Without SNAP, Black children, who come from food insecure households, will have to figure out where their next meal is coming from when they go home from school,

By Alvin Buyinza
Word in Black

A banner reads: “EBT (Electronic Benefit Transfer) Accepted Here,” at El Recuerdo Market in Los Angeles, Oct. 31, 2025, after two federal judges ordered President Donald Trump’s administration to continue funding SNAP during the government shutdown. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

A federal judge in Rhode Island has ordered the Trump administration on Oct. 31 to tap into emergency funds to pay for the Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program hours before the federal dollars for SNAP were expected to dry out. 

In an oral ruling, U.S. District Judge John McConnell Jr. ordered the United States Department of Agriculture to tap into contingency funds to fuel the SNAP program, according to Politico. McConnell’s order comes in response to several citizens and nonprofits that sued the USDA over not using emergency funds to support SNAP during the shutdown.

The federal government said that it did not have the right to use a contingency fund and didn’t have the money to afford fueling the SNAP benefits, Politico reported. Brooke Rollins, the agriculture secretary, didn’t say if she’d comply with the court order. 

Federal funding for SNAP — the Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program, which helps 40 million households put food on the table — was set to run out on Nov. 1 because Democrats and Republicans are locked in a stalemate over funding the federal government. And President Donald Trump has so far refused to transfer money from a contingency fund to keep the program afloat for the next few weeks.

Pamela Ann Koch, an associate professor of nutrition and education at Columbia University, says that children from SNAP-eligible households will feel the impact of losing their monthly nutrition benefits. Those negative emotions, she says, likely will spill over into their academic lives. 

“Children absorb everything that is going on around them, so they feel that stress too,” Koch says. “So on top of not having enough food, they are also going to recognize the hardship that their family is going through, and when they’re worried about that, how can they show up at school and be ready to learn everything that they are going to learn?”

About one in four Black households relies on SNAP to avoid food insecurity, according to data from the Economic Policy Institute.

The federal program, started in 1939, has been responsible for helping feed millions of Black children burdened with food insecurity. In 2023, about 14 percent of Black households with children and 14 percent of Hispanic families with children experienced food insecurity — a share far higher than the roughly 6 percent rate for White households.

Mountains of research have pointed to how students coming from food-insecure homes struggle in school. Poor performance and dips in school attendance are just some of the setbacks of not having enough or any food in your home. 

What about free school meals?

Free school meals help stave off the adverse effects of food insecurity. Schools that enroll in the Community Eligibility Provision — a program that allows schools that serve a sizable share of children from food-insecure households to provide free meals — can offer free breakfasts and lunches to all students if at least 25 percent of a school’s student body qualifies for free meals. 

But Koch says free school meals might not be enough to sustain hungry children through the entire day. 

Schools that serve free meals meet only a third of the daily caloric intake they need. Even if students could get a third meal via an afterschool program, it would be “just barely enough” to meet recommended nutritional requirements, Koch says. 

With SNAP benefits about to lapse for the first time in the federal program’s 86-year history, schools and state leaders are stepping up to feed eligible students and families. 

A middle school in New York City’s Chinatown neighborhood is restarting a food pantry where families struggling with food insecurity can receive a bag of groceries biweekly, according to Chalkbeat. Another school in Brooklyn, where 85 percent of students are from SNAP households, has set up a GoFundMe page to purchase grocery store gift cards and stockpile basics that they’ll give out to students throughout the day.

Meanwhile, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said she is considering using schools to send more food home to families in need. 

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey have both taken steps to inject millions of dollars into their respective states’ food banks ahead of Nov. 1. Both Democrats join a handful of other states, which include West Virginia, Rhode Island, California and New Mexico, that are trying to do the same.

This story was originally published by Word in Black.com.

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