Hobbs Vetoes Bills Aimed at Reforming SNAP

Hobbs
Governor Katie Hobbs enjoying one of Arizona's beautiful waterways. [Photo via Office of the Governor]

By Zachery Schmidt

Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs vetoed numerous bills attempting to reform the state’s management of the federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.

Last year, Congress passed H.R. 1, also known as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which made changes to SNAP to help root out fraud, waste and abuse.

H.R. 1 said if states do not reduce their SNAP payment rate error to under 6% by fiscal year 2028, their SNAP programs will enter a cost-sharing arrangement with the federal government.

If Arizona’s SNAP payment rate error exceeds 6%, the state may have to pay between $150 million and $200 million from its general fund in fiscal year 2028.

The bills Hobbs vetoed were Senate Bill 1002, SB 1331 and SB 1334.

SB 1002 would have given the Arizona Department of Economic Security additional tools to check someone’s SNAP eligibility.

SB 1331 would have mandated a work requirement for people 60 or younger to receive SNAP benefits.

SB 1334 would have prevented DES from seeking SNAP work requirement waivers for able-bodied people without dependents.

In addition to these bills, Hobbs vetoed House Bill 2206, which would have required Arizona to reduce its SNAP payment error rate to below 3% by 2030.

Senate Majority Leader John Kavanagh, R-Fountain Hills, introduced SB 1002, SB 1331, SB 1334 and HB 2206’s state Senate companion bill, SB 1333.

Kavanagh told The Center Square on Monday that if Arizona doesn’t bring its current SNAP payment error rate, around 8%, below 6%, then Arizona could be forced to pay hundreds of millions of dollars per year in SNAP administrative costs.

Kavanagh said he had hoped Hobbs, a Democrat, would have sign the SNAP bills to push Arizona’s payment  error rate “down and free other money up for other uses rather than paying the administrative costs to Washington, D.C.”

In her letter explaining why she vetoed SB 1002, SB 1331, SB 1334 and HB 2206, Hobbs said these bills contain “yet more unfunded mandates and not a dollar to help our state agencies implement these changes now, or to modernize our systems for the future.”

“SNAP is the most robust and effective anti-hunger tool we have in Arizona – I know this firsthand. It’s also the most secure, thanks to strong anti-fraud measures and oversight. Instead of creating more needless frustration for Arizona families, I invite you to join me in actually lowering costs for them,” Hobbs said.

Kavanagh told The Center Square that Hobbs is “keeping people on” these government programs “who shouldn’t be on, and she’s not letting us take people off who should be taken off.”

The majority leader see the vetoes as obstacles to economic progress.

He noted Republican-implemented low regulations and taxation have helped Arizona’s economy grow.

Kavanagh said he expects to see the state’s economy grow in the future, but the “failure to control” abuse in these government programs is “gonna slow down that advancement.”

If a Republican becomes governor, the Legislature will pass these bills into law next session, Kavanagh said.

12 Comments

  1. What a mess! SNAP is one of the easiest to abuse! When I and my 7 kids were forced into the welfare system, I saw the fraud! So many ways to cheat it would be hard to count! It’s just being more responsible to vet people to know who really needs the assistance.
    I went to college, got a degree and got to work! Even with 7 at home! If I can do it anyone can!

  2. Such a dishonest and fradulent seat-filler. Congrats Arizona, I thought I could like living here, but like Washington, my exit strategy is to vote with my feet and let y’all enjoy your garbage dump.

  3. Well now folks can really see how careless
    the left is. Trying to make life BETTER for the people they cater to to party and self. What she has
    vetoed what 400 plus bills to improve the
    state and to keep the bums in place! Too bad
    no one has really followed up on a recall. But
    when the legislature can be be had for pennies
    on the dollar what can we expect

  4. Another scalp for the Veto Queen. Her “reasons” are always stupid. In this case, the changes are not specifically funded. And, for her, 8% waste, fraud and abuse is perfectly acceptable.

  5. Is anyone really surprised? If it helps illegals , she, like all Democrats, are all for it. If it’s something that helps Americans or legal residents of her own state, the can all go to Hades they don’t care and proved it during the SOTU. How anyone can vote Democrat is beyond me

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