S-4866-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry.
Sponsored by Michael Bennet (D-CO)
What it does
This bill would increase federal funding for two existing farmers' market nutrition programs: the Senior Farmers' Market Nutrition Program (SFMNP) and the WIC Farmers' Market Nutrition Program. It would raise the minimum individual benefit under both programs to $35 (and raise the WIC maximum to $60), allow electronic and mobile payment technologies, permit up to 50% of senior benefits to be redeemed through community-supported agriculture and food hubs, and direct the USDA to study ways to streamline and modernize program delivery. It would also set aside at least 10% of SFMNP funds for states, territories, and tribes that did not participate in the prior year.
Who benefits
Low-income seniors (at or below 200% of the federal poverty line) who would receive higher benefit amounts. WIC-eligible mothers, infants, and children who would see increased minimum and maximum benefit levels. Small and local farmers who sell at farmers' markets, through community-supported agriculture, or food hubs, who would gain more customers and revenue. States, territories, and Indian Tribes not currently participating in the SFMNP, who would receive a dedicated funding set-aside. Rural communities with limited market access who would benefit from expanded redemption options including home delivery. Payment technology vendors who would gain new government contracts for electronic benefit transfer and mobile payment systems. Food hubs and community-supported agriculture operations that would become eligible redemption sites.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who would bear the cost of increased mandatory and discretionary appropriations. States currently receiving larger SFMNP allocations that could see funding reduced (up to 10%) under the revised distribution formula. Farmers' markets and vendors that rely on paper coupon systems and may face transition costs or disruption during the shift to electronic payment technologies. Larger agricultural producers and grocery retailers who do not benefit from the farmers' market channel and may face increased competition for low-income consumer spending. Administrative staff at state agencies who would face new reporting requirements and program restructuring obligations.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the current SFMNP benefit of $20,600,000 annually has not kept pace with inflation or need, and that the existing minimum individual benefit of as little as $10 is too low to meaningfully change purchasing behavior. They contend that raising benefits to $35–$60, expanding redemption options to include food hubs and home delivery, and modernizing payment technology would simultaneously reduce senior food insecurity — which affects roughly 5.5 million older Americans — and strengthen local farm economies by directing federal nutrition dollars to regional producers rather than large supply chains.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill significantly increases mandatory and discretionary spending — from $20.6 million to $75 million annually for the SFMNP alone, plus $25 million in additional appropriations — without demonstrated evidence that farmers' market programs are more cost-effective than existing nutrition programs like SNAP. They contend that expanding redemption to food hubs, aggregators, and home delivery models dilutes the original purpose of connecting low-income consumers directly with local farmers, and that the administrative complexity of integrating multiple electronic payment systems across diverse state and tribal programs may consume resources that would otherwise go to participant benefits.