Omitting Food From In-Kind Support and Maintenance Calculations, 21199-21211 [2024-06464]
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 60 / Wednesday, March 27, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION
20 CFR Part 416
[Docket No. SSA–2021–0014]
RIN 0960–AI60
Omitting Food From In-Kind Support
and Maintenance Calculations
Social Security Administration.
Final rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
We are updating our
Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
regulations to remove food from the
calculations of In-Kind Support and
Maintenance (ISM). We are also adding
conforming language to our definition of
income. These changes simplify our
rules by making them less cumbersome
to administer and easier for the public
to understand and follow, and they
improve the equitable treatment of food
assistance within the SSI program. This
final rule also includes other minor
revisions to our regulations related to
income, including clarifying our
longstanding position that income may
be received ‘‘constructively.’’
DATES: This final rule will be effective
September 30, 2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Tamara Levingston, Office of Income
Security Programs, 6401 Security Blvd.,
Robert M. Ball Building, Suite 2512B,
Woodlawn, MD 21235, 410–966–7384.
For information on eligibility or filing
for benefits, call our national toll-free
number, 1–800–772–1213 or TTY 1–
800–325–0778, or visit our internet site,
Social Security Online, at https://www.
socialsecurity.gov/.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
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Background
The SSI program provides monthly
payments to adults and children with a
disability or blindness, and to adults
aged 65 and older. These individuals
must meet multiple eligibility
requirements, including having
resources and income below specified
amounts.1 Resources are cash or other
liquid assets or any real or personal
property that individuals (or their
spouses, if any) own and could convert
to cash to be used for their support and
maintenance.2 Income is anything
individuals receive in cash or in-kind
that they can use to meet their food and
1 See 20 CFR 416.202 for a list of the eligibility
requirements. See also 20 CFR 416.420 for general
information on how we compute the amount of the
monthly payment by reducing the benefit rate by
the amount of countable income as calculated
under the rules in subpart K of 20 CFR part 416.
2 20 CFR 416.1201(a).
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shelter needs.3 Individuals’ resources
may affect their SSI eligibility, while
their income may affect both their
eligibility and payment amounts.
Both earned income and unearned
income include items received in-kind.4
Generally, we value in-kind items at
their current market value, and we
apply the various exclusions for both
earned and unearned income.5
However, we have special rules for
valuing in-kind support and
maintenance (ISM) that is received as
unearned income.6 On February 15,
2023, we published a Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM), Omitting
Food From In-Kind Support and
Maintenance Calculations,7 which
proposed updating our regulations to
exclude food from the ISM calculations
and adding conforming language to our
definition of income.
We are making these changes based
on the Commissioner of Social
Security’s rulemaking authority
specified in sections 205(a), 702(a)(5),
1631(d)(1), 1631(e)(1)(A), and 1633(a) of
the Social Security Act. These sections
of the Act give the Commissioner the
authority to adopt rules relating to,
among other things, what data the
Commissioner determines is necessary
for the agency to collect for the effective
and efficient administration of the SSI
program, as well as the nature and
extent of the evidence applicants and
recipients need to provide to establish
benefit eligibility. The modifications to
our policy regarding how we will
calculate ISM are a proper exercise of
the Commissioner’s rulemaking
authority under the Act. The NPRM
includes a full discussion of the ISM
policy as well as the rationale for and
analysis of this policy change, which we
adopt in this final rule except as
indicated in the following
modifications.
Under this final rule, we no longer
consider food expenses in our ISM
calculations. Instead, we will consider
only shelter expenses (i.e., room, rent,
mortgage payments, real property taxes,
heating fuel, gas, electricity, water,
sewerage, and garbage collection
services). We will continue to use the
Value of the One-Third Reduction (VTR)
rule 8 and the Presumed Maximum
3 20 CFR 416.1102. See also 20 CFR 416.1103 for
examples of items that are not considered income.
4 See 20 CFR 416.1110 and 20 CFR 416.1120.
5 See 20 CFR 416.1111(d), 416.1112, 416.1123(c),
and 416.1124.
6 See 20 CFR 416.1123(c) and 416.1131–1147.
7 88 FR 9779.
8 When we apply the VTR rule, we count onethird of the Federal Benefit Rate (FBR) as unearned
income. See 42 U.S.C. 1382a(a)(2)(A); 20 CFR
416.1131(a). For information on the FBR, see 20
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21199
Value (PMV) rule in determining the
value of ISM to an SSI applicant or
recipient.9
Though we are omitting food
expenses from our ISM calculations, we
will still ask a question about food for
the narrow purpose of determining
whether to use the VTR rule or the PMV
rule. Food expenses would not be
included in the actual calculation; they
will only be considered in determining
whether to apply the VTR or PMV rule.
When an applicant or recipient 10 tells
us that they live in another person’s
household, we will ask if others within
the household pay for or provide them
with all their meals. If the applicant or
recipient answers ‘‘no,’’ we will value
the shelter using the PMV rule. If the
applicant or recipient answers ‘‘yes,’’
we will then evaluate the applicant’s or
recipient’s shelter contribution to
determine if the PMV rule or the VTR
rule applies. If the VTR rule does not
apply, then we will evaluate any ISM
under the PMV rule. Asking only the
one question is a change from what we
proposed. In the NPRM, we proposed
asking three questions to assess whether
an applicant or recipient purchased
food separately from the household.
These were: (1) do you buy food
separately from the household? (2) do
you eat all meals out? and (3) do you
receive Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits? 11
In this final rule, we revised these three
questions into one single question to
better enable us to identify applicants
and recipients who should have their
shelter valued under the PMV rule
because they obtain food outside of their
household. Our original three questions
might have disadvantaged some
applicants and recipients because they
would not have identified all potential
circumstances in which the PMV rule
currently applies (and because the PMV
rule can be rebutted, it is more
advantageous in some circumstances).
For example, our original three
questions would not have identified
situations where: applicants and
recipients receive benefits from foodassistance programs other than SNAP;
CFR 416.405 through 416.415. Some States
supplement the FBR amount.
9 When we apply the PMV rule, we count the set
maximum value as unearned income, unless the
applicant or recipient rebuts this presumption. See
20 CFR 416.1140. The set maximum value is onethird of the FBR, plus the amount of the general
income exclusion, see id., which is currently $20,
see 20 CFR 416.1124(c)(12).
10 We refer to ‘‘applicant or recipient’’ here and
throughout this final rule when we mean
‘‘applicant, recipient, or couple’’ for ease of
reference, except where reference to the couple is
specifically relevant.
11 See 88 FR 9785.
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people outside of the household pay for
or provide food or meals; or applicants
or recipients earmark contributions for a
pro rata share of the household’s food
expenses under the previous process.
We will apply the VTR rule when
applicants or recipients (1) live in
another person’s household throughout
a month; (2) receive shelter from others
living in the household; and (3) others
within the household pay for or provide
all the applicant’s or recipient’s meals.
By definition, claimants who live in
their own households will not be
assessed under VTR. Alternatively, we
will apply the PMV rule when an
applicant or recipient receives ISM, but
the VTR rule does not apply. This
means we will apply the PMV rule
when applicants or recipients: (1) live in
another person’s household and receive
shelter from others living in the
household, but others within the
household do not pay for or provide all
the applicant’s or recipient’s meals; (2)
live in their own household, but
someone helps provide them with
shelter; or (3) live in a non-medical
institution as described in 20 CFR
416.1141(c). Under the PMV rule,
applicants and recipients may rebut the
presumption that shelter is worth the set
maximum value by showing the actual
value is lower than the set maximum
value.12
In addition, we are updating our
regulations with clarifying language.
Our previous regulations stated that for
the VTR rule to apply, applicants or
recipients must receive both food and
shelter from the person in whose
household they are living. In practice,
when determining whether to apply the
VTR rule, we consider others in the
household as well. We are clarifying
this longstanding practice in our
regulations. Specifically, in 20 CFR
416.1131(a)(2) and (3), we have changed
the language to indicate that we will
consider food and shelter received
‘‘from others living in the household’’—
not just from the person in whose
household the applicant or recipient is
living.
This final rule also clarifies that
income may be received
‘‘constructively.’’ For purposes of the
definition of income in 20 CFR
416.1102, income may be received
‘‘actually’’ or ‘‘constructively.’’ As we
explained in our NPRM, income is
received constructively if it is under the
applicant’s or recipient’s control, or the
applicant or recipient can use it despite
12 If applicants or recipients successfully rebut
that presumption, we reduce their benefits by a
smaller amount or not at all. See 20 CFR
416.1140(2)(ii).
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support.15 Under our current policy,
this type of food assistance from family
and friends is treated differently than
food support from charitable or
government sources.16 Thus, excluding
food from the calculation of ISM
ensures that food assistance from public
Severability
and private sources is treated uniformly
In the event of an invalidation of any
under our ISM rules.17 Overall, this
part of this rule, our intent is to preserve final rule promotes equity by: providing
the remaining portions of the rule to the increased financial security to affected
fullest possible extent. In particular, we beneficiaries; providing consistent
intend the clarification of consideration treatment of food support regardless of
of others in the household in 20 CFR
source; reducing reporting requirements
416.1131 to be severable, as it better
and the effects of reporting on
explains our current policy and
applicants and recipients; and
functions independently of the other
facilitating improved food security
changes reflected in this final rule. We
among certain beneficiaries.18
also intend the clarification of
In addition, as we discussed in the
constructive receipt of income in 20
NPRM, food costs are quite variable and
CFR 416.1102 to be severable, as it
valuing food is inherently challenging
better explains our current policy and
because it is difficult to accurately
functions independently of the other
estimate food expenses.19 Individuals
changes reflected in this final rule.
receive food at different intervals, in
different amounts, and from different
Justification for Change
sources, and the price of food can
We historically included in-kind
fluctuate significantly over a relatively
receipt of food in our ISM calculations
short period of time. When any of these
because food assistance helps people
food-related factors changes, under our
meet their basic needs. However, the
current policy, applicants and recipients
complexities of our current food ISM
must immediately report the change or
policies outweigh their utility. As
else risk a potential over- or
discussed in the NPRM in much greater underpayment.20 This creates
detail, we are revising our policy for
significant burdens for the SSI
several purposes, including to make our applicants and recipients and also for
policies simpler (and thus easier to
the agency to process frequent changes
comprehend and use), and to promote
related to food ISM and ensure that
equity both by treating food assistance
payments are accurate. As we noted in
equally regardless of the source and by
the NPRM, our ISM calculations have
not disadvantaging an already
historically been a significant cause of
vulnerable population when they
payment errors.21 We anticipate that
receive food assistance.14 First, this final eliminating a highly variable expense,
rule simplifies SSI policy because it
such as food, from our ISM calculations
removes a variable from our ISM
will help us achieve greater program
calculations, which, in turn, will:
efficiency and payment accuracy.
reduce the amount of program rules an
For a more detailed explanation of
applicant or recipient needs to
how we expect the final rule to function
understand; reduce the amount of
in these ways, we refer to Justification
information that applicants or recipients for Change section of the NPRM.22
must report; simplify and shorten
Modifications From NPRM
processing; and lead to fewer benefit
In several places, this final rule differs
recalculations and payment errors.
slightly from the CFR text we set out in
Second, this final rule promotes equity.
the NPRM. As discussed earlier, we
SSI recipients, by definition, have low
revised the language because our
income and resources. Because loworiginal three questions might have
income people disproportionately
disadvantaged applicants and recipients
encounter barriers across a range of
who obtain food outside of their
social, health, and economic outcomes,
household. We anticipate that the
our goal is to improve their
revised question will be more
circumstances, thus improving equity.
