Gov. Ron DeSantis' administration appears to be backing down from its month-long suggestion that the summertime extension of federal aid for hungry children was not needed.

Florida will apply for the $820 million Pandemic Electronic Benefit Transfer that will give needy families $375 per child in food aid, the state's child welfare agency said Monday.

The money has been available since April. Florida's status as the "only state" that had not applied for the federal aid became a major talking point for Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried, who sent a letter Aug. 25 asking the Governor to apply for the aid. On Tuesday, Fried, who is running to replace DeSantis as Governor, said she'll believe Florida has applied for it when she sees it.

"Unfortunately, as of the time of this press release, my office and our federal partners have been told that no application has been submitted for the summer P-EBT funding from our state," Fried said in a written statement released Tuesday morning. "I hope that DCF will complete the application soon, although I'm still appalled that it has taken Governor DeSantis this long to do something so simple that will help feed so many hungry kids in our state."

Before this week, the Governor's office routinely responded to Fried's roundtables and news conferences on the topic, saying food was being provided to needy children in spite of pandemic conditions. Food was available to needy children through Summer BreakSpots, which Fried's department runs, and, unlike other states, in-person school started in August and hungry children could get food at school, Christina Pushaw, Governor's spokeswoman said on numerous occasions.

The position was roundly bashed in newspaper editorials. And more than 80 groups called on DeSantis  to apply, including the Florida PTA, according to the Orlando Sentinel.

But a Department of Children and Families spokeswoman statement seemed to put the cause for the hold-up on Fried's department, though not directly.

"The Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, run by Commissioner Fried, is the agency charged with ensuring summer nutrition for students while schools are on break," DCF spokeswoman Mallory McManus. "Last week, out of an abundance of caution, the Florida Department of Children and Families (DCF) started the process of applying for Pandemic EBT to make certain that any possible gaps left by Commissioner Fried's program will not affect children.

"The Summer Food Service Program is federally funded by the United States Department of Agriculture and is state administered in Florida by FDACS," McManus added.

Fried's news release contained the background statement, "In Florida, the P-EBT program is administered by DCF in partnership with the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS). FDACS does not have the authority to apply for the funding on its own because DCF is the lead agency, but FDACS needs to sign off on the application before DCF can submit it to USDA for approval."

The DeSantis administration had accepted the first round of Pandemic EBT in May, given under President Donald Trump's administration.