SNAP eligibility changes spark debate on gap for impacted recipients
[April 16, 2026]
By Sean Reed | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – A coalition of non-profits and community
organizations across the state are warning that more than 200,000
Illinoisans receiving money from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance
Program, or SNAP, could lose benefits beginning May 1.
The Save Our SNAP Coalition, consisting of roughly 85 different
organizations, called on legislators to pass three bills, two of which
could cost the state a combined $130 million.
Danielle Perry, vice president of policy and advocacy at the Greater
Chicago Food Depository, told The Center Square that about 200,000
Illinoisans could lose benefits as soon as May 1 due to definition and
requirement changes made by Congress last July.
The main bill the coalition wants passed is SB 3277, which would create
a program to automatically give recipients seeing a change or stop in
federal benefits a one-time payment of $600 – representing about three
months worth of the average SNAP subsidy.

Rep. Steve Reick, R-Woodstock, said the lump sum payments are a slippery
slope.
“If you create that moral hazard with a $600 lump sum payment now, in
the next General Assembly you’ll end up with an entitlement program that
automatically makes up the shortfall,” Reick said. “The tree does not
exist upon which money grows.”
Perry said the intent of the bill is different.
“It's truly a one time payment. We look at it like a bridge. These
people, all of a sudden, in the next few days will not\ have money for
food. So this is just an immediate, one time direct cash assistance that
will sunset. And we don't have intentions on making it continue,” Perry
said.
SB 3167 would expand eligibility for legal migrants who would otherwise
qualify for benefits, if not for immigration status. A number of people
in this category have already lost the benefit due to other eligibility
changes that set in this month.
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Perry noted that many different groups would soon be required to
report work hours in order to receive any benefits, including
veterans, former foster children and the homeless.
Rep. Tom Weber, R-Fox Lake, said the changes to SNAP eligibility
were made because reform was, and is, needed.
“I think what we’re seeing from taxpayers is they want
accountability,” Weber said. “I think we need to work hand-in-hand
with the federal government to reform and create more accountability
in all the different accountability programs.”
The error rate in payment amounts, both over and under what they
should have been, was 11.4% as of 2024, according to the USDA.
Perry said a function of her organization’s advocacy is making
people aware that new work requirements are coming, saying many
likely already meet work requirements, but simply don’t know how to
approach reporting.
“What we're afraid of is that on May 1 that person with the link
card will be in the grocery store, trying to use it, and now their
benefits will be shut off,” Perry said. “Not because they're not
working, because so many of the people on SNAP who are able bodied
work, we just think it's because of lack of information.”
If lawmakers act upon the coalition’s call, they would have to pass
the bills through both chambers before the start of May to avoid a
gap in benefit payments.
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