Panel adopts amendment asking DES to seek USDA waiver to restrict SNAP purchases; bill advances 7–5
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After hours of testimony for and against vendor and beneficiary impacts, the committee adopted an amendment directing DES to request USDA authority to restrict SNAP purchases (aligned to a WIC‑style list) and returned HB23‑96 with a due‑pass recommendation, 7‑5. Advocates warned of food deserts and administrative burdens; supporters cited obesity and diabetes data.
Representative Viasucci sponsored an amendment to HB23‑96 directing the Department of Economic Security (DES) to request a USDA waiver and, if necessary, pursue demonstration authority to limit the use of SNAP benefits to a state‑specified list (modeled on or aligned with WIC‑type items). The sponsor framed the change as a nutrition policy aimed at reducing sugar‑sweetened beverage purchases and improving long‑term health outcomes.
Testimony divided sharply. The William E. Morris Institute for Justice and other anti‑hunger advocates opposed restrictions, saying SNAP serves people with disabilities, seniors, the unhoused and rural residents who may lack refrigeration or access to full grocery stores; they warned about administrative burdens and unintended harm to vulnerable people. Access (the state Medicaid/benefits agency) testified neutral, noting many required data matches already exist but estimating IT costs to set up secure connections with the Department of Revenue at $50,000–$80,000 GF and pointing to other operational costs.
Policy witnesses and some members, citing CDC and related analyses about higher rates of obesity and diet‑related disease among low‑income populations, argued pilot limits or a targeted waiver could incentivize healthier purchases without reducing overall benefit levels.
Outcome: Committee adopted the Bliss amendment (01/22/2026, 08:43AM) authorizing DES to seek a USDA waiver for purchase restrictions and returned HB23‑96 as amended with a due‑pass recommendation by roll call (7 Ayes, 5 Nays). The amendment explicitly preserved benefit amounts and participation and required DES to provide guidance and a reasonable implementation period.
