
Thousands of Coloradans face food aid cuts under Trump's new law
Why it matters: It's a historic cut to the social safety net, which Republicans claim will weed out waste, fraud and abuse. But experts warn the move could leave more people hungry and uninsured.
The big picture: The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), often called food stamps, helps low-income families, seniors and people with disabilities buy groceries.
By the numbers: More than 617,000 Coloradans, about 10% of the state, were enrolled in SNAP as of March 2025, per federal data.
In Denver, nearly 119,000 people receive the benefits, according to the city.
About 43% of Colorado SNAP households have children, Feeding America figures show.
What they're saying: Democratic Colorado Gov. Jared Polis and local advocates say the funding cuts will be devastating for local families and strain an already-stressed state budget.
"We are deeply concerned about the impact this bill will have on people dealing with food insecurity," Denver Human Services spokesperson Daniel Hernandez told Axios Denver in a statement.
"[E]specially the parents struggling to afford groceries and adults in their 60s who are jobless [and] must now meet strict work requirements in order to receive food assistance," he said.
The other side: Colorado's four Republican U.S. House members — Reps. Lauren Boebert, Jeff Crank, Gabe Evans and Jeff Hurd — all backed Trump's bill, including the SNAP cuts.
How it works: Trump's law doesn't just slash funding — it rewrites the rules.
Parents of children 14 or older must now work at least 20 hours a week to keep benefits.
The new policy also bumps the work requirement age up to 64. It was 54.
What's next: Each Colorado county's human services department determines SNAP eligibility. In Denver, officials are scrambling to understand the fallout.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
22 minutes ago
- New York Post
Mamdani vows to declare war against charter schools if electioned mayor, survey reveals
Socialist Zohran Mamdani plans to declare war on charter schools if he's elected mayor, according to a survey he answered — sparking outrage from advocates and parents who called the frontrunner candidate's views 'very misguided.' The 33-year-old Queens assemblyman said he would fight efforts to open more charters, which largely educate minority, working-class students, and even opposed the schools sharing space in city-owned buildings. 'I oppose efforts by the state to mandate an expansion of charter school operations in New York City,' he said in a Staten Island Advance questionnaire before the June 24 Democratic primary. Advertisement 4 Socialist Democratic mayoral nominee Zohran Mamdani plans to declare war against charter schools that largely educate minority students if he's elected mayor, according to a survey he answered. REUTERS Mamdani's hostility to charter schools, which are privately-run, publicly funded — puts him in sync with the United Federation of Teachers union, which endorsed him in the November general election following his primary victory over ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo and others. But charter school parents and operators suggested Mamdani was deviating from his affordability agenda — touting he'll choke off classrooms that educate mostly black and Latino students from working class and low-income neighborhoods he claims to be championing. Advertisement 'I don't understand why Mamdani would be hostile to charter schools. I think he's very misinformed,' said mom Arlene Rosado, whose son, Mano, is a tenth-grader at the Nuasin Next Generation K-12 charter school in The Bronx. Rosado transferred her son there because he was getting bullied at the traditional neighborhood public school, and she said he is now safe and not getting picked on. 'Charter schools are helping kids in the community. You should always have a choice. Taking that choice away is not cool,' Rosado told The Post. The Rev. Raymond Rivera — founder of the Family Life Academy charter school network in The Bronx — said that Mamdani must support charter schools if he really cares about kids of color. Advertisement 4 A Staten Island Advance questionnaire has the 33-year-old Queens assemblyman saying, 'I oppose efforts by the state to mandate an expansion of charter school operations in New York City.' Stephen Yang 'Ninety five percent of children in our charter schools are students of color,' he told The Post. 'We believe our parents should have a choice.' Mamdani, in the SI Advance questionnaire, vowed to audit charter schools that are co-located in city Department of Education buildings, suggesting they received too much public funding. 'I also oppose the co-locating of charter schools inside DOE school buildings, but for those already co-located my administration would undertake a comprehensive review of charter school funding to address the unevenness of our system,' the survey said. Advertisement 'Matching funds, overcharged rent, and Foundation Aid funding would be part of this audit as my administration determined how to manage the reality of co-located schools and legal entitlements,' Mamdani claimed. 