As we discussed in our NPRM, disabled comprehensive than the original three
individuals are more likely to be food
15 Id. at 9786–87.
insecure, and this policy change will
16 Id. at 9787.
remove critical barriers to receiving
17 Id.
informal food assistance from friends,
18 Id. at 9786–88.
family, and community networks of
19 Id. at 9785.
not actually receiving it, unless there are
significant restrictions on the
applicant’s or recipient’s ability to
receive it.13 Constructive receipt of
income is part of our current policy, and
this change makes it clearer.
20 Id.
13 88
FR 9784 (Feb. 15, 2023).
14 Id.
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at 9785–86.
at 9786–88.
22 Id. at 9784–9788.
21 Id.
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questions we proposed in the NPRM. In
addition, we eliminated the phrase we
proposed related to receiving shelter
from a ‘‘combination of others living
inside the household and others living
outside the household.’’ In these
instances, this final rule retains existing
CFR language, which references only
receipt of shelter from ‘‘others living in
the household.’’ We detail these changes
below.
• We revised paragraph (h) of 20 CFR
416.1121. In the NPRM, we stated that
one rule (the VTR rule) applies if ‘‘you
are living throughout a month in
another person’s household receiving all
your shelter from others living in the
household.’’ 23 This final rule revises
this to ‘‘you are living in another
person’s household, you receive shelter
from others living in the household, and
others within the household pay for or
provide you with all of your meals.’’
• We revised paragraph (c) of 20 CFR
416.1130 and redesignated it as
paragraph (b)(2). In the NPRM, we
stated that the VTR rule applies if you
(applicants or recipients) are living in
the household of a person who provides
you with shelter, ‘‘unless we determine
that you buy your food separately from
the household, eat all meals out, or
receive Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program benefits.’’ 24 This
final rule revises this to ‘‘and others
within the household pay for or provide
you with all of your meals.’’
• We revised paragraph (a)(2) of 20
CFR 416.1131 to eliminate the phrase,
‘‘combination of others living inside the
household and others living outside the
household.’’ 25 We also revised
paragraph (a)(3) of 20 CFR 416.1131. In
the NPRM, we stated that the VTR rule
applies when you (applicants or
recipients), ‘‘[d]o not buy food
separately from the household, eat all
meals out, or receive Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance Program benefits.’’
This final rule revises this to when
‘‘[o]thers within the household pay for
or provide you with all of your meals.’’
• We revised paragraph (a) of 20 CFR
416.1141. In the NPRM, we did not
propose changes to this section. The
previous regulatory text stated that the
PMV rule applies if applicants or
recipients are living in another person’s
household ‘‘but not receiving both food
and shelter from that person.’’ The final
rule revises this to ‘‘you receive shelter
from others living in the household; and
others within the household do not pay
for or provide you with all of your
meals.’’
23 88
FR 9794 (Feb. 15, 2023).
24 Id.
25 Id.
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• We revised paragraphs (a) and (b) of
20 CFR 416.1147 to eliminate the
phrase, ‘‘combination of others living
inside the household and others living
outside the household.’’ 26 We further
revised paragraph (a) of 20 CFR
416.1147. In the NPRM, we stated,
‘‘When both of you live in another
person’s household throughout a month
and receive shelter from others living in
the household or a combination of
others living inside the household and
others living outside the household,’’
then the VTR rule applies to the couple.
The final rule revises this to ‘‘When
both of you live in another person’s
household throughout a month, receive
shelter from others living in the
household, and others within the
household pay for or provide you with
all of your meals. . . .’’ We further
revised paragraph (b) of 20 CFR
416.1147. In the NPRM we stated, ‘‘If
one of you is living in the household of
another person who provides you with
shelter’’ and the other person is
temporarily absent and ineligible, then
we compute benefits as if the two are
separately eligible individuals. The final
rule revises this to ‘‘If one of you is
living in the household of another
person and receives shelter from others
living in the household, and others
within the household pay for or provide
you with all of your meals. . . .’’
Listening Sessions
During the public comment period,
we held two listening sessions, as
described in Executive Order (E.O.)
12866, at the request of advocacy
groups. Notes from those sessions are
available at https://
www.regulations.gov/document/SSA2021-0014-0003 under the ‘‘Supporting
& Related Material’’ tab. The issues
raised during those sessions are also
addressed in the ‘‘Comments Summary’’
section of this final rule.
Comments Summary
We received 4,386 public comments
on our NPRM from February 15 through
April 17, 2023. Of the total comments,
4,320 are available for public viewing at
https://www.regulations.gov/docket/
SSA-2021-0014.27 These comments
were from:
• Individuals;
• Advocacy groups for claimant
representatives, such as the National
Organization of Social Security
Claimants’ Representatives and the
26 88
FR 9795 (Feb. 15, 2023).
excluded comments that were unrelated to
the proposal or were exact duplicates submitted by
the same commenter. Because of the nature of
sorting and processing comments, some exact
duplicates may have been posted publicly.
27 We
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21201
National Association of Disability
Representatives; and
• Other advocacy groups.
We carefully considered the public
comments we received. More than 95%
of commenters supported the proposals
in the NPRM. Some commenters agreed
with the overarching proposal but
recommended amendments to it. Other
commenters asked questions and offered
opinions on the potential financial and
legal implications of the proposal. A few
commenters disagreed with the proposal
altogether.
We received some comments that
were outside the scope of this rule
because they did not relate to our
proposal to remove food from the ISM
calculations. Even though outside the
scope, we address some of these
comments where they related to ISM
more generally and a response might
help the public understand our
programs better.
The next section summarizes and
responds to the public comments.
Comments and Responses
Requests To Modify the New Policy
Outlined in the NPRM
Comment: A commenter suggested we
should no longer apply ISM
retroactively, and that we should
provide advance notice of ISM
reduction. The commenter expressed
that applicants and recipients should
have the opportunity to understand the
effects of ISM and to begin contributing
a fair share towards the household
expenses before ISM reduction is
applied. The commenter asserted that
by ceasing the retroactive application of
the ISM rule for SSI applicants, SSA
would greatly reduce ‘‘negative effects’’
and ‘‘stop penalizing recipients for the
long wait time it takes for applications
and appeals processing.’’
Response: In general, we determine an
individual’s eligibility for SSI payments
for a month based on the individual’s
(and eligible spouse’s, if any) income,
resources, and other relevant
characteristics in that month.28 But, for
a variety of reasons, we may have to
calculate payments for a particular
month after the fact (for example,
because it takes time to process a new
claim, or we did not receive timely
information about a change in
circumstances). Doing so does not make
our application of ISM ‘‘retroactive.’’
Additionally, we provide written
advance notice of a planned adverse
action, where SSI payments would be
reduced, suspended, or terminated.29
28 See
29 See
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42 U.S.C. 1382(c)(1).
20 CFR 416.1336.
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We agree that individuals should have
the opportunity to understand ISM and
its potential effects. Individuals may
contact us directly to ask questions, and
we provide a variety of resources to
explain our rules in plain language, like
instructions on our forms and readerfriendly publications we make available
online, by mail, and in our offices.
Comment: Several commenters
suggested that we change ISM rules to
reflect a rebuttable presumption that the
SSI recipient has no countable ISM,
because ‘‘only rarely’’ is the ISM
received of ‘‘true market value.’’
Response: It is not clear to us what the
legal and policy basis would be to
presume that the individual has no
countable ISM. The Social Security Act
states ‘‘that relevant information will be
verified from independent or collateral
sources and additional information
obtained as necessary in order to assure
that . . . benefits are only provided to
eligible individuals (or eligible spouses)
and that the amounts of such benefits
are correct.’’ 30 Further, it is not clear to
us who would rebut the presumption.
Nor is it clear to us what is meant by
the statement that the ISM received
rarely is of ‘‘true market value.’’
Comment: One commenter
recommended that we create a PMV
rebuttal form and make changes to the
Rebuttal Rights Notice. The commenter
stated that such a form should plainly
advise recipients that they have a right
to rebut PMV, clearly explain what
kinds of evidence recipients could
submit and how to do so and provide
space for recipients to provide further
information to the agency. The
commenter expressed that many SSI
recipients are ‘‘unaware of the PMV
rebuttal procedures’’ and are ‘‘denied
crucial additional benefits to which they
are entitled because they fail to
rightfully rebut the PMV’s maximum
one-third reduction.’’
Response: Generally, our technicians
discuss the PMV rebuttal process with
applicants and recipients when they
assist them by phone or in person at the
time of the application or post-eligibility
event.31 Sometimes, our technicians are
unable to discuss the PMV rebuttal
process upfront, such as when an
applicant applies electronically or by
mail. Under those circumstances, we
send them the Rebuttal Rights
Notification. This letter serves as a
prompt for applicants and recipients to
contact us directly to ensure they
understand PMV rebuttal rights and
how to rebut the PMV. While we
30 42
U.S.C. 1383(e)(1)(B)(i).
