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Farm bill with SNAP restrictions passes narrowly in House

Fotokostic / Shutterstock.

On Thursday evening, the U.S. House of Representatives approved the 2018 farm bill, H.R. 2, which included controversial changes to food assistance programs that Catholic leaders had voiced concern over.

The Farm Bill is the main agricultural and food policy guide for the country. It provides funding for a number of programs and regulations in the food and agriculture industries.

The party-line vote was 213-211. No Democrats voted for the bill, and 20 Republicans voted against it. The same bill failed in May, when 30 Republicans voted against the legislation.

The most controversial element of the bill was a provision to change the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, previously called food stamps.

The farm bill would tighten restrictions on eligibility for SNAP. It would require people between the ages of 18 and 59 who receive SNAP to either have a job or participate in a job training program for 20 hours per week. Adults with disabilities or young dependents are exempted from this requirement.

Penalties for not complying with work requirements increase under the bill, from one month ineligibility to one year for a first violation, and from three months to three years for a second violation.

When the farm bill was being discussed in April, representatives from the U.S. bishops conference, Catholic Relief Services, Catholic Charities USA, Catholic Rural Life, and the National Council of the U.S. Society of St. Vincent de Paul wrote a letter to leaders of the Congressional Agriculture Committee.

"Efforts to improve state workforce training programs by providing case-management, streamlining workforce programs, providing increased training slots and setting minimum standards are welcomed," they said.

"However, the new workforce training program appears to lack sufficient investment to meet the additional demand for meaningful job training and skill building that will be generated by the new requirements," they said in the April letter. The letter noted that the majority of SNAP recipients currently work.

"Moreover, rural communities may find compliance especially challenging given that job training programs are often located far away, and there is insufficient access to transportation," the letter said.

Speaker of the House Paul Ryan said the passage of the farm bill was a step "moving toward a poverty-fighting system," where Americans will be able to move out of a cycle of poverty.

"This is a big deal," said Ryan in a statement published on his website.

Ryan referred to the SNAP reforms as "critical," saying they will "close the skills gap, better equip our workforce, and encourage people to move from welfare to work."

"These reforms will return agency to people, rather than keeping it in government, empowering individuals to reach their full potential and make the most of their lives."

President Donald Trump, posting on Twitter, said that he was "so happy to see work requirements included" in the version of the bill that passed the House of Representatives.

"Big win for the farmers," said Trump.

The bill now moves on to the Senate, where a bipartisan compromise bill is expected to be debated next week.

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