DELBARTON, W.Va. 鈥 A half-dozen cars had been in the queue for nearly four hours by the time the House of Hope mobile food pantry line began to move. Seventy or so more idled behind them by 11:30 a.m., when the food distribution began.
The plan was to begin handing out boxes of groceries at 11, but the truck delivering the food blew a tire en route. No one complained.
Perry Hall was among those waiting. His wife, Lilly Hall, volunteers with the distribution team. Perry has been dealing with a form of cancer called multiple myeloma. The Halls get by on around $1,500 a month from his Social Security benefits, plus assistance from the federal , or SNAP. But because of her age, Lilly, 59, recently became subject to new SNAP work requirements and at risk of losing her benefits.
As part of the federal One Big Beautiful Bill Act, all 鈥渁ble-bodied adults鈥 64 or younger who don鈥檛 have dependents and don鈥檛 work, volunteer, or participate in job training at least 80 hours a month are now restricted to three months of benefits every three years from SNAP, formerly known as food stamps. Previously, the federal requirement applied to those 54 or younger. The new rule, which went into effect in November, also applies to parents of children 14 or older. And it removed exemptions for veterans, people experiencing homelessness, and young adults who鈥檝e aged out of foster care.
Proponents of work requirements argue that they incentivize people who are 鈥渨ork-ready鈥 to seek and keep jobs, reducing dependence on government assistance and upholding the 鈥.鈥
Rhonda Rogomb茅 serves as health and safety net policy analyst for the . She and her colleagues have studied the effects of SNAP work rules and found that requiring recipients to work does not lower an area鈥檚 unemployment rate.
Previous work requirements were suspended nationwide during the covid pandemic and reinstated in fall 2023. The researchers found that the average number of people employed in Mingo County each month actually went down after the requirement was reimposed.
A 2018 federal research project that examined several data sources, including SNAP data from nine states, found that work requirements 鈥渉ave no impact on labor force participation and the number of hours worked.鈥
There are a number of possible explanations, Rogomb茅 said, 鈥渂ut when people are hungry, they鈥檙e not able to support themselves. When people are hungry, it鈥檚 harder to focus at work. It鈥檚 harder to engage in work activity, and we think that that鈥檚 part of it.鈥
Jobs are scarce in this southern West Virginia county. Lilly Hall found work at a Delbarton restaurant. But it鈥檚 unpaid until a waitress position opens 鈥 enough to preserve her benefits, but far from ideal.
On that mild Wednesday in late March, House of Hope provided chicken, eggs, bread, potatoes, fresh fruit and vegetables, and milk.
Among those in line were older residents and 鈥渟ome young people that have lost their way and they can鈥檛 get work and they just need help,鈥 said Timothy Treleven, who operates the pantry with his wife, Christine, and Gail Lendearo.

House of Hope鈥檚 scheduled distribution day is the last Saturday of each month 鈥 supplemented by occasional weekday Facing Hunger visits 鈥 as money from monthly checks begins to run out and cupboards go bare.
On a typical Saturday, pantry staff and volunteers hand out up to 400 boxes of food.
鈥淚t鈥檚 an honor to do this,鈥 Lendearo said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a blessing.鈥
Perry Hall鈥檚 cancer is now in remission, but for a while his treatment required that he and Lilly travel back and forth, 4陆 hours each way, to Morgantown. The couple鈥檚 van couldn鈥檛 make the trip, so they paid a friend for rides.
Mingo鈥檚 population is just under 22,000, down from around 27,000 in 2010. It once flourished, fueled by coal. Williamson, the county seat, was home to an opera house and businesses operated by immigrants from Italy, Russia, and Syria. The region is still referred to as 鈥渢he coalfields,鈥 but little is mined here these days. .
Rogomb茅 and her colleagues found that Mingo County residents face significant barriers to securing what few jobs are available. These include unreported physical and mental impairments, housing insecurity, and a lack of high school diplomas and identification documents.

Filing the paperwork to receive benefits or to confirm compliance is difficult for many residents. The West Virginia Center on Budget and Policy鈥檚 research found that about 1 in 4 lack reliable internet access.
Additional changes lie ahead for the SNAP program. Currently, the federal government and the states share administrative costs equally, but in October states will assume 75% of those costs. And beginning in October 2027, they鈥檒l be required to pay additional costs based on .
Kentucky, like West Virginia, is among the poorer states that will be most affected by the new requirements and costs. The Kentucky Center for Economic Policy estimates that with the expanded work requirements.
Jessica Klein, a researcher with the center, worries about the consequences. 鈥淲e know SNAP has an impact on health, and not just because it decreases food insecurity,鈥 she said. It worsens blood pressure rates, obesity, medication adherence, and more.
With the additional financial burden placed on states, 鈥淚 think what we鈥檒l see is some states changing rules that impact participation in order to have a smaller, more affordable program,鈥 Klein said. 鈥淢y fear is that some states will choose not to operate SNAP at all.鈥
In Mingo County, folks are stepping up. At least eight food pantries offer groceries to those in need.
Janet Gibson runs the Blessing Barn pantry in the Ben Creek community. 鈥淚 can go from one end of the creek to the other鈥 and tell you everyone鈥檚 name and a little something about them, she said. She takes pride in feeding her people.

Gibson said it can be hard to find even volunteer opportunities in the county, largely because of transportation challenges. A look at a local map can be misleading: A couple of dozen miles into a holler or up a ridge could take an hour or more.
鈥淲hether you鈥檙e working full-time or not, you鈥檙e still spinning out gas to get to work,鈥 Gibson said, 鈥渁nd gas ain鈥檛 cheap now.鈥
A single mother of three, Trista Shankle of Paducah, Kentucky, isn鈥檛 subject to the new SNAP requirements, but she worries about the fragility of the social safety net. She overcame challenges, is earning a master鈥檚 degree in social work, and works for an organization that connects community college students with benefits. Her family receives SNAP, Medicaid, housing support, and assistance from the USDA鈥檚 . If any one of those is cut, she said, she may have to drop out of school.
Shankle is certain she wouldn鈥檛 have advanced to where she is today without the benefits she and her family have received: 鈥淭hey bring a sense of calm and comfort. I know that my kids aren鈥檛 going to go hungry.鈥
The first week in April, Lilly Hall reported for work at Black Bear Trails Restaurant. She鈥檚 grateful for the opportunity. And when a waitress slot opens, 鈥淚鈥檒l snag that position so quick it鈥檒l make your head flip.鈥
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