These days, every time we turn on the news, something else is shifting and by the time you
are reading this they are bound to have changed again. SNAP benefits have been caught in a political back-and-forth, there is uncertainty around federal funding, families are wondering what it means for their next grocery trip.
The conversations in Washington seem far away, but the impacts land right here, in the
Monadnock region, in our kitchens, our neighborhoods, and at the doors of The River
Center.
- A federal appeals court recently ordered the USDA to fully fund November SNAP benefits for roughly 42 million recipients.
- Before this order could be implemented nationwide, a Supreme Court Justice issued a
temporary stay, leaving the programโs status uncertain in many areas. - Some states have already issued full payments, while others were directed to reverse or
reduce benefits. - Meanwhile, the USDA formally reduced maximum SNAP allotments for November to about 65 % of the typical monthly benefit.
In New Hampshire, the state has been actively stepping in to help residents. As of Nov. 7, the state DHHS announced that all SNAP recipients in the state received their full
November benefits on their EBT cards, providing relief despite ongoing federal uncertainty.
Additionally, the state has earmarked $2 million to support mobile food pantries and
expand traditional pantry operations, ensuring that families have access to food even if
there are delays or reductions at the federal level. SNAP-only mobile food pantries are
continuing through at least Nov. 14, providing targeted support to families with urgent needs.
What this means locally: families are receiving their full benefits for now, but the rules keep shifting โ and that unpredictability is its own burden.
When SNAP benefits are delayed, reduced, or unclear, families who were already stretching
every dollar suddenly have even less room to breathe. That uncertainty creates ripple
effects โ longer lines at food distributions, more stress, and more people calling us saying, โI never thought Iโd be in this position, but here I am.โ
Then thereโs the human side of all this.
Recently, a close friend of mine reminded me just how layered food insecurity really is.
Because of health issues, she cannot stand in long lines, something many of us donโt think
twice about. The food distributions happening across the region are doing incredible, heroic work. But even with all that effort, she still finds herself without access to what she needs. Everyone on the food line is there because of circumstances, but no two circumstances are the same. Hunger is never only about food. Itโs also about transportation, mobility, chronic health issues, caregiving responsibilities, access to information, and whether someone can physically and emotionally manage the process of getting help.
Our community is rising to the occasion, as it always does: Volunteers stepping up,
organizations coordinating, neighbors helping neighbors. Early on, it was amazing to see
how many were interested and have used a resource guide put together by our office with
resources available in this region. That is what we do. But these efforts, as vital as they are,
donโt erase the truth that we need long-term, systemic change. We need solutions that make sure people can actually reach the help thatโs offered, and that when they arrive, the
experience honors their dignity and acknowledges their challenges.
At The River Center, and at other family resource centers nearby, weโre seeing all of this up
close. Weโre hearing from families who are worried, overwhelmed, and tired of feeling like
the ground keeps moving beneath them. In those conversations, one thing becomes clear:
what carries people through isnโt certainty, itโs connection. Itโs knowing there is a place they can call, a door they can walk through, a person who will listen without judgment.
While federal decisions shift day by day, hereโs what isnโt changing:
We are here.
We are showing up.
We are listening.
We are adapting.
We are helping families navigate whatever tomorrow brings.
And weโre not alone. Our entire regional network (food pantries, school systems, healthcare partners, volunteers) is working tirelessly to make sure no one falls through the cracks. But we need to keep pushing for a stronger, more responsive system. A system where someone like my friend doesnโt have to choose between going hungry and standing in a line her body physically canโt manage.
As we move through this uncertain season, Iโm reminded that hope is not naรฏve, and itโs
certainly not passive. Hope is taking action. Hope is making calls, bringing a bag of groceries to a neighbor, advocating for policies that actually meet people where they are. Hope is choosing, day after day, to build a community where every person matters.
If you are struggling right now, youโre not alone. Reach out to us at The River Center. If you
are someone who wants to help, there is a place for you, too. In times like these, our greatest strength isnโt perfect systems, itโs each other.
And together, weโll get through this storm, and, potentially, we will have learned lessons to
help make our systems more prepared in the future.
Sources:
- Reuters: Trump administration cannot withhold full funding for food aid, US appeals
court rules - AP News: Supreme Court Justice issues temporary stay on full SNAP benefits
- USDA FNS: Revised SNAP benefits update, November 2025
- The Guardian: USDA tells states to “undo” SNAP benefits
- New York OTDA: SNAP benefits and shutdown update
- NH DHHS: DHHS announces availability of full SNAP benefits
- WMUR: SNAP/WIC benefits continue in NH amid federal uncertainty
