Skip to Main Content
Colorado Attorney General

Phil Weiser

Colorado Attorney General

File A Complaint
  • About Us
    • Attorney General Bio & Photos
    • Vision & Values
    • Senior Staff & Organization
    • Colorado Attorney General Annual Report
    • Attorney General Opinions
    • Budget & Accounting
    • Contact Our Office
  • Sections
    • Administration
    • Civil Litigation & Employment Law
    • Consumer Protection
    • Criminal Appeals
    • Criminal Justice
    • Natural Resources & Environment
    • Division of Community Engagement
    • Revenue & Regulatory Law
    • State Services
  • Careers
    • Attorney & Other Non-Classified Positions
    • Fellowships
    • Internships
    • Classified Staff Positions
    • Other Opportunities to Join our Team
  • Media Center
    • Press Room
    • Colorado Open Records Act – CORA
  • Resources
    • Survivors of Childhood Sexual Abuse
    • Victim Assistance
    • Data Protection Laws
    • Colorado Privacy Act
    • Funding Opportunities
    • Office of Financial Empowerment
    • Code of Colorado Regulations
    • Colorado Revised Statutes
    • Transparency Online Project (TOPS)
  • Licensing
    • Business Resources
    • Collection Agencies & Debt Collectors
    • Credit Services Organizations
    • UCCC Licensing & Notification
    • Debt Management Services Providers
    • Health Club Bonds
    • Repossessors
    • Student Loan Servicer Licensing
    • Telemarketing
  • Recursos en español

Attorney General Phil Weiser demands answers from Trump administration on SNAP funding expected to lapse at end of month

Oct. 24, 2025 (DENVER) – Attorney General Phil Weiser and 22 other attorneys general today sent a letter to U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins demanding clarity and additional information on how USDA plans to proceed after alerting states that funding for critical food programs may lapse soon because of the ongoing federal government shutdown.

“Coloradans should not go hungry during the government shutdown when USDA has reserve funds to meet critical needs. Suspending SNAP benefits at the end of the month will cause grave harm to children, seniors, and veterans who rely on food assistance every day for their meals. USDA must explain what legal authority they have to withhold congressionally mandated funds to the states for food assistance,” said Attorney General Weiser.

On Oct. 10, USDA issued a letter to all state agencies and state agency directors that administer the SNAP program. The letter indicated that “if the current lapse in appropriations continues, there will be insufficient funds to pay full November SNAP benefits for approximately 42 million individuals across the Nation.” It also directed States to stop work on November benefits until further notice.

In other words, without citing any legal authority or providing any reasoning, USDA prohibited states like Colorado from sending already calculated November allotments to EBT vendors for processing. USDA does have authority to reduce SNAP benefits or even suspend or cancel them under certain circumstances. However, USDA’s Oct. 10 letter does not indicate that any of the legal requirements to do so have been met.

In addition, USDA appears to have at least $6 billion in SNAP contingency reserve funds that Congress appropriated for emergency situations like this. The attorneys general argue the federal government should use those funds to continue providing SNAP benefits rather than direct states to suspend November benefits. Furthermore, USDA also has access to other funds that could also be used to provide SNAP benefits during the ongoing shutdown.

The attorneys general further argue that if carried out, USDA’s Oct. 10 directive will harm millions of Americans and could cause significant hardship for the 42 million Americans who depend on SNAP to feed themselves and their families. Even a temporary delay, which now appears inevitable, will have devastating effects on the American public and the national economy.

More than 600,000 Coloradans receive SNAP benefits and about 50% are children. Nearly 24,000 veterans in Colorado have relied on SNAP benefits in recent years.

Read the letter to Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins regarding SNAP funding (PDF).

###

Media Contact:
Lawrence Pacheco
Chief Communications Officer
(720) 508-6553 office
lawrence.pacheco@coag.gov

Most Recent

Eye care clinics agree to pay combined $520K over illegal Medicaid billing

Jan. 15, 2026 (DENVER) — Attorney General Phil Weiser today announced a settlement with Apex Vision and Wellness, a Greeley-based eye clinic, and Just for Grins Vision, a Fountain-based eye clinic, to resolve allegations that the clinics illegally billed the […]

Attorney General Phil Weiser sues HHS for conditioning funding on discriminatory policy

Jan. 13, 2026 (DENVER) – Attorney General Phil Weiser today joined 11 other attorneys general in suing the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services for unlawfully conditioning billions of dollars in federal funding on states’ agreement to discriminate against […]

Fall semester Safe2Tell data shows reporting shift while critical interventions continue

Jan. 13, 2026 (DENVER) — Safe2Tell saw a decline in fall semester reports compared with last year, even as the period included some of the highest reporting months in the program’s history, according to the monthly report released by the […]

Office of the Attorney General
Colorado Department of Law
Ralph L. Carr Judicial Building
1300 Broadway, 10th Floor
Denver, CO 80203

(720) 508-6000

Contact the Office of the Attorney General

Contact

ACCESSIBILITY STATEMENT

DECLARACION DE ACCESIBILIDAD

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Instagram
YouTube
BlueSky