S-4836-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry.
Sponsored by Pete Ricketts (R-NE)
What it does
This bill would amend the Food and Nutrition Act of 2008 to allow state agencies to hire private contractors to help process Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) applications under specific circumstances, including application surges, pandemics, natural disasters, seasonal workforce cycles, and temporary staffing shortages. Contractors would be required to work alongside existing government employees — not replace them — and contracts could not include financial incentives to delay or deny benefits. States would be required to notify the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) when they hire contractors, and USDA would be required to publish that information publicly within 10 days and submit annual reports to Congress.
Who benefits
SNAP applicants who currently face processing delays during high-demand periods such as disasters or economic downturns. State agencies struggling with staffing shortfalls who would gain a legal pathway to surge capacity. Private contractors and staffing firms that would become eligible for new government contracts. Rural and disaster-affected communities where application backlogs tend to be most acute. Taxpayers in states where faster processing reduces administrative backlogs and associated costs.
Who is hurt
State and local government employees and their unions, who may view contractor use as a long-term threat to public-sector jobs even with the anti-supplanting provision. SNAP applicants who could face inconsistent service quality if contractor oversight is inadequate. Advocacy organizations concerned that private contractors may have weaker accountability than civil servants. States with strong public-employee labor protections that may face tension between federal flexibility and existing collective bargaining agreements, even though the bill includes a carve-out for staffing-shortage scenarios.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that current law's prohibition on private contractors creates unnecessary bottlenecks during crises, leaving eligible families waiting weeks or months for food assistance. They contend that during COVID-19, many state SNAP agencies were overwhelmed and lacked legal tools to quickly expand capacity, resulting in documented processing delays that harmed vulnerable households. They argue the bill's guardrails — no incentives to deny benefits, no supplanting of merit-based workers, public disclosure requirements, and congressional oversight through annual reports — are sufficient to prevent abuse while giving states the flexibility they need to serve applicants promptly.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that privatizing eligibility determinations — even partially — introduces profit motives into a program designed to serve the most vulnerable Americans, and that no-denial-incentive contract language is difficult to enforce in practice. They contend that historical experience with private contractors in public benefit programs, including documented errors and due process failures in Medicaid and child welfare contexts, shows that accountability gaps are real and measurable. They further argue that the bill's "temporary staffing shortage" trigger is broadly defined and could become a permanent workaround, gradually eroding the merit-based civil service workforce that administers SNAP.