Program Operations Manual System
(POMS) SI 00835.320.
31 See
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appreciate this commenter’s feedback,
we need to conduct additional analysis
prior to determining if a form would
improve certain applicants’ and
recipients’ ability to understand and
utilize the PMV rebuttal process, or if
people would find it more burdensome.
As a result, while this final rule does
not include the adoption of a new form,
in FY 2024 we intend to initiate a
separate Paperwork Reduction Act
(PRA) process. As part of this PRA
process, we would propose the Rebuttal
Rights Notification Form, and would
solicit feedback on the proposed form.
Comment: One commenter expressed
that the SSI program would be better
served by eliminating the VTR
framework altogether and instead
assessing all recipients under the PMV
framework.
Response: We are unable to eliminate
the VTR because it is required by the
Social Security Act in 42 U.S.C.
1382a(a)(2)(A), which states: ‘‘in the
case of any individual (and his eligible
spouse, if any) living in another
person’s household and receiving
support and maintenance in-kind from
such person, the dollar amounts
otherwise applicable to such individual
(and spouse) . . . shall be reduced by 33
1⁄3 percent in lieu of including such
support and maintenance in the
unearned income of such individual
(and spouse). . . .’’
Comment: A commenter suggested
there is an alternative simplification:
assigning a set value to food received
with a possibility of rebuttal.
Response: The commenter’s
suggestion would be difficult to
implement, as it is not clear how we
would fairly assign a set value to food
received, particularly since food prices
can be volatile. Additionally, because
rebutting the presumption would
require evidence of food costs, it would
present the same challenges and
burdens that currently exist.
Miscellaneous Comments Regarding
Various Aspects of the New Rule
Comment: A commenter expressed
that it may be efficient to use data
matches with State agencies to establish
SNAP receipt, and to allow applicants
and recipients the opportunity to rebut
the results of the match.
Response: The commenter’s suggested
use of a data match with State agencies
for SNAP benefits related to our original
proposal to ask three food-related
questions—one of which asked directly
about SNAP receipt. However, as noted
above, instead of the three food-related
questions we proposed in the NPRM, we
will ask only one food-related question,
for the limited purpose of determining
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whether ISM should be valued under
the VTR or PMV rule: do others within
the household pay for or provide you
with all of your meals? We separately
ask about an applicant’s or recipient’s
receipt of food-assistance benefits for
purposes other than determining their
living arrangement and will continue to
do so. We will work to add appropriate
internal guidance to the question ‘‘Do
others within the household pay for or
provide you with all of your meals?’’ to
direct technicians to review whether the
applicant or recipient has separately
indicated they receive food-assistance
benefits. This will ensure that when an
individual has indicated they receive
food-assistance benefits they are treated
under PMV. Further, the receipt of
SNAP benefits will also continue to be
relevant to our proposed rulemaking:
Expand the Definition of a Public
Assistance Household,32 which
proposes to expand our definition of a
public assistance household to include
SNAP as an additional means-tested
public income-maintenance (PIM)
program under 20 CFR 416.1142(a). The
agency will use data matches with State
agencies if appropriate for these other
purposes.
Comment: One commenter noted that
the Medicare Part D Extra Help program
does not count ISM in determining
eligibility, and the commenter
expressed that the ‘‘incentive structure
of the Extra Help subsidy could
ultimately decrease the same
individual’s SSI assistance’’ when
individuals are eligible under both
programs. Further, the commenter
expressed that removing shelter inputs
from ISM entirely would make SSI and
the Extra Help program eligibility
methodologies more uniform. The
commenter stated that, in an ideal
system, eligibility criteria for lowincome assistance programs would be
consistent.
Response: The Social Security Act
requires that we treat ISM differently for
SSI than for Extra Help. While the Act
specifies that income for Extra Help is
generally calculated the same way as for
SSI, it also says that for Extra Help
‘‘support and maintenance furnished inkind shall not be counted as income.’’ 33
We do not anticipate changes in our
ISM calculations will impact the Extra
Help program.
Comment: One commenter
recommended simplifying our ISM
regulations for increased readability and
digestibility. The commenter expressed
that SSI recipients and applicants
32 See
88 FR 67148.
42 U.S.C. 1395w–114(a)(3)(C)(i); POMS HI
03020.045.
33 See
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typically require ‘‘extensive and timeconsuming client counseling to translate
dense terminology and complex rule
structure into plain language.’’ For
example, the commenter said that the
language in 20 CFR 416.1102 is
challenging because it presents ‘‘in-kind
support and maintenance’’ as an
exception to a general rule. The
commenter expressed there is also a
broader readability problem with ‘‘inkind income,’’ because it is an
‘‘uncommon and unfamiliar term that
confuses most people and prevents
them from understanding their reporting
requirements.’’ In addition, they
suggested the possibility of renaming
ISM with a term like ‘‘value of free
shelter’’ or ‘‘free shelter reduction.’’
Response: Although we appreciate the
suggestion to simplify and improve the
readability and digestibility of our
regulations, it is not possible to
eliminate all technical language.
Sometimes it is necessary for us to use
terms that may be technical, unique to
the SSI program, or both because they
reflect complex statutory requirements
and other unique aspects of the SSI
program. The use of such terms is often
because the requirements and language
are set by statute.
In addition, the terms ‘‘value of free
shelter’’ or ‘‘free shelter reduction’’
might not be accurate and might be
confused with other policies in our
program, such as ‘‘rent-free shelter.’’ 34
Further, it is important to keep our
terms consistent throughout our
policies, forms, publications, and
outreach efforts. Revising a widely used
term like ‘‘ISM’’ would be a significant
undertaking and would likely lead to
confusion for the people who receive
benefits from, or work with recipients
of, our program currently and are
already familiar with the terms we use
now.
However, we acknowledge that our
regulations are complex. For that
reason, we provide a variety of
resources to explain our rules in plain
language, like instructions on our forms
and reader-friendly publications we
make available online, by mail, and in
our offices. Individuals may also contact
us directly to ask questions.
Comment: Multiple commenters
expressed concerns about, or advised
against, continuing to ask applicants
and recipients the three questions about
food 35 to determine whether to use the
VTR or PMV rule. They said asking
34 See
POMS SI 00835.370.
mentioned above, the questions we
proposed in the NPRM were: (1) do you buy food
separately from the household? (2) do you eat all
meals out? and (3) do you receive SNAP benefits?
35 As
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these questions and continuing to
consider food, even in this limited way,
would result in complexity and
confusion for applicants, recipients, and
SSA staff.
Conversely, another commenter
supported our proposal to continue
asking the food questions. The
commenter said, ‘‘While we
acknowledge that asking these three
questions of all SSI recipients does not
streamline the ISM process for
applicants and recipients, that is clearly
outweighed by the fact that this
approach will enable more applicants
and recipients to be assessed under the
PMV rule, thereby avoiding a potential
ISM reduction that is greater than the
actual value of the ISM received.’’
Another commenter similarly supported
continuing to ask the food questions by
urging us to ‘‘take care not to
inadvertently penalize recipients using
their monthly benefits to contribute to
their household’s food expenses’’ and
provided an example of a former client
who was ‘‘eligible to receive her
maximum FBR because she paid for her
household’s food, though she was
allowed to live in that household rentfree.’’
Response: We acknowledge that it
would simplify our process further if we
stopped asking SSI applicants and
recipients questions about food. Instead
of asking three questions as proposed in
the NPRM, we will instead ask one
question to make the process simpler.
Receipt of food from outside the
household can determine whether the
PMV rule applies, and the PMV can be
advantageous in some circumstances
because it provides an opportunity for
applicants and recipients to rebut the
value of ISM provided. Therefore, we
think it is important to continue to ask
about food in this limited way.
Comment: A commenter asserted that
support and maintenance means room
and board as evidenced by the context
of the law,36 where the ‘‘exclusion of a
residence in a nonprofit retirement
home is given, and room and board is
clearly understood, as in [Program
Operations Manual System (POMS)] SI
00830.605.’’ In addition, the commenter
mentioned a 2008 Bulletin article cited
in the NPRM.37 The commenter added
that PMV must emulate VTR, and
36 The commenter cited ‘‘1612a(2)(A).’’ We
believe the intended reference was to section
1612(a)(2)(A) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C.
1382a(a)(2)(A)).
37 See Balkus, Richard; Sears, James; Wilschke,
Susan; and Wixon, Bernard. ‘‘Simplifying the
Supplemental Security Income Program: Options
for Eliminating the Counting of In-kind Support and
Maintenance.’’ Social Security Bulletin, vol. 68, no.
4, 2008, www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/ssb/v68n4/
v68n4p15.html.
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therefore that removal of food from ISM
is not to be considered as within the
law.
Response: We are removing food from
the calculations of ISM. Regarding the
statute’s provision on residing in a
nonprofit retirement home or similar
nonprofit institution,38 we did not
change the regulations that apply when
someone lives in a nonprofit retirement
home or similar institution.39 Regarding
the comments on POMS SI 00830.605
(Home Energy Assistance and Support
and Maintenance Assistance (HEA/
SMA)),40 we did not change the
regulations on support and maintenance
assistance.41
The 2008 Bulletin referenced by the
commenter generally supports
simplification such as removing food
from the ISM calculations: ‘‘One of the
founding principles of SSI is that, as a
program that is national in scope, it
should be based on a ‘flat grant’
approach that does not involve program
administrators in the detailed
household budgets of millions of
recipients. The law creating the SSI
program included the one-third
reduction provision so that SSA would
not have to determine the actual value
of room and board when a recipient
lived with a friend or relative. . . . SSA
created the PMV rule and the pro rata
share concept through regulations in an
attempt to better address equity among
recipients. However, these regulations
compromised the simplification
objective of the ‘flat grant’ approach[.]’’
Finally, it is not clear what it would
mean for the PMV rule to emulate the
VTR rule with respect to removal of
food from the calculation of ISM. The
changes here will remove food from the
calculation of ISM under both rules.
