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Excluded Workers and SNAP Recipients to Get Benefits After All

Many residents will soon get much-needed and overdue relief, as a result of a revenue forecast that freed up funds allocated in the District’s 2023-24 budget.

Roughly 15,000 workers who were left out of previous pandemic relief will get their long-promised payments of about $1,000 each. Councilmember Nadeau worked with fellow councilmembers to ensure the payments to excluded workers made it into the budget.

In addition, SNAP benefits for more than 100,000 D.C. residents will be temporarily increased with nearly $40 million dollars allocated by the Council. Federal aid that had boosted SNAP benefits expired in March, leaving those recipients with much-reduced benefits.

Councilmember Janeese Lewis George orchestrated a measure by which the benefits for both groups would kick in if the September revenue projections, as determined by the District’s Chief Financial Officer, showed that the District would have the revenue to cover them. They did.

“This is going to be really good for all of our communities. Folks are going to be able to use that to pay off debt, to make purchases they’ve been delaying — it’s going to be a critical lifeline,” Councilmember Nadeau told the Washington Post.

Councilmember Nadeau thanked Councilmember Christina Henderson for introducing the SNAP legislation that led to the increased benefits and thanked Councilmember Lewis George, who chairs the Committee on Facilities and Family Services, for devising a mechanism to get the SNAP and excluded worker benefits into this year’s budget.

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The Council passed a budget that restored the holes in the social safety net, but with one-time funds. That means next year we'll have an even bigger hole to fill. Councilmember Nadeau speaks to what was accomplished in this year's budget process and why she's proposing a Wealth Proceeds Tax to generate revenue and make sure that the budget isn't balanced on the backs of those who can least afford it.
In my final Committee budget as a Councilmember, we were able to send funds to every other committee to help fill gaps in the safety net created by the Mayor’s proposal, including to support more people in temporary housing, and to expand food access, wellness for seniors, and programming for teens. We found ways to take small actions, such as licensing and building code changes, to effect big results, like building more housing and speeding up business contracting issues.
Even when faced with these financial pressures, we can still find ways to support some of our most vulnerable communities. I am excited to see funding for so many critical programs and supports, including the millions for the crisis response programs, school-based behavioral health, remote patient monitoring during pregnancy, chronic illness screenings for uninsured residents, and medical debt mitigation.

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