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Another Fight Expected Over SNAP Means Testing Cut From Ohio Budget

Karen Kasler

The idea of “means testing” for Ohioans getting food stamp or SNAP benefits was removed in the final version of the state budget. But advocates for low-income Ohioans and those who cycle in and out of poverty say the idea isn’t dead. Statehouse correspondent Karen Kasler reports.

The Senate version of the budget included a test to ensure SNAP recipients have no more than $2,250 in certain assets. That was removed from the budget but is part of Senate Bill 17. And Hope Lane with the policy research group the Center for Community Solutions says she expects the idea to get more traction after summer meetings with groups like the American Legislative Exchange Council, or ALEC.

“Those conservative ‘bill mill’ groups meet in DC and across the country to get together and figure out what worked in the first half of the year and what didn’t work and how to regroup. I anticipate seeing it again and I anticipate another fight.”

Backers of the means test idea point out it follows federal guidelines, and doesn’t include homes valued under $600,000 or cars worth less than $4,650.

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