SNAP recipients in NYC and consequences of federal cuts

REFERENCES American Medical Association. (2025). Changes to Medicaid, the ACA and other key provisions of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. Access here. Barr, A. and Smith, A. A. (2023). Fighting Crime in the Cradle: The Effects of Early Childhood Access to Nutritional Assistance. Journal of Human Resources, 58(1) 43-73. Access here. Carlson, S. and Llobrera, J. (2022). SNAP Is Linked With Improved Health Outcomes and Lower Health Care Costs. Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Access here. Congressional Budget Office. (2025). Estimated Budgetary Effects of Public Law 119-21, to Provide for Reconciliation Pursuant to Title II of H. Con. Res. 14, Relative to CBO’s January 2025 Baseline. Access here. Congressional Budget Office. (2025). Estimated Effects of Public Law 119-21 on Participation and Benefits Under the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. Access here. Congressional Budget Office. (2025). Public Law 119-21, to Provide for Reconciliation Pursuant to Title II of H. Con. Res. 14 Title VII, Finance, Subtitle B, Health, Chapter 1, Medicaid. Access here. Frongillo, E. A., Jyoti, D. F., Jones, S.J. (2006). Food Stamp Program Participation Is Associated with Better Academic Learning among School Children. The Journal of Nutrition, 136(4), 1077-1080. Access here. Gunderson, C. (2015). Food Assistance Programs and Child Health. The Future of Children, 25(1), 91–109. Access here. Internicola, S. (2025). How Federal Budget Changes Could Reshape The New York City Public Housing Authority. New York: New York City Independent Budget Office. Access here. Jones, J. (2025). Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) - Key Statistics and Research. U.S. Department of Agriculture Economic Research Service. Access here. Koutavas, A., Collyer, S., Jia, Y. (2025). Spotlight on: Housing Affordability and the Threat of Cuts to Federal Housing Assistance Programs. The Poverty Tracker. New York: Robin Hood. Access here. Koutavas, A., Wang, B., Garfinkel, I., Ananat, E., Collyer, S., Curran, M., Hartley, R. P., and Wimer, C. (2025). The Economic Costs of Cutting SNAP: Every $1 in SNAP Cuts to Families with Children Costs Society $14 to $20. Poverty and Social Policy Brief, 9(6). New York: Center on Poverty and Social Policy, Columbia University. Access here. National Low Income Housing Coalition. (2025). President Trump Releases “Skinny” Budget Request Foreshadowing Historic Cuts to HUD in Full FY26 Request – Take Action!. Access here. New York State Office of Temporary and Disability Assistance. (2025). SNAP Benefits by Congressional District. Access here. New York State Office of Temporary and Disability Assistance. (2026). Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) Caseloads and Expenditures: Beginning 2002. Access here.

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SNAP RECIPIENTS IN NEW YORK CITY AND THE CONSEQUENCES OF FEDERAL CUTS TO SNAP

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