自信一点,这个equal treatment是SNAP 联邦法规,是民主党总统卡特特地加上去的
1977–1978: “Equal treatment” enters regulation. After Congress overhauled the Food Stamp Program in the Food Stamp Act of 1977, USDA issued implementing regs in September 1978. These included the equal-treatment clause (then written for “coupon customers”), requiring the same prices and terms as cash purchases and barring sales tax on eligible foods. That text is the ancestor of today’s rule.
自信一点,这个SNAP equal treatment法规是民主党总统卡特的EO,USDA不能知法犯法啊
1977–1978: “Equal treatment” enters regulation. After Congress overhauled the Food Stamp Program in the Food Stamp Act of 1977, USDA issued implementing regs in September 1978. These included the equal-treatment clause (then written for “coupon customers”), requiring the same prices and terms as cash purchases and barring sales tax on eligible foods. That text is the ancestor of today’s rule.
Wikimedia Commons
自信一点,这个equal treatment是SNAP 联邦法规,是民主党总统卡特特地加上去的
1977–1978: “Equal treatment” enters regulation. After Congress overhauled the Food Stamp Program in the Food Stamp Act of 1977, USDA issued implementing regs in September 1978. These included the equal-treatment clause (then written for “coupon customers”), requiring the same prices and terms as cash purchases and barring sales tax on eligible foods. That text is the ancestor of today’s rule.
自信一点,这个SNAP equal treatment法规是民主党总统卡特的EO,USDA不能知法犯法啊
1977–1978: “Equal treatment” enters regulation. After Congress overhauled the Food Stamp Program in the Food Stamp Act of 1977, USDA issued implementing regs in September 1978. These included the equal-treatment clause (then written for “coupon customers”), requiring the same prices and terms as cash purchases and barring sales tax on eligible foods. That text is the ancestor of today’s rule.
Wikimedia Commons
自信一点,这个equal treatment是SNAP 联邦法规,是民主党总统卡特特地加上去的
1977–1978: “Equal treatment” enters regulation. After Congress overhauled the Food Stamp Program in the Food Stamp Act of 1977, USDA issued implementing regs in September 1978. These included the equal-treatment clause (then written for “coupon customers”), requiring the same prices and terms as cash purchases and barring sales tax on eligible foods. That text is the ancestor of today’s rule.