Comment: A commenter asserted that
the 2005 precedent of the removal of
clothing, used to support the proposal,
actually achieves the opposite. The
commenter said that clothing is a ‘‘semidurable’’ good and may be thought to be
unlike consumption goods and services
like food and shelter. The commenter
pointed to text from the 2005 rule which
says: ‘‘unlike food and shelter, clothing
generally is not received every month.
Items of clothing are more likely to be
received infrequently and sporadically,
and they generally have no substantial
value.’’ The commenter asked if the
same could be said for food.
38 Section 1612(a)(2)(A) of the Social Security
Act, as amended (42 U.S.C. 1382a(a)(2)(A)).
39 20 CFR 416.1144.
40 We note also that our sub-regulatory guidance,
including our POMS, does not carry the weight of
regulations.
41 20 CFR 416.1157.
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Response: We did not make the same
simplification for food that we did for
clothing. In 2005, we removed clothing
from the definition of income and the
definition of ISM.42 Here, we are
removing food from the calculations of
ISM. The comparison that we drew in
the NPRM—‘‘Like the 2005
simplification, this proposal would
simplify the ISM calculations with
respect to a factor for which it is
difficult to obtain accurate, verifiable
estimates. Like clothing, food is an
expense that fluctuates from month to
month and may be provided from
different sources at different
intervals.’’—is accurate. Furthermore,
while the 2005 rule included specific
rationale justifying why it was
appropriate to treat clothing differently
than food or shelter, including the
argument the commenter raised, in
developing this rulemaking we
presented specific rationale as to why it
is appropriate to remove food from the
calculation of ISM.43
Comments Regarding Potential
Financial Effects of This Policy
Comment: A commenter asked how
much of the estimated SSI program cost
of $1.5 billion is due to an estimated
increase in the number of applications
that might result following publication
of this rule.
Response: The Office of the Chief
Actuary (OCACT) estimated that
roughly $0.2 billion of the estimated
total increase in Federal SSI payments,
from fiscal years (FY) 2024 through
2033, is due to applications that would
not be filed under current rules but are
expected to be filed under the new
rules. This is equivalent to an increase
of 26,000 Federal SSI recipients in FY
2033.
Comment: A commenter asserted that
the administrative burden reduction and
cost savings to the agency and the
public are small, while many
beneficiaries will be ‘‘harmed’’ by the
consequences of the change. The
commenter said the ‘‘entire regime of
reporting and investigations is still
needed for housing support and indeed
several food questions are still going to
be asked.’’ The commenter also stated
that, because SSI is considered in
decisions regarding SNAP (and housing
assistance), some recipients could see
reductions in these food (and housing)
benefits. Further, the commenter
suggested that we should use the
Financial Eligibility Model (FEM) to
model and consider these effects. In
addition, the commenter expressed that
42 70
43 88
FR 6340.
FR 9785 (Feb. 15, 2023).
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this rule will ‘‘encourage the migration
of beneficiaries from living in their
family’s home and receiving ample food
support to either staying in their
family’s home with no food support or
moving on their own.’’
Response: Though removing food
from the calculations of ISM is limited,
we anticipate that removing even just
this one variable from our calculations
will simplify the process.
When we use this final rule, we will
ask fewer questions, not require details
about food expenses and costs, and not
require verification of food-related
amounts. This reduces burdens for
applicants and recipients. As noted in
our NPRM, we expect time-savings
related to this rule to have associated
cost-savings for applicants, recipients,
and our agency.
Regarding the comment on potential
reductions in SNAP or other benefits,
though we cannot speak fully to the rule
change’s effects on programs that we do
not administer, we note that when
SNAP benefits are affected by increased
income, such as an SSI payment, they
are generally reduced by 30% of the
increase, up to the point of
ineligibility.44
The FEM is an internal tool developed
by SSA that we have used historically
to match survey data with
administrative records to evaluate
financial eligibility for SSI and other
programs. The FEM is not capable of
estimating the impact of SSI changes on
other programs, nor was it designed for
that purpose.
Lastly, we have not made this rule
change to provide incentives for people
to change their living arrangements or
the way they obtain food, including
food assistance. For the reasons stated
in the NPRM, we anticipate this
regulation will improve the
administration of our program.
Comment: One commenter said,
‘‘Medicaid impacts do not appear to be
discussed,’’ and opined that there could
be a substantial effect on Medicaid
expenditures. The commenter asked if a
discussion of Medicaid impacts will be
included with the final rule.
Response: As a matter of protocol, the
estimates prepared by SSA’s OCACT
focus on the impact on SSA.
44 See the Food and Nutrition Services, U.S.
Department of Agriculture’s SNAP Eligibility page
available at: https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/
recipient/eligibility. The SNAP program has an
exception to the 30% reduction, which applies in
some circumstances to one- or two-person
households that would still receive the minimum
benefit (i.e., would have benefits reduced by less
than 30% of the increases in income). See the
Congressional Research Service’s The Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP): Categorical
Eligibility, summary, available at https://sgp.fas.org/
crs/misc/R42054.pdf.
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Comment: A commenter expressed
that States may be harmed by the
proposed change because some
individuals currently not receiving
benefits will become eligible and State
expenses for supplemental benefits will
increase.
Response: We did not calculate the
effect on State supplemental payments
as this is outside the scope of our
standard actuarial work. State
supplements are relatively small
compared to the Federal Benefit Rate
(FBR) and payments depend on living
arrangements defined by each State. We
anticipate that some individuals will
become eligible for Federal SSI
payments under this rule change, but a
small number of those who remain
ineligible for a Federal payment could
become eligible for a State payment as
well.45 We are unable to speak to Stateadministered SSI supplement effects.
Comments on the Rulemaking Process
and Associated Legal Issues
Comment: One commenter stated that
the regulation will cost taxpayers $1.5
billion over ten years 46 and asserted
(without further explanation) that the
regulation violates the major questions
doctrine of the United States Supreme
Court. Further, the commenter
expressed that we gave no justification
for the timing of the proposal.
Response: The Commissioner of
Social Security has ‘‘full power and
authority to make rules and regulations
to establish procedures’’ that are ‘‘not
inconsistent with the provisions of’’ the
Social Security Act and are ‘‘necessary
or appropriate to carry out such
provisions.’’ 47 The Supreme Court has
described this particular Congressional
grant of authority as ‘‘exceptionally
broad .’’ 48 In addition, the
Commissioner has authority to prescribe
the requirements for filing applications,
45 State eligibility requirements vary by State, and
State and Federal income requirements may be
different. In some instances, an applicant’s or
recipient’s income may make them ineligible for
Federal SSI payments but they may still qualify for
State SSI payments.
46 The commenter referred to figures provided in
the NPRM. In the NPRM, we estimated that the
transfer from the government to SSI recipients, for
the period of FYs2023 through 2032, represents an
increase in Federal SSI payments of 0.2%.
47 42 U.S.C. 405(a); see also 42 U.S.C. 1383(d)(1)
(stating that the provisions of 42 U.S.C. 405(a) shall
apply for relevant title XVI purposes ‘‘to the same
extent as they apply in the case of title II’’); 42
U.S.C. 902(a)(5) (‘‘The Commissioner may prescribe
such rules and regulations as the Commissioner
determines necessary or appropriate to carry out the
functions of the Administration.’’).
48 Heckler v. Campbell, 461 U.S. 458, 466 (1983)
(‘‘Congress has conferred on the [Commissioner]
exceptionally broad authority to prescribe standards
for applying certain sections of the Social Security
Act.’’) (cleaned up, citations omitted).
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data to be furnished, and the reporting
of events and changes in circumstances
‘‘as may be necessary for the effective
and efficient administration’’ of the SSI
program.49 The commenter did not
articulate why, in their view, there is
any ‘‘reason to hesitate before
concluding that Congress meant to
confer’’ authority to adopt this rule.50
Regarding timing, we are always
looking for ways to improve and
simplify our program rules and policies.
Comment: A commenter expressed
that there are technical inadequacies in
the NPRM, such as ‘‘no evidence’’ that
the estimated 16 percent of recipients
currently evaluated under the VTR rule
would now be evaluated under the PMV
rule, and that the Consumer Price Index
(CPI), which excludes food from its
assessment, is irrelevant to the analysis.
Response: SSA’s OCACT used
information about whether recipients
receive SNAP benefits, which is
collected during the initial claim and
redetermination processes, among other
administrative data, to estimate that
roughly 16% of recipients who are
evaluated under the VTR according to
current rules would be evaluated under
the PMV according to the rules as stated
in the NPRM. As discussed above, we
have revised the questions we ask about
food, and will instead ask a single
question that does not directly address
SNAP. However, we assume that
recipients who receive SNAP do not
have all their meals provided by others
within their household and, thus, would
also be evaluated under the PMV rule.
OCACT estimates that additional
recipients who would have been
evaluated under the VTR rule under the
NPRM will now be evaluated under the
PMV rule. However, OCACT estimates
that very few such recipients would
have a change in SSI payment. Further,
our reference to certain types of CPI
measures that exclude food was meant
to illustrate that many economic
analysts consider food prices to be
significantly more volatile than the
prices of most other types of goods and
services. We did not use these types of
CPI measures in our quantitative
analysis of the rule.
Comment: One commenter asked us
to post separately all the citations they
provided in their comments as part of
our formal administrative record for
purposes of the Administrative
Procedure Act.
Response: Consistent with our
standard procedures, we posted
49 42 U.S.C. 1383(e)(1)(A); see also 42 U.S.C.
1383b(a).
50 West Virginia v. EPA, 142 S. Ct. 2587, 2608
(2022) (quotation omitted).
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publicly all relevant comments 51 and
made them available within docket
SSA–2021–0014 on
www.regulations.gov. We consider
public comments as part of the
rulemaking record. Any citations
commenters provided within public
comment submissions are viewable by
the public within the comment
submissions.
Request for Further Policy Changes in
the Overall Area of ISM
Comment: Some commenters
expressed that this proposal was a good
‘‘first step,’’ but advised that we should
make additional reforms, such as
omitting ISM from our program entirely,
revising calculations for married
recipients, raising benefit amounts, and
raising savings limits.
