Rick's Blog

DeSantis Administration Far Surpasses SNAP Error Rate

Infographic map of the United States showing SNAP payment error rates for FY 2025 by state, with each state colored by rate (green 0–5%, yellow 5–10%, orange 10–15%, red above 15%). States labeled with abbreviations and percentages; national rate is 10.62%. Legend also notes Matching Funds Percentage and color coding. Banner reads USDA Food and Nutrition Administration SNAP: PAYMENT ERROR RATES FY 2025.

Today, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) released the annual Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) payment error rates (PER), which measure how accurately states determine who is eligible for SNAP and how much they should receive.

“These payment error rates are further proof that state accountability is severely lacking in SNAP,” said Agriculture Secretary Brooke L. Rollins. “USDA has taken historic action to help interested states curb SNAP waste, and I hope other states, regardless of political leadership, prioritize needy families and the American taxpayer over politics.”

Background: H.R. 1 added new guardrails for states’ payment error rates, implementing real financial consequences for states that mismanage taxpayer dollars. States with error rates at or above the 6% threshold will be responsible for covering 5%, 10%, or 15% of their states’ benefits. The higher their PER, the higher the percentage—and in most cases, as soon as October 1, 2027. The FY 2025 PER is the first year that could be used to calculate those percentages.

Andrade’s Calls Out DeSantis

Last week, I interviewed State Rep. Alex Andrade, who believes Gov. DeSantis has been “pretty checked out of actually focusing on the administration of our state since he began running for president.” He pointed to the mismanagement of the SNAP program as an example.

“We are the worst or second-worst state in the country in allowing fraud, waste and abuse in our SNAP program, but that only began in 2022, Rick. and I think that there is somewhat of a correlation between when Gov. DeSantis started thinking of himself as a national figure and stopped caring about doing the day-to-day job of being governor and what happened in that program,” Andrade said. “Under Rick Scott, our average error rate, the percentage of the amount that we would potentially overpay in Snap to a person that didn’t qualify for Snap, hovered around four or five percent annually. Under Rick Scott, it’s now hovering around fifteen percent.”

Florida may have to contribute $1 billion to the SNAP program next year. Thanks, Ron.

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