HR-8256-119
Referred to the House Committee on Agriculture.
Sponsored by Suzanne Bonamici (D-OR)
What it does
The Senior Hunger Prevention Act of 2026 would modify or expand federal food assistance programs to reduce hunger among older Americans. Because the bill text provided contains only the title and referral information — with no enacted provisions — the specific mechanical details (eligibility thresholds, funding levels, program modifications) are not available for analysis. The bill has been referred to the House Committee on Agriculture, where its provisions would be developed or reviewed.
Who benefits
Low-income seniors who currently face food insecurity — estimated at roughly 5–7 million Americans aged 60 and older, according to Feeding America data. Nutrition service providers, food banks, and meal delivery organizations (such as Meals on Wheels programs) that serve elderly populations. Grocery retailers and food suppliers participating in federal nutrition programs. Caregivers and family members of food-insecure seniors who bear informal support costs.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers who would bear the cost of any new or expanded spending. State and local agencies that administer nutrition programs, which may face new compliance or reporting requirements. Competing budget priorities within the Agriculture Committee's jurisdiction that could be crowded out by new mandatory or discretionary spending. Potentially, means-tested program applicants in other categories if funding is reallocated rather than newly appropriated.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that senior hunger is a documented and growing problem — Feeding America estimates that 1 in 11 Americans over 60 faces food insecurity, a rate that has risen with inflation and fixed-income pressures. They contend that targeted federal nutrition assistance for seniors reduces downstream healthcare costs, since malnutrition in older adults is linked to hospitalizations and increased Medicare expenditures, making the program fiscally efficient over time.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that expanding categorical food assistance programs adds to federal mandatory spending without addressing the structural causes of senior poverty, such as inadequate retirement savings or Social Security benefit levels. They contend that existing programs — including SNAP, the Commodity Supplemental Food Program, and the Older Americans Act nutrition services — already serve this population, and that new legislation may duplicate existing efforts, adding administrative overhead without proportionate benefit.