Response: We are unable to consider
eliminating ISM entirely, because it is
required by the Social Security Act.52
We acknowledge the commenters’
suggestions regarding revising
calculations for married recipients,
raising payment amounts, and raising
savings limits. However, such
suggestions unrelated to the
consideration of food in the ISM
calculations are outside the scope of this
rulemaking. Similarly, the additional
ISM-related rules that commenters
suggested are outside the scope of this
rulemaking.
Comment: Multiple commenters
suggested changes related to how we
consider shelter expenses and
contributions in our ISM calculations.
For example, one commenter suggested
that ISM based on shelter costs should
apply only when the shelter is fixed and
stable, and should not apply for
recipients who are transient with no
fixed abode.
Other commenters suggested that we
redefine how we count shelter
assistance and minimize housing
expenses in the calculations of ISM.
They expressed that we could more
narrowly define shelter to include
assistance with utilities or omit utilities
from shelter expenses—because rent
and mortgage payments pay for access
to shelter—and utilities could be seen as
amenities in some cases.
Another commenter suggested that we
accept self-verification of housing costs
and contributions, because it can be
difficult for SSI recipients to obtain
statements from their landlords or
friends with whom they are staying and
to confirm their precise living
arrangement because many living
51 We excluded comments that were exact
duplicates submitted by the same commenter.
52 See 42 U.S.C. 1382a(a)(2)(A).
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arrangements are verbal. According to
the commenter, people who themselves
do not receive SSI, but who rent a room
to an SSI recipient, may be reluctant to
provide information about their
mortgage, utility costs, or property tax
payments to an agency from which they
receive no direct support.
Response: We acknowledge the
suggestions related to the consideration
of shelter expenses and contributions.
However, these suggestions are outside
the scope of this rulemaking.
Comment: One commenter
recommended changing the way we
treat cash gifts received directly by an
SSI applicant or recipient. The
commenter asserted that, in the context
of ‘‘rent help’’ from a family member or
friend, the distinction we make between
third-party payments (ISM) and cash
gifts has material consequences, because
the SSI reduction from third-party
payments (ISM) is capped at the onethird ISM limit, while there is no cap for
cash gift income. The commenter
characterized this distinction as
‘‘arbitrary and meaningless for SSI
recipients because the intent and effect
in both instances is identical (i.e.,
covering rent).’’
Response: This suggestion is not
related to removing food from the ISM
calculations and is outside the scope of
this rulemaking.
Comment: Some commenters
suggested publishing regulations to
expand the definition of ‘‘public
assistance household,’’ to expand the
applicability of a rental subsidy policy,
and to exclude from the definition of
ISM items with no current market value.
Response: Our Regulatory Agenda
includes two proposed rules similar to
these suggestions: Expand the Definition
of a Public Assistance (PA) Household,
RIN 0960–AI81; and Nationwide
Expansion of the Rental Subsidy Policy
for SSI Recipients, 0960–AI82. We listed
these proposed rules in the Spring 2023
Unified Agenda (Agenda) of Regulatory
and Deregulatory Actions. The Agenda
comprises regulatory items we are
actively pursuing and is available at
https://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/
eAgendaMain. On August 24, 2023, we
published an NPRM, Expansion of the
Rental Subsidy Policy for Supplemental
Security Income (SSI) Applicants and
Recipients, which proposes to revise our
regulations by applying nationwide the
ISM rental subsidy exception, currently
in place for SSI applicants and
recipients residing in seven States, that
recognizes a ‘‘business arrangement’’
exists when the amount of required
monthly rent equals or exceeds the
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PMV.53 Likewise, on September 29,
2023, we published another NPRM,
Expand the Definition of a Public
Assistance Household,54 which
proposes to expand our definition of a
public assistance household to include
SNAP as an additional means-tested
public income-maintenance (PIM)
program under 20 CFR 416.1142(a).
Opposition to the New Policy
Comment: One commenter
maintained that ISM should continue
and said that because SSI is a ‘‘needsbased’’ program, if someone is receiving
food assistance, their ‘‘needs-based’’
benefit should be reduced. Further, the
commenter stated that if the change is
implemented, we should revise POMS
to include SNAP as income and
eliminate the earned and unearned
income exclusion(s). The commenter
also asserted that the proposal is just a
way for us to address insufficient
staffing by making SSI program
administration easier by ‘‘passing on the
burden to the taxpayers.’’ According to
the commenter, our proposal was
‘‘speculative’’ when we assumed that
individuals will, for example, pay more
for shelter if they no longer have to pay
food expenses. Further, the commenter
stated that recipients are ‘‘receiving
welfare from U.S. taxpayers without
contributing to the system’’ and should
therefore be subjected to ‘‘additional
scrutiny for each benefit’’ they receive,
and that such benefits should reduce
recipients’ monthly payments.
Response: We will continue to
consider ISM in our payment
calculations. Although we are removing
a variable from the ISM calculations, we
will still require applicants and
recipients to establish that their income
and resources are below existing limits
to receive payments.
Regarding the suggestion to revise
POMS to include SNAP as income and
eliminate the earned and unearned
income exclusion(s), changes to the way
we consider SNAP benefits and changes
to the earned and unearned income
exclusion(s) are outside the scope of this
rulemaking. Further, income exclusions
are provided by Federal statute, whether
the Social Security Act 55 or another
Federal statute,56 meaning that we could
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53 See
88 FR 57910.
88 FR 67148. We note that as part of this
NPRM we are seeking public comment on
expanding the definition of a public assistance
household to include households in which any
other (as opposed to every other) member receives
public assistance.
55 See 42 U.S.C. 1382a(b).
56 For example, the income exclusion for SNAP
benefits is provided by the Food and Nutrition Act,
at 7 U.S.C. 2017(b).
not eliminate them through
administrative action.
Lastly, we carefully review the details
of each case to ensure we pay the
correct benefits to the correct individual
at the correct time.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concerns based on
misunderstandings about the perceived
effects or consequences of our proposal.
For example, commenters asserted that
the rule would: require recipients to
work; cut benefits for recipients; have
negative consequences for recipients in
light of rising housing costs across the
country; and motivate people to falsify
information to receive the maximum
benefit possible. Additional commenters
expressed concerns that the only benefit
of the proposal is simplifying the SSI
application process; the money received
from SSI might not be enough to keep
up with increasing food costs; and we
should keep the current rules because
there are people outside of the U.S. that
need help, too.
Response: This final rule does not
require applicants and recipients to
work; is anticipated to be advantageous
to many applicants and recipients; and
is not projected to have consequences
related to housing costs. Regarding
motivating people to falsify information,
we remain committed to preventing,
detecting, and eliminating fraud in our
programs and encourage anyone with
concerns about fraud to visit https://
www.ssa.gov/fraud.57 In addition, while
removing food from the ISM calculation
may help ease the burden of rising food
costs for some recipients, increasing SSI
payments is not within the scope of this
rulemaking. Regarding assisting people
outside the U.S., the scope of this
rulemaking is limited to SSI applicants
and recipients. Because SSI payments
are available to eligible individuals who
live in the 50 States, Washington, DC,
and the Northern Mariana Islands, the
geographic scope of this rule is limited
to residents of these places.58
their payments would be reduced. Some
advocacy groups expressed the opinion
that calculating SSI payments using a
food cost estimate can be ‘‘arbitrary’’
and ‘‘inaccurate,’’ and so they were
supportive of removing that
requirement. Yet others asserted that the
proposed changes would simplify our
rules and reduce burdens on SSI
recipients. Additional commenters said
the rule would promote equity by not
disadvantaging an already vulnerable
population, and that the rule would
incentivize SSI recipients to use their
community support with ‘‘less anxiety’’
about negative impacts that could result
from this support. Another commenter
stated that the proposed rule might
facilitate increased food security, which
could lead to a ‘‘greater sense of wellbeing and better health outcomes.’’
Response: We acknowledge the
comments submitted in support of this
rulemaking.
Comments in Support of the Policy
The Office of Budget, Finance, and
Management estimates that this
regulation will result in a total net
administrative savings of $26 million for
the 10-year period from fiscal year (FY)
2024 to FY 2033. This estimate includes
processing time savings as field office
employees will not have to spend time
explaining and developing food as part
of ISM during initial claims, preeffectuation reviews, redeterminations,
and post-eligibility actions. The
aforementioned savings are partially
offset by costs to update our systems to
remove food from the ISM calculations,
to send notices to inform current
recipients of the policy changes, and to
Comment: The majority of the
comments were supportive of the new
policy. Many commenters cited a family
member or friend they thought might be
helped by this regulation. Others
expressed that people should be able to
accept meals without considering if
54 See
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57 In addition, we are required to verify
information. 42 U.S.C. 1383(e)(1)(B) requires, ‘‘that
relevant information will be verified from
independent or collateral sources and additional
information obtained as necessary in order to assure
that such benefits are only provided to eligible
individuals (or eligible spouses) and that the
amounts of such benefits are correct.’’
58 20 CFR 416.215.
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Regulatory Procedures
E.O. 12866, as Supplemented by E.O.s
13563 and Amended by 14094
We have consulted with the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) and
OMB has determined that this final rule
meets the criteria for a significant
regulatory action under E.O. 12866, as
supplemented by E.O. 13563 and
amended by E.O. 14094, and is subject
to OMB review.
Anticipated Transfers to Our Program
Our Office of the Chief Actuary
estimates that implementation of this
final rule for all eligibility and payment
determinations effective April 1, 2024,
and later will result in an increase in
Federal SSI payments of a total of about
$1.6 billion over the period of FYs 2024
through 2033. We refer the reader to the
NPRM for our detailed analysis.
Anticipated Administrative Costs and
Cost-Savings to the Social Security
Administration
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 60 / Wednesday, March 27, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
address inquiries from the notices.
Under the final rule, more individuals
will be eligible for SSI payments than
under the current regulation, resulting
in costs to process additional claims,
reconsiderations, appeals, continuing
disability reviews, redeterminations,
and post-eligibility actions.
