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Due to the federal government shutdown, CalFresh benefits will be delayed beginning Nov. 1, 2025. You can use your EBT card with any existing benefits. However, new CalFresh funds will not be added until federal funding restarts.

The Ventura County Human Services Agency created a list of questions and answers about the CalFresh funding delay:

For a list of food pantries, click here, call 2-1-1, or visit 211ventura.org.

Debido al cierre del gobierno federal, los beneficios de CalFresh se retrasarán a partir del 11/01/2025. Puede usar su tarjeta EBT con los beneficios existentes. Sin embargo, no se agregarán nuevos fondos de CalFresh hasta que se restablezca la financiación federal.

La Agencia de Servicios Humanos del Condado de Ventura creó una lista de preguntas y respuestas sobre el retraso en la financiación de CalFresh.

Para obtener una lista de despensas de alimentos, haga clic aquí, llame al 2-1-1, o visite 211ventura.org.

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Keep kids safe this Halloween

A young girl and a dog sit on a bed with Halloween candy buckets

What you can do to help trick-or-treaters avoid injury.

Halloween should be a night filled only with treats. Yet every year, kids are injured-sometimes seriously-because they're too excited to watch out for cars, masks block their sight, or a knife slips when they're carving pumpkins.

To keep the trick-or-treaters in your family safe this Halloween, follow these tips from the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, the American Academy of Pediatrics and Safe Kids Worldwide:

Make costumes safe. For example, to make kids more visible at night, have them wear light-colored costumes, and decorate both costumes and bags with reflective tape or stickers.

Also see that kids:

  • Dress up with nontoxic face paint and makeup instead of masks. Wearing a mask could block your child's vision.
  • Wear costumes, wigs and accessories that are clearly labeled as flame-resistant.
  • Don't carry a sword or stick that is sharp and potentially dangerous.
  • Never wear nonprescription, decorative contact lenses, which can cause serious eye infections and permanent vision loss.

Set ground rules for trick-or-treating. Any child younger than 12 needs to be accompanied by an adult when trick-or-treating, particularly when crossing streets. Older kids need to tell parents precisely where in the neighborhood they'll be knocking on doors. They also need to agree on a specific time to show up back at home and to carry a cellphone for emergencies.

In addition, all kids should be reminded to:

  • Always use sidewalks when they're available. When sidewalks aren't available, kids should walk on the far edge of the street, facing traffic.
  • Never cross between parked cars, use alleys or cut across yards.
  • Only go to homes with a porch light on, and never enter a home or car for a treat.
  • Always carry a flashlight with fresh batteries.
  • Throw away any candy that is unwrapped or has a wrapper that is torn.

Take care with pumpkins. Don't let small children carve pumpkins. Let them draw a face with a marker, and then carve the pumpkin yourself.

Some other pumpkin safety tips:

  • If older kids carve pumpkins, have them use a pumpkin carving kit or a knife specifically designed for carving.
  • Consider using a flashlight or glow stick instead of a candle to light pumpkins.
  • Always place candle-lit pumpkins on a sturdy table, away from curtains and other flammable objects.

Keep your home safe

Even if you don't have trick-or-treaters in your family, if you're handing out candy you should follow these precautions:

  • Keep anything a child could trip on—such as a bike or garden hose—away from your yard or porch.
  • Remove wet leaves from sidewalks and steps.
  • Restrain pets so they don't bite trick-or-treaters.

Reviewed 6/17/2025

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