Maryland
Food stamps: Last August SNAP payment for Maryland worth up to $1,691 goes out in 10 days
Maryland low-income residents who receive grocery assistance from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program will see their payments for August within 10 days.
SNAP payments are sent out to residents beginning on Aug. 4, and payments end on Aug. 23. Recipients will get their benefits based on the first three letters of their last name.
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There are a number of household and income requirements that applicants must meet to receive benefits. A maximum of $740 is given to a household of three and $1,691 for a household of eight. The program adds up to $211 for each extra member past eight, and the average payment per household member for each month is $180.
While there is no asset limit in Maryland, households must meet certain gross income limits. For a family of one, there’s a monthly income limit of $2,430. A household of three’s limit is $4,143, and a household of eight has a limit of $8,427.
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SNAP is issued on an electronic benefits transfer card, which is called the Independence Card in Maryland. Beneficiaries can use this similar to a debit card at participating grocery or convenience stores to purchase qualifying food and drink items.
Around 800,000 people, or roughly 13% of Maryland’s population, receive food stamps in the state, per the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.
Maryland
Two moms killed in separate hit-and-runs on Maryland’s ‘highway of death’ in 24 hours
Two moms have been killed in separate hit-and-runs along Maryland’s infamous “highway of death” within the space of around 24 hours.
The first incident unfolded at around 9pm on Thursday night when 52-year-old Sandra Abarca Orellana, of Temple Hills, was crossing the road to reach a bus stop following a shopping trip to Tanger Outlets National Harbor Mall on Oxon Hill Road.
Prince George’s County Police said the victim was found in the road after being struck by a vehicle. She was pronounced dead at the scene.
Almost exactly one day later at 10pm Friday, 40-year-old Loretta Canter-Andrews, of Accokeek, was struck by a vehicle in the northbound lanes of Route 210 near Farmington Road, police said. She was also pronounced dead at the scene.
The two fatal incidents occurred around 16 kilometers (10 miles) apart along Highway 210, which has earned the grim nickname of Maryland’s “highway of death.”
In 2024 alone, 21 pedestrian deaths have occurred along Prince George’s County roads – 11 of them hit-and-runs, reported NBC Washington.
Police told the outlet they are now looking for a burgundy, four-door Sedan in connection to Orellana’s death. The vehicle was seen heading north on Oxon Hill Road toward the shopping mall at the time of the hit-and-run, police said.
It is not clear if a vehicle has been identified in connection to the second death.
Canter-Andrews’s son TJ Andrews paid tribute to his mother.
“She was outgoing. She had no filter on her but she was a very caring person and would do anything for anyone if she had it,” he told Fox5.
“I’m blank-minded about it and hurt, mad, I just, for her sake, I just want justice done for her point of view.”
Maryland
Rainy Thanksgiving morning, followed by chilly temps in Maryland
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Maryland
What are you thankful for? Maryland residents respond
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