| What to Know for Tuesday, March 10, 2026: | 1: Over 30 states ban junk food purchases with food stamps—bipartisan support grows |  | (Image credit: FGA) |
| Bipartisan movement gaining momentum: More than 30 states have committed to prohibiting junk food purchases with food stamps, including blue states like Colorado and Hawaii — several states have already rolled out their bans after Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins announced states could submit waivers. Taxpayer money fueling health crisis: Soda is the #1 item bought with food stamps, with nearly $25 billion spent annually on sugary drinks, candy, and snacks — kids and adults receiving food stamps face higher rates of obesity and weight-related health issues than those not on the program. What's different now: After 20 years of failed attempts, states finally have a willing federal partner to work with on welfare program reforms — the "Make America Healthy Again" movement has crossed party lines and entered serious policy discussions, with momentum building for nutritious food requirements.
| ➜ Read the full story from the Foundation for Government Accountability here. | | | 2: Million-dollar earners already stopped paying Social Security taxes for 2026 |  | (Image credit: Getty Images) |
| High earners stop paying after $184,500: Individuals earning $1 million annually stopped contributing to Social Security as of March 9th because the payroll tax is capped at $184,500 — billionaire Elon Musk may have paid all his Social Security taxes for the entire year on New Year's Day, depending on how his income is structured. Lifting the cap could fix 67% of the funding crisis: Eliminating the payroll tax cap starting this year (without increasing benefits for extra contributions) would fix 67% of Social Security's long-range funding shortfall — this is the most popular reform option according to a 2025 survey of over 2,200 Americans. Earnings inequality widened the funding gap: Only 6% of workers earn above the cap, but their real earnings grew 62% from 1983-2000 while the other 94% of workers saw just 17% growth — the share of total earnings subject to Social Security taxes dropped from 90% in 1983 to about 82.5% today, contributing to the projected 2032 trust fund depletion.
| ➜ Read the full story from CNBC here. | | 3: Social Security phone wait times slashed from 42 minutes to just 6 minutes under new leadership |  | (Image credit: Getty Images) |
| Dramatic service improvements: Commissioner Frank Bisignano cut average phone wait times from 42.2 minutes in November 2024 to just 6 minutes now — the agency also served 68 million callers in FY 2025, a 65% increase from FY 2024, with an independent IG audit confirming the numbers are accurate. Disability claims processing accelerated: The initial disability claims backlog dropped over 30% from 1.27 million in June 2024 to less than 830,000 now — average processing time is 45 days shorter than January 2025, and hearing-level processing time is down to 265 days, the lowest in 20 years. Billions in waste eliminated: Open unimplemented audit recommendations are at their lowest level in nearly 40 years, with potential savings of $4.9 billion — the agency also added 12.4 million deceased individuals (aged 120+) to the Death Master File and worked with Homeland Security to end improper payments to illegal immigrants.
| ➜ Read the full story from the Washington Strand here. | | | Here's What You Missed on YouTube: | Check out our new YouTube videos for Tuesday, March 10th. | 7 Social Security Mistakes That Could Cost You $149,000! |  | 7 Social Security Mistakes That Could Cost You $149,000 |
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| SNAP Benefits: DO THIS Before March 31st - New Rules Take Effect |  | SNAP Benefits: DO THIS Before March 31st - New Rules Take Effect |
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| | | The Daily 3 Deal List—Week of March 9th | | 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. | *View our Advertising Disclosure |
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