Anticipated Time-Savings and
Qualitative Benefits
As discussed in the NPRM, we
anticipate qualitative benefits from this
final rule because it will simplify our
policy and make the SSI claims process
easier for applicants and recipients. The
public benefits from simplifications to
our program because it may take less
time and effort to understand our
program and its requirements and may
make it easier to comply with the
program’s requirements. Also, because
SSI applicants and recipients will not
need to report as much information
related to food expenses, they may save
time that they otherwise would have
spent gathering information and
contacting us to report this information.
See the Paperwork Reduction Act
section of the NPRM’s preamble for
more details on the burden reduction
associated with this rule.
The time we save on processing SSI
applications is only a limited
component of the overall time-savings
to the public. Recipients will no longer
need to report monthly changes in the
value of food support they receive.
Additionally, reporting food support,
whether on the initial application or at
a later point during post-award
eligibility review, oftentimes requires us
to further develop this support, which
may require completion of a variety of
information collections and forms as
discussed in the Paperwork Reduction
Act section of the NPRM’s preamble.
Time savings in completing these forms
not only benefits applicants and
recipients, but also third parties. While
we do not maintain administrative data
on the volume of post-award
information collections pertaining to
food-support reporting, we anticipate
administrative time savings.
In many situations, recipients fail to
timely report receiving food support.
This requires us to develop the issue
after a recipient’s monthly payment
amount has been paid. This, in turn,
may create an overpayment, which
would require us to develop the issue
further and contact the recipient for an
interview. As discussed in the NPRM,
we expect that simplifying the ISM
calculation may reduce improper
payments. The overpayment recovery
process can be a time-intensive process
to navigate, particularly for recipients
seeking to have their overpayment
waived or reconsidered. While we have
not quantified the amount of time
recipients spend working to resolve
overpayments related to food ISM, we
anticipate that this final rule may result
in time savings associated with reduced
improper payments.
Further, as discussed in the NPRM,
there are potential qualitative benefits to
this final rule such as reduced food
insecurity, enhanced social support
networks, reduced frustration and
anxiety among the SSI population
associated with understanding and
complying with complicated foodsupport ISM policies, potentially
enhanced dignity with elimination of
the need to report receipt of food to the
government (which may appear
intrusive to some applicants and
recipients), and more consistent and
equitable treatment of applicants’ and
recipients’ various sources of food
assistance.
Congressional Review Act
Pursuant to the Congressional Review
Act (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.), the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs
designated this rule as meeting the
criteria in 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
E.O. 13132 (Federalism)
We analyzed this final rule in
accordance with the principles and
criteria established by E.O. 13132, and
determined that the final rule will not
have sufficient federalism implications
to warrant the preparation of a
federalism assessment. We also
Number of
respondents
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OMB #; form #; CFR citations
0960–0145
0960–0145
0960–0174
0960–0174
0960–0229
0960–0229
0960–0416
0960–0416
0960–0456
SSA–8202
SSA–8202
SSA–8006
SSA–8006
SSA–8000
SSA–8000
SSA–8203
SSA–8203
SSA–8011
VerDate Sep<11>2014
(Paper Form) ...............................
Claims System) ...........................
(Paper Form) ...............................
(SSI Claims System) ...................
(Paper Form) ...............................
(SSI Claims System) ...................
(Paper Form) ...............................
(SSI Claims System) ...................
(Paper Form) ...............................
16:04 Mar 26, 2024
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PO 00000
Frequency
of
response
67,698
1,764,207
12,160
109,436
705
1,646,520
135,357
1,468,220
21,000
Frm 00029
Current
average
burden per
response
(minutes)
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
21
20
7
7
40
35
20
19
15
determined that this final rule will not
preempt any State law or State
regulation or affect the States’ abilities
to discharge traditional State
governmental functions.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
We certify that this final rule will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities,
as it affects individuals or States only.
Therefore, a regulatory flexibility
analysis is not required under the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, as amended.
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
Since under this final rule we will no
longer need to consider food expenses
for in-kind support and maintenance
calculations, we are making minor
changes to Forms SSA–8202–BK,
Statement for Determining Continuing
Eligibility for Supplemental Security
Income Payment (OMB Control No.
0960–0145); SSA–8006, Statement of
Living Arrangements, In-Kind Support
and Maintenance (OMB Control No.
0960–0174); SSA–8000–BK, Application
for Supplemental Security Income
(OMB Control No. 0960–0229); SSA–
8203–BK, Statement for Determining
Continuing Eligibility for Supplemental
Security Income Payment (OMB Control
No. 0960–0416); SSA–8011, Statement
of Household Expenses and
Contributions (OMB Control No. 0960–
0456); and SSA–5062 & SSA–L5063,
Claimant Statement about Loan of Food
or Shelter and Statement about Food or
Shelter Provided to Another (OMB
Control No. 0960–0529).
The form changes will result in a
burden reduction of one minute per
response, for a total burden savings of
95,668 hours. This figure represents the
difference between the previous and
new total estimated annual burden (as
shown in the chart below).
Below are charts showing the revised
burden estimates that will be effective
upon the effective date of the final rule.
The following chart shows the time
burden information associated with the
final rule:
Current
estimated
total
burden
(hours)
Anticipated
new burden
per
response
under
regulation
(minutes)
23,694
588,069
1,419
12,768
470
960,470
45,119
464,936
5,250
E:\FR\FM\27MRR1.SGM
20
19
6
6
39
34
19
18
14
27MRR1
Anticipated
estimated
total burden
under
regulation
(hours)
22,566
558,666
1,216
10,944
458
933,028
42,863
440,466
4,900
Estimated
burden
savings
(hours)
1,128
29,403
203
1,824
12
27,442
2,256
24,470
350
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 60 / Wednesday, March 27, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Number of
respondents
OMB #; form #; CFR citations
0960–0456
0960–0529
0960–0529
0960–0529
0960–0529
Frequency
of
response
Current
average
burden per
response
(minutes)
Anticipated
new burden
per
response
under
regulation
(minutes)
Current
estimated
total
burden
(hours)
Anticipated
estimated
total burden
under
regulation
(hours)
Estimated
burden
savings
(hours)
SSA–8011 (SSI Claims System) ...................
SSA–5062 (Paper Forms) .............................
SSA–5062 (SSI Claims System) ...................
SSA–L5063 (Paper Forms) ...........................
SSA–L5063 (SSI Claims System) .................
398,759
29,026
29,026
29,026
29,026
1
1
1
1
1
15
30
20
30
20
99,690
14,513
9,675
14,513
9,675
14
29
19
29
19
93,044
14,029
9,192
14,029
9,192
6,646
484
483
484
483
Totals .........................................................................
5,740,116
....................
....................
2,250,261
........................
2,154,593
95,668
The following chart shows the
theoretical cost burdens associated with
the final rule:
Number of
respondents
OMB #; form #
0960–0145
0960–0145
0960–0174
0960–0174
0960–0229
0960–0229
0960–0416
0960–0416
0960–0456
0960–0456
0960–0529
0960–0529
0960–0529
0960–0529
Anticipated
estimated
total burden
under
regulation
from chart
above
(hours)
Average
theoretical
hourly cost
amount
(dollars) *
Average
combined wait
time in field
office and/or
teleservice
centers
(minutes) **
Total annual
opportunity
cost
(dollars) ***
SSA–8202 (Paper Form) ..........................
SSA–8202 Claims System) ......................
SSA–8006 (Paper Form) ..........................
SSA–8006 (SSI Claims System) ..............
SSA–8000 (Paper Form) ..........................
SSA–8000 (SSI Claims System) ..............
SSA–8203 (Paper Form) ..........................
SSA–8203 (SSI Claims System) ..............
SSA–8011 (Paper Form) ..........................
SSA–8011 (SSI Claims System) ..............
SSA–5062 (Paper Forms) ........................
SSA–5062 (SSI Claims System) ..............
SSA–L5063 (Paper Forms) ......................
SSA–L5063 (SSI Claims System) ............
67,698
1,764,207
12,160
109,436
705
1,646,520
135,357
1,468,220
21,000
398,759
29,026
29,026
29,026
29,026
22,566
558,666
1,216
10,944
458
933,028
42,863
440,466
4,900
93,044
14,029
9,192
14,029
9,192
* $12.81
* 12.81
* 12.81
* 12.81
* 21.29
* 21.29
* 21.29
* 21.29
* 29.76
* 29.76
* 21.29
* 21.29
* 21.29
* 21.29
** 24
** 21
** 24
** 21
** 21
** 21
** 21
** 21
** 21
** 21
** 24
** 21
** 24
** 21
*** $635,952
*** 15,066,328
*** 77,885
*** 630,854
*** 15,009
*** 32,133,210
*** 1,921,167
*** 20,317,962
*** 364,560
*** 6,922,474
*** 545,854
*** 411,983
*** 545,854
*** 411,983
Totals ....................................................................
5,740,116
2,154,593
........................
..........................
*** 80,001,075
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES
* We based these figures on the average Disability Insurance (DI) payments based on SSA’s current FY 2023 data (https://www.ssa.gov/legislation/2023factsheet.pdf); on the average U.S. citizen’s hourly salary, as reported by Bureau of Labor Statistics data (https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm); and the average of both DI payments and the average U.S. citizen’s hourly salary.
** We based these figures on the average FY 2024 wait times for field offices and hearings office, as well as by averaging both the average
FY 2024 wait times for field offices and teleservice centers, based on SSA’s current management information data.
*** This figure does not represent actual costs that SSA is imposing on recipients of Social Security payments to complete this application;
rather, these are theoretical opportunity costs for the additional time respondents will spend to complete the application. There is no actual
charge to respondents to complete the application.
SSA is submitting a single new
Information Collection Request (ICR)
which encompasses the revisions to
above listed information collections
(currently under OMB Numbers 0960–
0145, 0960–0174, 0960–0229, 0960–
0416, 0960–0454, and 0960–0529) to
OMB for the approval of the changes
due to the final rule. After approval of
this combined ICR, we will adjust the
figures associated with the current OMB
numbers for these forms to reflect the
new burden via Change Request.
