The federal government shutdown is disrupting major federal programs, including the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). Now one in five children nationwide risks losing benefits because Congress has failed to pass a budget. On October 30, a federal judge ordered the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) to draw from SNAP's contingency fund to cover payments, but that fund holds roughly $5–6 billion—barely enough to cover three weeks of payments for a program that spends more than $8 billion each month.
The ongoing deadlock highlights SNAP's fragility due to its near-total reliance on federal funding. More importantly, its chronic dependency on Washington's one-size-fits-all solutions has left it failing the very children it's supposed to help. The best way to ensure

Reason

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