Houston Food Bank Urges SNAP Recipients to Verify Benefits Amidst New Work Requirements & Texas Abortion Lawsuit

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Houston Food Bank Urges SNAP Recipients to Verify Benefits Amidst New Work Requirements & Texas Abortion Lawsuit
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The Houston Food Bank is advising SNAP recipients to review their benefit status as new work requirements are implemented. Simultaneously, a Texas man is suing a California doctor over abortion-inducing pills, utilizing a new state law. The lawsuit alleges the doctor provided pills that resulted in two terminated pregnancies. The legal action seeks damages and aims to halt the provision of abortion medication in Texas.

Houston Food Bank urging SNAP recipients to check benefit status as new work requirements take effect Read full article: Houston Food Bank urging SNAP recipients to check benefit status as new work requirements take effect KPRC 2’s Randy McIlvoy and Aaron Wilson break down the Texans’ biggest goals and concerns in the 2026 offseasonNo description availableWhat to know about SNAP eligibility and benefits in Texasagainst a California doctor he accuses of providing abortion-inducing pills to his partner, leveraging for the first time a new Texas law that allows private citizens to sue abortion providers for up to $100,000.

The lawsuit alleges the woman’s ex-husband ordered the abortion pills from Coeytaux. Subsequently, Rodriguez’ girlfriend took the pills and terminated a pregnancy on Sept.19, 2024 and another pregnancy in January 2025. Rodriguez claims in the lawsuit that he was the father in those pregnancies. On Sunday, Rodriguez, through his lawyer Jonathan Mitchell, who helped design Texas’ abortion ban, updated the lawsuit, largely stating the same allegations against Coeytaux. However, this time, Mitchell includedas an additional tool to compel Coeytaux to pay $75,000 in minimum damages, plus other fees, Rodriguez is asking for and to stop prescribing or providing abortion-inducing drugs in Texas. HB 7, which went into effect Dec. 4, allows private citizens to sue anyone who manufactures, distributes, mails or provides abortion medication to or from Texas. The bill’s opponents have called it a “bounty hunter law” because successful plaintiffs would be awarded at least $100,000 in damages. If the plaintiff is not directly related to the fetus, they would only be entitled to 10% and would have to give the remaining money to a charity of their choosing. Women taking abortion pills would not be eligible to be sued under the bill, nor would women who take them after miscarriages. “If discovery reveals that Coeytaux has mailed, transported, delivered, prescribed, or provided any abortion-inducing drug to any person or location in Texas since HB 7 took effect on December 4, 2025, then Mr. Rodriguez will seek to recover at least $100,000.00 for each of those statutory violations,” Mitchell said in the updated lawsuit. The Center for Reproductive Rights, which is representing Coeytaux, released a statement condemning the lawsuit as a strategic attack to further implement legislation that undermine the choices women make about their body. “This law goes against everything Texans value. It’s anti-freedom, anti-privacy, and anti-family,” said Marc Hearron, associate litigation director at the Center for Reproductive Rights, in the news release. “But these lawmakers are relentless in their attempts to scare doctors and patients from prescribing and accessing abortion pills – exactly because they are so safe, effective, and widely used across the United States.”There have been estimates that as many as 19,000 orders for abortion pills from Texans were placed after Texas’ initial abortion ban was enacted. After Texas banned abortion, many turned to online pharmacies and out-of-state providers to obtain medication to terminate their pregnancies despite the bans. Texas is among states leading on the crackdown of abortion pills. In December, Texas joined Florida in suing the Federal Drug Administration over the agency’s approval of mifepristone, a drug commonly prescribed to terminate pregnancies. Darcy Caballero, government relations & political director of Planned Parent Texas Votes, said women often use these abortion-inducing pills because they are pregnant with fetuses that have fatal diagnoses. “They are now having to face a real difficult choice of either going through with a labor that they know is not viable or have to leave the state to get the care that they need because otherwise the state is going to make it hostile for anyone to help them,” Caballero said. The latest lawsuit raises similar legal questions that have popped up in other Texas lawsuits against out-of-state abortion pill providers, namely related to whether their state’s shield laws can protect them from Texas’ challenges. Texas has sued two out-of-state abortion pill providers in New York and Delaware for violating Texas’ abortion laws, but New York and Delaware have shield laws which protect medical providers from out-of-state investigations and prosecutions. While theCalifornia’s shield law could also allow Coeytaux to countersue Rodriguez, but in Sunday’s update, Mitchell pointed out language that Texas lawmakers wrote into HB 7 that prevents such counteractions. The lawsuit also alleges Coeytaux is in violation of the Comstock Act, an 18th Century anti-obscenity law. The Comstock Act has not been enforced for more than a hundred years, with some legal experts arguing it’s entirely unenforceable as a result, while others, including Mitchell, argue it can be used to federally criminalize mailing abortion pills.What does the groundhog do? Breaking down Groundhog Day!City leaders promise action as illegal dumping takes over Houston neighborhoodBig changes to SNAP benefits: New work rules now in effect in TexasKPRC 2’s Daniella Guzman reporting from Milan ahead of the OlympicsDarian Walker with Express Children's Theatre at KPRC 2Set it and forget - Texas Towel Trap, Hard FreezeKPRC 2's Daniella Guzman is heading to Milan for the 2026 Winter Olympics!Houston, get ready for a CHILLY weekend!Do You Feel Safe Riding METRO? We Asked Houston Riders

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