The P-EBT Parent Portal allows parents to view and receive information about their child’s P-EBT benefits. To access it, you’ll need to create a CAFÉ account and link your child’s case in the portal.
P-EBT is a temporary food benefit program operating during the COVID-19 pandemic. P-EBT provides benefits to all eligible children without needing to apply . Who is eligible for School P-EBT benefits? Must be enrolled in free or reduced-price school meals at a school operating the National School Lunch Program; OR,
The P-EBT program was re-authorized to cover the entire 2020-21 school year. A new P-EBT has been approved for Pennsylvania by the United States Department of Agriculture’s Food and Nutrition Service. Please visit the Pennsylvania Department of Human Services (DHS) P-EBT website for comprehensive information on the P-EBT program.
The USDA Food and Nutrition Service approved the continuation of the Pandemic Electronic Benefit Transfer (P-EBT) Program for the 2021-2022 school year. However, operation of the program is reviewed and approved on a state-by-state basis.
If your student is eligible for P-EBT benefits in the 2021-2022 school year, additional benefits will be re-loaded when they are issued. If you are not currently receiving SNAP benefits or if you were not previously issued a P-EBT card, a new P-EBT card will be mailed to you.
Cards Are Automatically Reloaded Each child will get one card, which will be automatically reloaded with your new benefits as they become available, so don't throw your card away. If you lose your card, you can get a replacement card through the P-EBT Helpline at (877) 328-9677 (M-F 6am - 8pm).
Households must submit a P-EBT application separately for each child through DCF's online application portal to receive P-EBT assistance for SY 2021-2022. This is different from past P-EBT cycles, when DCF did not require an application for P-EBT. The last day to submit an application is July 31, 2022.
P-EBT benefits for the current school year will start to be issued in mid to late June, 2022. If you require a replacement card you can request one through the new P-EBT Parent Portal.
This means that Stage 1 benefits for the 2020-2021 school year have begun being removed from cards. DHS will be reissuing these benefits automatically at the end of November or early in December back onto the cards. Parents do NOT need to report this issue to have the benefits reloaded onto their cards.
On April 19, 2022, the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture approved Pennsylvania's plan to provide P-EBT benefits to students for the 2021-22 school year.
The P-EBT benefit for school children is available for the entire summer. However, the benefit for SNAP-enrolled children under 6 is only available through the end of the federal government's COVID-19 public health emergency declaration.
The Department was approved for a P-EBT plan for the 2021-2022 school year which will provide P-EBT benefits to students who meet the following eligibility criteria: The student attends a school that participates in the National School Lunch Program (NSLP) and School Breakfast Program.
How many months of P-EBT will a child get? If they qualify, school children will be able to receive P-EBT for the months of August 2020 through June 2021. Children in child care may be eligible for P-EBT for the months of October 2020 through June 2021.
Currently, no COVID-19 waivers allowing the issuance of emergency allotments have been extended to any state for June 2022. However, eligible school children and children in childcare programs may receive temporary emergency food assistance (P-EBT) during the upcoming summer months.
You can check your EBT balance by calling 1-888-EBT-PENN or using the MyCOMPASS PA app on your smartphone. The state will send new P-EBT cards to all other families who qualify.
If you got SNAP benefits during this time period, you will get an extra payment in early May or early June, if the amount you received in each month from September 2020 through March 2021 was less than 50 percent of the maximum benefit for your household size or if you were already receiving the maximum benefit.
What is P-EBT? Pandemic Electronic Benefit Transfer (or P-EBT) was developed by Congress and is funded through the United States Department of Agriculture (or USDA). The federal government makes the rules for this program.
Once you receive the P-EBT card, you will need to activate it by calling the P-EBT hotline on the back of the card. You will be asked to enter the full number on the front of the card. Then you will be asked to enter the last four digits of your social security number.
To check the balance on the card, simply call the EBT Hotline number again and any time after the card has been activated, you will get an automated list of options, including options to check the balance of the card, hear the last ten transactions on the card, change your PIN, or dispute charges.
The P-EBT benefits will remain in the SNAP account for nine months after the account is no longer used. For example, if the benefits are loaded in May and never used, they will be removed in February. But if a portion of those benefits are used in July, then the balance will remain on the card until April.
The maximum daily rate for P-EBT is $6.82. This means that the monthly amount from September through May is $136.40 for a fully virtual student. For September through February, the monthly amount for a student attending some days in person and some days virtual will be $88.66.
If your child receives meals through the National School Lunch Program (NSLP) and is not receiving those meals because they are not having in-person classes, then they qualify for P-EBT.