We published a notice of proposed
rulemaking on February 15, 2023, at 88
FR 9779. In response to that NPRM,
individual submitted comments on
PRA-related issues such as the need for
the information; its practical utility;
ways to enhance its quality, utility, and
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16:04 Mar 26, 2024
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clarity; and on ways to minimize the
burden on respondents, including the
use of automated collection techniques
or other forms of information
technology. Please see the Comments
section of the preamble for PRA-related
comments and SSA’s response.
Since the publication of the NPRM,
we removed language and requirements,
which reduces the burden on the public.
Accordingly, we are currently soliciting
comment on these changes and their
associated burden reductions. If you
would like to submit comments, please
send them to the following locations:
Office of Management and Budget, Attn:
Desk Officer for SSA, Fax Number:
202–395–6974
Social Security Administration, OLCA,
Attn: Reports Clearance Director, 3100
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
West High Rise, 6401 Security Blvd.,
Baltimore, MD 21235, Fax: 410–966–
2830, Email address:
OR.Reports.Clearance@ssa.gov
You can submit comments until April
26, 2024, which is 30 days after the
publication of this notice. To receive a
copy of the OMB clearance package,
contact the SSA Reports Clearance
Officer using any of the above contact
methods. We prefer to receive
comments by email or fax.
List of Subjects in 20 CFR Part 416
Administrative practice and
procedure, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Supplemental Security
Income (SSI).
The Commissioner of Social Security,
Martin O’Malley, having reviewed and
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 60 / Wednesday, March 27, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
approved this document, is delegating
the authority to electronically sign this
document to Faye I. Lipsky, who is the
primary Federal Register Liaison for
SSA, for purposes of publication in the
Federal Register.
Faye I. Lipsky,
Federal Register Liaison, Office of Legislation
and Congressional Affairs, Social Security
Administration.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, we amend 20 CFR chapter III,
part(s) 416, as set forth below:
PART 416—SUPPLEMENTAL
SECURITY INCOME FOR THE AGED,
BLIND, AND DISABLED
Subpart K—Income
1. The authority citation for subpart K
of part 416 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Secs. 702(a)(5), 1602, 1611,
1612, 1613, 1614(f), 1621, 1631, and 1633 of
the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 902(a)(5),
1381a, 1382, 1382a, 1382b, 1382c(f), 1382j,
1383, and 1383b); sec. 211, Pub. L. 93–66, 87
Stat. 154 (42 U.S.C. 1382 note).
2. Revise § 416.1102 to read as
follows:
■
§ 416.1102
What is income?
Income is anything that you receive in
cash or in-kind that you can use to meet
your needs for food or shelter. For
purposes of this definition, income may
be received actually or constructively.
Income is received constructively,
unless there are significant restrictions
on your ability to receive it, if it is under
your control or you can use it despite
not actually receiving it. Sometimes
income also includes more or less than
you actually receive (see §§ 416.1110
and 416.1123(b)). In-kind income is not
cash but is something else that you can
use to meet your needs for food or
shelter. Exception: Food is not included
in the calculations of in-kind support
and maintenance, which is a type of
unearned income that we have special
rules for valuing (see §§ 416.1130
through 416.1148).
■ 3. Amend § 416.1103 by revising
paragraphs (a)(4), (b)(2), the example in
paragraph (g) and paragraph (j) to read
as follows:
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES
§ 416.1103
What is not income?
(a) * * *
(4) In-kind assistance (except shelter)
provided under a nongovernmental
program whose purpose is to provide
medical care or medical services;
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) In-kind assistance (except shelter)
provided under a nongovernmental
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16:04 Mar 26, 2024
Jkt 262001
program whose purpose is to provide
social services; or * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(g) * * *
Examples: If your daughter uses her
own money to pay your mortgage
payment directly to the mortgage lender,
the payment itself is not your income
because you do not receive it. However,
because of your daughter’s payment, the
transaction provides you with shelter;
the mortgage payment is in-kind income
for shelter to you. Similarly, if you book
a hotel room on credit and your son
later pays the bill, the payment to the
hotel is not income to you, but the
payment of the bill is in-kind income for
shelter to you. In this example, if your
son pays for the hotel bill in a month
after the month of the hotel stay, we will
count the in-kind income to you in the
month in which he pays the bill. On the
other hand, if your brother pays a lawn
service to mow your grass, the payment
is not income to you because the
mowing cannot be used to meet your
needs for food or shelter. Therefore, the
payment for the lawn service is not inkind income as defined in § 416.1102.
*
*
*
*
*
(j) Receipt of certain noncash items.
Any item you receive (except shelter as
defined in § 416.1130) which would be
an excluded nonliquid resource (as
described in subpart L of this part) if
you kept it, is not income.
Example 1: A community takes up a
collection to buy you a specially
equipped van, which is your only
vehicle. The value of this gift is not
income because the van does not
provide you with food or shelter and
will become an excluded nonliquid
resource under § 416.1218 in the month
following the month of receipt.
Example 2: You inherit a house which
is your principal place of residence. The
value of this inheritance is income
because the house provides you with
shelter and shelter is income. However,
we value the house under the rule in
§ 416.1140.
■ 4. Amend § 416.1104 by revising the
fourth sentence and removing the fifth
sentence in the paragraph to read as
follows:
§ 416.1104
Income we count.
* * * One type of unearned income
is in-kind support and maintenance
(shelter), which we value depending on
your living arrangement.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. Amend § 416.1121 by revising
paragraph (h) to read as follows:
§ 416.1121
Types of unearned income.
*
*
PO 00000
*
Frm 00031
*
Fmt 4700
*
Sfmt 4700
21209
(h) Support and maintenance in-kind.
This is shelter furnished to you that we
value depending on your living
arrangement. (Food is not included in
the calculations of in-kind support and
maintenance.) We use one rule if you
are living in another person’s
household, you receive shelter from
others living in the household, and
others within the household pay for or
provide you with all of your meals. We
use different rules for other situations in
which you receive shelter. We discuss
all of the rules in §§ 416.1130 through
416.1148.
■ 6. Revise § 416.1130 to read as
follows:
§ 416.1130
Introduction.
(a) General. Both earned income and
unearned income include items
received in- kind (see § 416.1102).
Generally, we value in-kind items at
their current market value, and we
apply the various exclusions for both
earned and unearned income. However,
we have special rules for valuing shelter
that is received as in-kind support and
maintenance (a type of unearned
income). This section and the ones that
follow discuss these rules. In these
sections (i.e., §§ 416.1130 through
416.1148) we use the in-kind support
and maintenance you receive in the
month as described in § 416.420 to
determine your SSI benefit. We value
the in-kind support and maintenance
using the Federal benefit rate for the
month in which you receive it.
Exception: For the first 2 months for
which a cost-of-living adjustment
applies, we value in-kind support and
maintenance you receive using the VTR
or PMV based on the Federal benefit
rate as increased by the cost-of-living
adjustment.
Example: Mr. Jones resides in his
son’s house and receives all of his meals
from his son. Mr. Jones receives a
monthly SSI Federal benefit rate that is
reduced by one-third. This one-third
represents the value of the in-kind
support and maintenance he receives
because he lives, throughout a month, in
the household of his son, who provides
all of his food and shelter. In January,
we increase his SSI benefit because of
a cost-of-living adjustment. For that
month, we determine that the VTR rule
applies by considering the food and
shelter he received from his son two
months earlier in November, and we
calculate the SSI payment using the
Federal benefit rate for January.
(b) How we calculate in-kind support
and maintenance. (1) We calculate inkind support and maintenance
considering any shelter that is given to
you or that you receive because
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someone else pays for it. Shelter
includes room, rent, mortgage
payments, real property taxes, heating
fuel, gas, electricity, water, sewerage,
and garbage collection services. You are
not receiving in-kind support and
maintenance in the form of room or rent
if you are paying the amount charged
under a business arrangement. A
business arrangement exists when the
amount of monthly rent required to be
paid equals the current market rental
value (see § 416.1101). Exception: In the
States in the Seventh Circuit (Illinois,
Indiana, and Wisconsin), a business
arrangement exists when the amount of
monthly rent required to be paid equals
or exceeds the presumed maximum
value described in § 416.1140(a)(1). In
those States, if the required amount of
rent is less than the presumed
maximum value, we will consider as inkind support and maintenance the
difference between the required amount
of rent and either the presumed
maximum value or the current market
value, whichever is less. In addition,
cash payments made to uniformed
service members as allowances for onbase housing or privatized military
housing are in-kind support and
maintenance.
(2) We have two rules for valuing the
in-kind support and maintenance that
we count. The one-third reduction rule
applies if you are living in another
person’s household, you receive shelter
from others living in the household, and
others within the household pay for or
provide you with all of your meals (see
§§ 416.1131 through 416.1133). The
presumed value rule applies in all other
situations in which you receive
countable in-kind support and
maintenance (see §§ 416.1140 through
416.1145). If certain conditions exist, we
do not count in-kind support and
maintenance. These conditions are
discussed in §§ 416.1141 through
416.1145.
■ 7. Amend § 416.1131 by revising
paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) and adding
paragraph (a)(3) to read as follows:
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES
§ 416.1131
The one-third reduction rule.
(a) * * *
(1) Live in another person’s
household (see § 416.1132) for a full
calendar month except for temporary
absences (see § 416.1149); and
(2) Receive shelter from others living
in the household. (If you do not receive
shelter from others living in the
household, see § 416.1140); and
(3) Others within the household pay
for or provide you with all of your
meals. If others within the household do
not pay for or provide you with all of
your meals, any ISM received for shelter
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16:04 Mar 26, 2024
Jkt 262001
will be calculated under the PMV rule
(see § 416.1140).
*
*
*
*
*
8. Amend § 416.1133 by revising the
last sentence of paragraph (a) and the
first sentence of paragraph (c) to read as
follows:
■
§ 416.1133 What is a pro rata share of
household operating expenses.
(a) * * * (If you are receiving shelter
from someone outside the household,
we value it under the rule in
§ 416.1140.)
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Household operating expenses are
the household’s total monthly
expenditures for rent, mortgage,
property taxes, heating fuel, gas,
electricity, water, sewerage, and garbage
collection service. * * *
9. Revise § 416.1140 to read as
follows:
■
§ 416.1140
The presumed value rule.
