10/21/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/21/2025 08:09
Oct 21, 2025
AUGUSTA-- Due to the ongoing federal government shutdown, the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Food and Nutrition Service (FNS) has notified every state that November funding for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), the nation's largest anti-hunger program, will not be issued at this time.
Nationwide, approximately 42 million individuals receive SNAP benefits, including 169,812 in Maine. In total, nearly 12.5 percent of Maine's population receive SNAP benefits, with several counties -- Androscoggin, Aroostook, Piscataquis, Somerset, and Washington -- approaching or surpassing 20 percent of their populations.
Nearly 75% of Maine's SNAP households include at least one working adult, more than half include a person with a disability, 43% include an older adult, and over one-third include children. The average monthly SNAP benefit for a family of four in Maine is $572.
"Thousands of low-income working Maine families rely on this basic food assistance, but now these benefits are at risk because the Trump Administration and Republicans in Congress have shut down the government instead of agreeing to extend the health care tax credits on which so many families depend to pay for their health insurance," said Governor Janet Mills. "They should listen to the people of this country and stop cutting health care, stop hurting working families, and end this needless shutdown."
"The federal SNAP program helps support food security, improve health outcomes, and strengthen Maine's economy," said Department of Health and Human Services Commissioner Sara Gagné-Holmes. "For tens of thousands of Maine people, these benefits mean the ability to put food on the table. A disruption of this scale will also impact Maine's food pantries, which are vital partners in helping communities meet basic needs, as well as retailers. We are monitoring developments closely and will continue to assess the full impact."