Title 7 › Chapter CHAPTER 51— - SUPPLEMENTAL NUTRITION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM › § 2036a
Creates a federal grant program that lets State agencies run nutrition education and obesity prevention programs for low-income people. People who can get help include those already eligible for certain federal nutrition benefits, people who live in low-income communities, and other low-income people the Secretary approves. States must send the Secretary a plan that says how they will use the money, how the work fits low-income needs, and how they will track and report results using an electronic system. The plan must cover local projects, list allowable admin costs (for example, staff pay, supplies, travel, materials, rent, maintenance, memberships, indirect costs, and use of public building space), and follow rules set by the Secretary. States may run services directly or work with other agencies and community groups. The program pays for evidence-based activities the Agriculture Department identifies with the CDC, such as individual and group education, multilevel interventions, and community approaches. The Secretary will keep an online bank of best practices and give technical help. States must tell people in their communities about the services and send an annual public report on spending, projects, results, and ongoing multiyear work. Each fiscal year a portion of funds from section 2027(a)(1) is set aside for these grants: $375,000,000 for 2011; $388,000,000 for 2012; $285,000,000 for 2013; $401,000,000 for 2014; $407,000,000 for 2015; and for 2016–2025 the prior year’s amount adjusted by the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers for the 12 months ending the prior June 30. From 2011–2013 all money was split by a State’s 2009 base funding. In 2014 it was 90/10 (base/SNAP share), in 2015 80/20, in 2016 70/30, in 2017 60/40, and in 2018 and after 50/50. If a State won’t use its full allotment, the Secretary can reallocate the funds to other States with approved plans; reallocated money counts as part of the recipient State’s base for the next year, but funds a State gives up do not. These grants are the only federal funding under this law for nutrition education and obesity prevention, and extra costs beyond the grant are not reimbursable. The Secretary had to publish grant requirements in the Federal Register by January 1, 2012.
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Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 2036a
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73