Who Will SNAP Cuts Affect in Maryland? On the Eastern Shore?

The House Agriculture Committee recently voted, along party lines, to advance legislation that would cut as much as $300 million from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.
SNAP is the nation’s most important anti-hunger program, helping more than 41 million people in the U.S. pay for food.
With potential cuts this large, it helps to know who benefits from this program in Maryland, and who would lose this assistance.
The
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities compiled
data on SNAP beneficiaries by congressional district, cited below, and produced the
Maryland state datasheet, shown below.
In Maryland, in 2023-24, 1 in 9 people lived in a household with SNAP benefits.
In Maryland’s First Congressional District, in 2023-24:
- Almost 34,000 households used SNAP benefits.
- Of those households, 43% had at least one senior (over age 60).
- 29% of SNAP recipients were people of color.
- 15% were Black, non-Hispanic, higher than 11.8% nationally.
- 6% were Hispanic (19.4% nationally).
- There were 24,700 total veterans (ages 18-64). Of those, 2,200 lived in households that used SNAP benefits (9%).
The CBPP SNAP datasheet for Maryland is below.
See data from all the states and download factsheets here.
Catlin Nchako is an expert in food assistance and SNAP basics at CBPP.
The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities is a nonpartisan research and policy institute that advances federal and state policies to help build a nation where everyone — regardless of income, race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender identity, zipcode, immigration status, or disability status — has the resources they need to thrive and share in the nation’s prosperity.
Common Sense for the Eastern Shore





