
What to Know for Friday, June 26th, 2026:
1: Retiring Louisiana senator proposes investing $1.5 trillion in separate fund Nine states avoid SNAP cost-sharing with error rates below 6% — dozens face millions in new costs starting October 2027

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States with high SNAP error rates forced to pay 5-15% of benefit costs based on sliding scale: South Dakota has lowest error rate (2.5%), Nebraska just below cutoff (5.9%) — states at 6-8% error rates pay 5% of benefits, 8-10% pay 10%, over 10% pay 15% — example: Missouri's 8.7% error rate means potentially covering $150 million annually (exceeding state prison budgets) — error rates released for first time matter under Trump's tax-and-spending law signed July 2025.
States receiving one-year cost-share delay if 13.34%+ error rate: Alaska (23% highest), Delaware, Georgia, Illinois, New Mexico, Oregon, DC: States can choose to use either 2025 or 2026 error rates to determine obligations — mistakes attributed evenly to SNAP recipients and program administrators — states already analyzing root causes and planning to increase error-reduction staff.
Facing cost-sharing, over 25% of states considering narrowing eligibility, four considering full SNAP withdrawal entirely: States must choose between cutting public schools/law enforcement/mental health care, making SNAP harder to access, or dropping program — 37 million people receiving SNAP benefits (down 5 million from year earlier) — advocates urge Congress to delay cost-share requirements as millions already lost assistance and face high grocery prices.
2: Nebraska ranked #1 for retirement by Legacy Healing Center study — beats Florida, Arizona based on healthcare, affordability, quality of life
Nebraska scores 68.83 with top-tier healthcare access and senior health outcomes: Study evaluated 25 metrics across healthcare (30%), affordability (22.5%), social life (22.5%), safety (15%), environment (10%) — Nebraska ranks #4 nationally for hospital ratings (3.75), #2 for wait times (108 minutes) — senior health strong: only 13.6% report poor physical health (#3), 12.1% poor mental health (#2) — affordable average home value $260,028, cost of living index 92.6.
Top 10 states for retirement: Iowa #2, Delaware #3, South Dakota #4, Wisconsin #5, New Hampshire #6: Iowa offers affordability (home value $216,891, cost of living 89.7) plus community amenities — Delaware highest Medicare coverage (97.7%), lowest adult day healthcare costs ($781/month #1 nationally), average monthly SS benefit $2,171 (#4) — Nebraska #1 for parks per 10,000 seniors (140.13), ranked high for golf courses and community centers.
Bottom performers: Washington, Tennessee, Oregon, Arkansas, Nevada face high costs, weak health outcomes, safety concerns: States ranked lowest face "mix of high costs, weaker health outcomes, and safety concerns" — retirees considering relocation should prioritize top 10 states for "stability, comfort, and peace of mind" when evaluating healthcare access, affordability, and quality-of-life amenities.
3: Democrats propose $5,000 out-of-pocket cap for traditional Medicare — would level playing field with Medicare Advantage plans but cost $50B+ annually
Sen. Ron Wyden bill would cap beneficiary cost-sharing at $5,000 in traditional Medicare vs. current unlimited exposure: Unlike employer coverage, ACA, and Medicare Advantage ($9,250 cap), traditional Medicare has no ceiling on 20% cost-sharing after deductibles — expensive conditions like cancer or long hospital stays could result in thousands in costs — Medigap supplemental insurance designed to fill gap but premiums rising rapidly, unaffordable for many — Wyden: "everyone else in health insurance neighborhood has cap...there's no good reason flagship program doesn't."
Bill would directly benefit 3.2 million (11% of traditional Medicare beneficiaries) saving average $1,200/year; 52% would exceed cap over 10 years: Brown University study found cap could save enrollees both direct costs and Medigap premium reductions — costs would count toward $5,000 cap from Medigap or retiree plans — Medicare would pick up amounts over limit — also eliminates asset tests for income assistance programs.
Conservative opposition likely focused on $50B+ annual federal cost amid Medicare solvency concerns and growing debt: Fiscal hawks question whether billions should cover costs beneficiaries/supplemental insurers would otherwise pay — note beneficiaries can choose Medicare Advantage eliminating Medigap need — bill's backers acknowledge passage unlikely this year but "playing long game," planning to push in next Congress when Democrats expect majority — highlights healthcare affordability as election issue.
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Your SNAP Check Is About to Get Bigger—Here's the Catch
This newsletter is for information only. Always confirm your options directly with Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, or a qualified advisor before making big decisions about your benefits.




