Food stamps: December direct payments worth up to $1,751 to Montana SNAP recipients end today

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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, as part of a research project with Feeding America to try to improve the health of diabetics in food-insecure families. Eric Risberg

Food stamps: December direct payments worth up to $1,751 to Montana SNAP recipients end today

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Montana’s Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program concluded its December payments, worth up to $1,751, on Wednesday.

Montana distributes SNAP payments over five days each month — December’s payments began on Dec. 2 and ended on Dec. 6. The date recipients receive their payment depends on their SNAP case number, account number, Social Security number, or last name.

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The household size of recipients determines the amount of their SNAP payments. Single-person households receive $291 per month, and eight-person households receive up to $1,751 per month. In households larger than eight, $219 is added for each additional person.

To qualify for SNAP payments in Montana, a single-person household cannot have a net monthly income above $1,215 and an eight-person household cannot have a net monthly income above $4,214.

SNAP benefits can be used at participating locations, including farmers markets and grocery stores. Payments are automatically loaded every month onto an electronic benefits transfer card.

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Created through the 1964 Food Stamp Act as one of President Lyndon B. Johnson‘s Great Society programs, SNAP aims to improve the nutrition of impoverished people by supplementing their food costs.

SNAP is active across all states and Washington, D.C., and there are some variations between each of the different programs.

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