Kirkland’s city manager has declared a local state of emergency in response to the abrupt cessation of federal food assistance, leaving approximately 7,500 residents without access to SNAP benefits.
The crisis affects roughly 3,000 households, according to city officials. The city reports local food banks and nonprofits are experiencing overwhelming demand due to the loss of these benefits and the furlough of federal workers.
“This situation represents an immediate and serious threat to the wellbeing of our community,” stated City Manager Kurt Triplett. “Whilst federal funding for SNAP continues to be uncertain and dynamic, this emergency proclamation allows the city to act quickly with maximum flexibility to support our residents who are most affected.”
Under Resolution R-5700, passed by the city council on 5 November, the city can now:
- Expedite funding to food banks and human service agencies
- Waive procedures that could delay emergency response
- Enter emergency contracts for food and supplies
- Redeploy city staff to support relief efforts
“We are a compassionate community,” stated Deputy Mayor Jay Arnold. “This action ensures we can respond swiftly and work alongside our partners to help fill the gaps created by the interruption of SNAP funding.”
The emergency remains in effect through 31 December 2025, or until federal SNAP benefits are restored, whichever comes first.
The emergency declaration represents an extraordinary municipal intervention into a crisis typically addressed through federal and state safety net programmes, illustrating how prolonged government shutdown disrupts the multi-tiered architecture of social services whilst forcing local governments to assume responsibilities beyond their typical mandate.
The 7,500 Kirkland residents suddenly lacking SNAP access constitute a substantial portion of the city’s population of approximately 93,000, representing roughly 8% of residents thrust into food insecurity overnight. The concentration of impact across 3,000 households indicates multi-person families bear significant burden, with children, elderly relatives, and individuals with disabilities among those affected.
The distinction between the 7,500 individuals and 3,000 households affected reveals an average household size of 2.5 people relying on SNAP benefits, consistent with national data showing food assistance programmes serve diverse household configurations including single parents with children, elderly couples, and multigenerational families pooling resources to survive.
The unprecedented demand overwhelming local food banks and nonprofits reflects these organisations’ design as supplemental resources rather than primary food sources for thousands of families. Food banks typically operate with volunteer labour, donated products, and modest budgets calibrated to serve baseline community needs, not to replace an entire federal nutrition programme serving thousands simultaneously.
City Manager Triplett’s characterisation of federal SNAP funding as “uncertain and dynamic” reflects the politically volatile situation where programme continuity depends on congressional negotiations and presidential decisions that can shift rapidly. This uncertainty prevents effective planning by local governments and service providers who cannot anticipate whether federal benefits will resume next week, next month, or after extended delay.
Resolution R-5700’s provisions granting emergency powers to city government remove bureaucratic barriers that normally govern municipal spending and contracting. These safeguards exist to ensure accountability and prevent waste, but emergency circumstances require prioritising speed over procedural compliance when residents face immediate harm.
The authority to fast-track funding to food banks and human service agencies allows the city to disburse resources without lengthy application reviews, competitive bidding processes, or standard approval channels that might delay assistance for weeks or months. This expedited funding can enable food banks to purchase bulk food supplies, hire temporary staff, extend operating hours, and lease additional storage or distribution space to accommodate surging demand.
The power to waive procedures that could delay emergency response provides broad discretion to circumvent administrative requirements that serve important purposes during normal operations but become obstacles during crises. This might include waiving permit requirements for temporary food distribution sites, suspending parking regulations near food banks, or bypassing standard procurement rules for emergency purchases.


