Food stamps: Texas SNAP payments for October worth up to $1,691 to wrap up in two days

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Food Stamps
This photo taken Jan. 8, 2014 shows the contents of a specially prepared box of food at a food bank distribution in Petaluma, Calif., part of a research project with Feeding America to try to improve the health of diabetics in food-insecure families. Doctors are warning that the federal government could be socked with a bigger health bill if Congress cuts food stamps _ maybe not immediately, they say, but if the poor wind up in doctors’ offices or hospitals as a result. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg) Eric Risberg

Food stamps: Texas SNAP payments for October worth up to $1,691 to wrap up in two days

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Texas’s Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program will conclude its October payments, worth up to $1,691, in two days.

Texas calculates its SNAP payment amounts based on household size. Single households receive $281, eight-member households $1,691, and families larger than eight are granted an extra $211 for every additional member, according to the Texas Health and Human Services Commission.

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Eligibility is determined by household income. To qualify, a single-person household cannot make more than $1,869 per month, and a five-person household cannot make more than $4,465 per month.

The Lone Star State issues SNAP payments over the first 10 business days of each month. October’s round of payments began Oct. 1 and will end on Sunday. The date when recipients get their money depends on their eligibility determination group number.

Texas SNAP payments are loaded on a Lone Star Card, which operates as an electronic benefits transfer card. The money is automatically loaded on the card on the issuance date.

Texas has work rules in place for recipients between the ages of 16 and 59. Participants must either work a job, actively seek one, or work in an approved work program, and recipients cannot quit their jobs without good reason.

SNAP was created as one of President Lyndon B. Johnson’s Great Society programs in 1964 through the Food Stamp Act. It is meant to increase the nutrition of low-income residents by supplementing their food costs.

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SNAP benefits can only be spent on food and nonalcoholic drinks. The funds cannot be used on luxury items or bills unrelated to food.

SNAP is active across all states and Washington, D.C.

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