4 Mamdani's public view on charter schools strikes a similar viewpoint of the United Federation of Teachers union, which has endorsed him for mayor in the upcoming November general election. Stephen Yang It's not the only controversial part of his education platform — which also includes wanting to cede the mayor's control over the nation's largest school system. Charter school advocates said Mamdani was a foe, not an ally, during his four years in the state Assembly. 'As a member of the Assembly, Mr. Mamdani has made clear that he was not supportive of charter schools or even the families that chose them, but he has recently and repeatedly said he would be a mayor for all New Yorkers — and that, of course, has to include the nearly 150,000 charter school students and their families,' said NYC Charter School Center CEO James Merriman. Merriman said he wants to meet Mamdani's team to correct 'misinformation' about the charter school sector. 4 The Democratic nominee's viewpoints on charter schools are a controversial part of his platform, while advocates call out Mamdani for being a foe to the charter school system during his time in the state Assembly. Stephen Yang Arthur Samuels, executive director of the Math, Engineering, and Science Academy (MESA) Charter High School, argued charter schools are serving Mamdani's affordability mission by providing a free education to struggling families who can't afford to pay private tuition or move to the suburbs. Advertisement 'I can't think of anything more empowering to those families than providing choice and agency,' said Samuels, who is opening a second MESA charter school in Dyker Heights this fall. There are 286 charter schools in the city serving about 150,000 students, or 15 of publicly-funded schools. Students in charter schools typically outperform their counterparts in traditional schools on the state's English Language Arts and math standardized exams. Most charters have a longer school day and school year than traditional schools, and their teaching staff are non-union. Advertisement Last year, 58.2% of charter students scored proficient on the ELA test — 9.1 percentage points higher than their district counterparts, 49.1%. Meanwhile, 66.3% of charter students passed the math test, compared to 53.4% of traditional public school students. — a near 13-percentage-point gap. Former Mayor Bill de Blasio sought to stymie the charter school sector. But a state law approved by then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo and the legislature forced the city to provide space to charter schools or pay their rent to operate in a private building. The current Democratic-run legislature has opposed charter school expansion.


The Hill
22 minutes ago
- The Hill
Zelensky says Russia seems ‘more inclined toward a ceasefire'
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Wednesday said he believed Russia was more likely to agree to a ceasefire than previously, and argued pressure from the U.S. is a key reason. Zelensky spoke amid reports that President Trump had discussed with European officials a meeting with Zelensky and Russian President Vladimir Putin in the coming weeks. 'Russia now seems to be more inclined toward a ceasefire – the pressure is working. But the key is to ensure they don't deceive anyone in the details – neither us, nor the United States,' Zelensky said during an address. 'We have proposed that in the near future, our representatives – from Ukraine and our partners, our national security advisors – hold talks to determine our position, our common position, and our shared vision,' he added. President Trump and Republican lawmakers have repeatedly threatened economic sanctions for the Kremlin if an agreement is not soon reached. On Wednesday, Trump's team said Russia was interested in talking to the president. 'The Russians expressed their desire to meet with President Trump, and the President is open to meeting with both President Putin and President Zelensky. President Trump wants this brutal war to end,' White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said. Putin has urged Ukraine to cede portions of its territory now under Russian control. Zelensky has rejected efforts to redefine Ukraine's sovereign borders. The Ukrainian president said he spoke with Trump following Special Envoy Steve Witkoff's meetings with officials in Moscow. 'Our joint position with our partners is absolutely clear – the war must end,' Zelensky wrote in a Wednesday post on X. 'And it must be done honestly. European leaders were on the call, and I am grateful to each of them for their support. We discussed what was spelled out in Moscow.'


NBC News
23 minutes ago
- NBC News
Trump reportedly open to meeting with Putin soon
A White House official says President Trump could meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin as soon as next week about a ceasefire in Ukraine. It comes after a meeting between president Trump's Envoy Steve Witkoff and Putin today in the Kremlin. NBC News' Keir Simmons reports.