There is no application for P-EBT. DHS will work with schools to get the necessary information to determine which students are eligible. If your child does not fall into any of these categories, they DO NOT qualify for P-EBT.
The Pandemic Electronic Benefits Transfer (P-EBT) program provides food benefits on an Electronic Benefits Transfer (EBT) card. The benefits are provided to District families with eligible children who would normally receive free or reduced-price school meals if not for virtual and hybrid learning due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
In July 2021, the USDA Food and Nutrition Service (FNS) approved Summer 2021 benefits for the District of Columbia. The District will issue benefits to eligible families by the end of September 2021. Eligible children will receive the federally approved flat rate of $375 per child for the Summer.
If they were eligible for P-EBT benefits in June 2021, regardless of their school’s operating status (virtual/hybrid) in June.
The District received approval in March 2021 to begin implementing the P-EBT plan for SY 2020–2021. Starting in Spring 2021, the District began issuing P-EBT payments to eligible families in three-month increments: October to December 2020, January to March 2021, and April to June 2021.
Families cannot apply to receive P-EBT. DC school children and children under six years of age are eligible for SY 2020-2021 P‑EBT based on these two sets of qualifications:
Eligible families that are currently receiving SNAP benefits or received P-EBT benefits previously will be issued benefits onto their existing EBT cards. Families that are new to the P-EBT program will receive new EBT cards when benefits for their child or children are issued.
Families can provide an updated address, report a lost or destroyed EBT card, or get assistance with problems activating an EBT card by submitting DHS’s Online PEBT Web Form. If you have any questions about your P-EBT benefits, please contact us by using this form.
The P-EBT Parent Portal allows parents to view and receive information about their child’s P-EBT benefits.
The P-EBT Parent Portal allows parents to view and receive information about their child’s P-EBT benefits.
Before accessing the P-EBT Parent Portal, you will need to create a CAFE account if you do not already have one. Click here for video instructions or here for step-by-step instructions on how to do so.
When I try to link my child's P-EBT case to my CAFÉ account, it cannot find the case. What do I do?
Beginning in March 2021, the Illinois Department of Human Services (IDHS) in collaboration with the Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE), began issuing School P-EBT benefits to families with eligible children for the 2020-2021 school year.
Benefits will be issued to eligible children between 7/11/2021-7/20/2021 for October through March 2021 benefits. Benefits will be issued to eligible children in August for the months of April through June 2021.
Each month, a school will report the predominant learning model (100% in-person, blended or hybrid, or 100% distance learning). Depending on the learning model of the student’s school, a student will either not be eligible to receive P-EBT benefits, received half a month’s benefit amount, or receive a full month’s benefit amount.
What is P-EBT? The Pandemic Electronic Benefit Transfer (P-EBT) program is food assistance approved by the U. S. Department of Agriculture, Food and Nutrition Service, and authorized by the Families First Coronavirus Response Act (P.L. 116-127) as amended by the Continuing Appropriations Act, 2021 and Other Extensions Act (P.L.
For students that had received P-EBT benefits for August and September of the current 2020-21 school year, benefits continuing from October 2020 through the balance of the school year will be issued their P-EBT benefits to their existing P-EBT account and can be redeemed with their existing Hawaii P-EBT card or Kokua EBT card.
Students that had already received P-EBT benefits for the months of August and/or September are eligible to receive a retroactive payment for the increase to the daily meal rate that was authorized by President Biden in January 2021.
Each agency makes reasonable efforts to maintain accurate, complete, timely, and relevant personally identifiable information as necessary to assure fairness when using that information to make any determination regarding the individual. Your personally identifiable information will not be disclosed or used for purposes other than those specified, without your consent, except as authorized by law. Please note that the fact that information provided by you is personally identifiable does not mean that it will remain private in all circumstances. Personally identifiable information maintained by the government is a “government record” as defined in Chapter 92F, Hawaiʻi Revised Statutes, General definitions . Access, including public access, to government records is controlled primarily by Chapter 92F, Hawaiʻi Revised Statutes. In addition, there may be other laws that require public access to personally identifiable information. For example, personally identifiable information contained in certain documents submitted to the Documents Registration Branch of the Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs is accessible to the public. Measures to guard against loss, misuse, alteration, or unauthorized access to personally identifiable information have been instituted by eHawaii.gov.
Pandemic Electronic Benefit Transfer (P-EBT) will help families cover the cost of breakfasts and lunches their children would have been eligible to receive for free or at reduced price through the National School Lunch Program. Find out if your school participates in the National School Lunch Program.
The P-EBT program was re-authorized to cover the entire 2020-21 school year. A new P-EBT has been approved for Pennsylvania by the Unit ed States Department of Agriculture’s Food and Nutrition Service. Opens In A New Window.