, outweighed the potential monetary harm to the government and [the other nutrition programs], months into the future.”
The ruling upholds an order from a district judge, who ruled on Nov. 6 that the government failed to comply with an earlier order that mandated quick partial SNAP payments for November or full funding of the program for the month.

The new ruling, however, does not immediately require the government to fund SNAP. That’s because later Friday, after the First Circuit declined to stay the district judge’s order, Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson entered an administrative stay of the district court order.

Supreme Court Temporarily Halts Order Requiring Government to Fully Fund SNAP
Jackson said the stay would be in place until the appeals court issued a ruling explaining why it was not blocking the order.

“This administrative stay will terminate forty-eight hours after the First Circuit’s resolution of the pending motion, which the First Circuit is expected to issue with dispatch,” she wrote at the time.

SNAP serves about 42 million Americans. The average participant receives about $187.20 per month on an electronic card, which can be used at grocery stores to buy produce and other items.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture, which runs the program with states, had said it would not fund SNAP at all starting in November due to the shutdown. The district judge initially ordered the government to choose between using money from its contingency fund to partially pay November benefits or fully funding the program with contingency money in combination with funds earned from tariffs.

Officials chose the former but did not meet the deadline included in the order for getting the money to beneficiaries, the judge said on Friday. He said the government had lost its ability to choose and must fully fund the program.

The department on Saturday told states to undo steps taken to disperse full benefits. The Senate, meanwhile, advanced a bill that would end the shutdown if it is approved by Congress and signed by President Donald Trump
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Copy Link Print
Share
Previous Article LOUISA CITY COUNCIL MEETING CANCELLED IN OBSERVANCE OF VETERANS DAY 2025
Next Article U.S. SENATE ADVANCES BILL TO END RECORD-BREAKING GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN
Ad imageAd image

Stay Connected

FacebookLike
TwitterFollow
InstagramFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
LinkedInFollow

Latest News

Dawgs Take Sting Out Of Hornets, Face Johnson Central For Class 2A Section 8 Title Saturday
Stay Ahead with Lazer Sports News
Lady Dawgs Beat Perry Co. Central To Set Up A Title Game Clash Against Johnson Central On Saturday
Stay Ahead with Lazer Sports News
LAWRENCE COUNTY’S FINAL BALLOT FOR MAY PRIMARY ELECTION RELEASED BY CLERK
Stay Connected with Local News Today
LC FISCAL COURT APPROVES STATE ADVANCEMENT FOR COUNTY CLERK IN SPECIAL MEETING
Courthouse
//

In God We Trust – Established 2008

Quick Link

  • Lazer ad prices and sizes
  • Stay Ahead with Lazer Sports News
  • Regional News Headlines: Daily News Briefing
  • Courthouse
  • Old Website Archives

Contact Us

(606)-638-0123 (606)-624-9019 markgrayson@me.com

Recent News

Facing Hunger Foodbank Hosts a Mobile Distribution in Lawrence County, KY
Announcements
TheLevisaLazer.comTheLevisaLazer.com
Follow US
© 2025 All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?

X