(a) How we apply the presumed value
rule. (1) When you receive in-kind
support and maintenance and the onethird reduction rule does not apply, we
use the presumed value rule. Instead of
determining the actual dollar value of
any shelter you receive, we presume
that it is worth a maximum value. This
maximum value is one-third of your
Federal benefit rate plus the amount of
the general income exclusion described
in § 416.1124(c)(12).
(2) The presumed value rule allows
you to show that your in-kind support
and maintenance is not equal to the
presumed value. We will not use the
presumed value if you show us that—
(i) The current market value of any
shelter you receive, minus any payment
you make for it, is lower than the
presumed value; or
(ii) The actual amount someone else
pays for your shelter is lower than the
presumed value.
(b) How we determine the amount of
your ISM under the presumed value
rule. (1) If you choose not to question
the use of the presumed value, or if the
presumed value is less than the actual
value of the shelter you receive, we use
the presumed value to figure your ISM.
(2) If you show us, as provided in
paragraph (a)(2) of this section, that the
presumed value is higher than the
actual value of the shelter you receive,
we use the actual amount to figure your
ISM.
10. Amend § 416.1141 by revising the
introductory paragraph and paragraphs
(a) and (b) to read as follows:
■
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
§ 416.1141
applies.
When the presumed value rule
The presumed value rule applies
whenever we count in-kind support and
maintenance as unearned income and
the one-third reduction rule does not
apply. This means that the presumed
value rule applies if you are living—
(a) In another person’s household (as
described in § 416.1132(b)); you receive
shelter from others living in the
household; and others within the
household do not pay for or provide you
with all of your meals;
(b) In your own household (as
described in § 416.1132(c)). For
exceptions, see § 416.1142 if you are in
a public assistance household and
§ 416.1143 if you are in a
noninstitutional case situation; or
*
*
*
*
*
■ 11. Amend § 416.1147 by revising
paragraph (a), the paragraph heading in
paragraph (b), the first sentence in
paragraph (b)(1), paragraph (c), and the
third sentence in paragraph (d)(1) to
read as follows:
§ 416.1147 How we value in-kind support
and maintenance for a couple.
(a) Both members of a couple live in
another person’s household and receive
shelter and all of their meals from
others living in the household. When
both of you live in another person’s
household throughout a month, receive
shelter from others living in the
household, and others within the
household pay for or provide you with
all of your meals, we apply the onethird reduction to the Federal benefit
rate for a couple (§ 416.1131).
(b) One member of a couple is in a
medical institution and the other
member of the couple lives in another
person’s household and receives shelter
and all of their meals from others living
in the household. (1) If one of you is
living in the household of another
person and receives shelter from others
living in the household, and others
within the household pay for or provide
you with all of your meals, and the
other is temporarily absent from the
household as provided in
§ 416.1149(c)(1) (in a medical institution
that receives substantial Medicaid
payments for their care (§ 416.211(b))),
and is ineligible in the month for either
benefit payable under § 416.212, we
compute your benefits as if you were
separately eligible individuals (see
§ 416.414(b)(3)). * * *
(c) Both members of a couple are
subject to the presumed value rule. If
the presumed value rule applies to both
of you, we value any shelter you and
your spouse receive at one-third of the
Federal benefit rate for a couple plus the
E:\FR\FM\27MRR1.SGM
27MRR1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 60 / Wednesday, March 27, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
amount of the general income exclusion
(§ 416.1124(c)(12)), unless you can show
that its value is less as described in
§ 416.1140(a)(2).
(d) * * *
(1) * * * We value any shelter
received by the one outside of the
medical institution at one-third of an
eligible individual’s Federal benefit rate,
plus the amount of the general income
exclusion (§ 416.1124(c)(12)), unless
you can show that its value is less as
described in § 416.1140(a)(2). * * *
*
*
*
*
*
■ 12. Amend § 416.1148 by revising
paragraph (b) to read as follows:
§ 416.1148 If you have both in-kind
support and maintenance and income that
is deemed to you.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) The presumed value rule and
deeming of income. (1) If you live in the
same household with someone whose
income can be deemed to you
(§§ 416.1160 through 416.1169), or with
a parent whose income is not deemed to
you because of the provisions of
§ 416.1165(i), any shelter that person
provides is not income to you. However,
if you receive any shelter from another
source, it is income and we value it
under the presumed value rule
(§ 416.1140). We also apply the deeming
rules.
(2) If you are a child under age 18
who lives in the same household with
an ineligible parent whose income may
be deemed to you, and you are
temporarily absent from the household
to attend school (§ 416.1167(b)), any
shelter you receive at school is income
to you unless your parent purchases it.
Unless otherwise excluded, we value
this income under the presumed value
rule (§ 416.1140). We also apply the
deeming rules to you (§ 416.1165).
■ 13. Amend § 416.1149 by revising
paragraph (c)(1) to read as follows:
§ 416.1149 What is a temporary absence
from your living arrangement.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(1)(i) If you enter a medical treatment
facility where you are eligible for the
reduced benefits payable under
§ 416.414 for full months in the facility,
and you are not eligible for either
benefit payable under § 416.212 (and
you have not received such benefits
during your current period of
confinement) and you intend to return
to your prior living arrangement, we
consider this a temporary absence
regardless of the length of your stay in
the facility. We use the rules that apply
to your permanent living arrangement to
value any shelter you receive during the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:04 Mar 26, 2024
Jkt 262001
month (for which reduced benefits
under § 416.414 are not payable) you
enter or leave the facility. During any
full calendar month you are in the
medical treatment facility, you cannot
receive more than the Federal benefit
rate described in § 416.414(b)(1). We do
not consider shelter provided during a
medical confinement to be income.
(ii) If you enter a medical treatment
facility and you are eligible for either
benefit payable under § 416.212, we also
consider this a temporary absence from
your permanent living arrangement. We
use the rules that apply to your
permanent living arrangement to value
any shelter you receive during the
month you enter the facility and
throughout the period you are eligible
for these benefits. We consider your
absence to be temporary through the last
month benefits under § 416.212 are paid
unless you are discharged from the
facility in the following month. In that
case, we consider your absence to be
temporary through the date of discharge.
*
*
*
*
*
21211
Background
The final regulations (TD 9981) that
are the subject of this correction are
under section 509(a) of the Code.
Corrections to Publication
Accordingly, the correction to the
final regulations (TD 9981) that are the
subject of FR Doc. 2023–25510,
published on November 20, 2023, on
page 80584, in the second column, is
corrected by correcting the fifth line of
the heading to read ‘‘1545–BJ53’’.
Oluwafunmilayo A. Taylor,
Section Chief, Publications and Regulations
Section, Associate Chief Counsel (Procedure
and Administration).
[FR Doc. 2024–06485 Filed 3–26–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
[FR Doc. 2024–06464 Filed 3–26–24; 8:45 am]
33 CFR Part 165
BILLING CODE 4191–02–P
[Docket Number USCG–2024–0229]
RIN 1625–AA00
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
Safety Zone; Anclote River, Tarpon
Springs, FL
[TD 9981]
Coast Guard, Department of
Homeland Security (DHS).
ACTION: Temporary final rule.
RIN 1545–BJ53
SUMMARY:
AGENCY:
26 CFR Parts 1 and 53
Requirements for Type I and Type III
Supporting Organizations; Correction
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Final regulations; correction.
AGENCY:
This document corrects the
correction to Treasury Decision 9981,
published in the Federal Register on
November 20, 2023. Treasury Decision
9981 issued final regulations providing
guidance on the prohibition on certain
gifts or contributions to Type I and Type
III supporting organizations from
persons who control a supported
organization and on certain other
requirements for Type III supporting
organizations. The regulations reflect
changes to the law made by the Pension
Protection Act of 2006.
DATES: This correction is effective on
March 27, 2024, and is applicable on
November 20, 2023.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Michael Gruccio at (202) 317–4541 (not
a toll-free number), or Don Spellmann at
(202) 317–4086 (not a toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
The Coast Guard is
establishing a temporary safety zone for
navigable waters of the Anclote River in
Tarpon Springs, FL for the removal of a
dredging pipe. The safety zone will
encompass all waters within a 200-yard
radius of the dredge vessel DIAMOND 6
and the tug vessel LADY LAFON. The
safety zone is needed to protect
personnel, vessels, and the marine
environment from potential hazards
created by dredge work and removal of
a dredging pipe. Entry of vessels or
persons into this zone is prohibited
unless specifically authorized by the
Captain of the Port St Petersburg.
DATES: This temporary rule is effective
without actual notice from March 27,
2024 through March 30, 2024. For the
purposes of enforcement, actual notice
will be used from March 24, 2024, until
March 27, 2024.
ADDRESSES: To view documents
mentioned in this preamble as being
available in the docket, go to https://
www.regulations.gov, type USCG–2024–
0229 in the search box and click
‘‘Search.’’ Next, in the Document Type
column, select ‘‘Supporting & Related
Material.’’
E:\FR\FM\27MRR1.SGM
27MRR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 60 (Wednesday, March 27, 2024)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 21199-21211]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-06464]
[[Page 21199]]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION
20 CFR Part 416
[Docket No. SSA-2021-0014]
RIN 0960-AI60
Omitting Food From In-Kind Support and Maintenance Calculations
AGENCY: Social Security Administration.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We are updating our Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
regulations to remove food from the calculations of In-Kind Support and
Maintenance (ISM). We are also adding conforming language to our
definition of income. These changes simplify our rules by making them
less cumbersome to administer and easier for the public to understand
and follow, and they improve the equitable treatment of food assistance
within the SSI program. This final rule also includes other minor
revisions to our regulations related to income, including clarifying
our longstanding position that income may be received
``constructively.''
DATES: This final rule will be effective September 30, 2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tamara Levingston, Office of Income
Security Programs, 6401 Security Blvd., Robert M. Ball Building, Suite
2512B, Woodlawn, MD 21235, 410-966-7384. For information on eligibility
or filing for benefits, call our national toll-free number, 1-800-772-
1213 or TTY 1-800-325-0778, or visit our internet site, Social Security
Online, at https://www.socialsecurity.gov/.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The SSI program provides monthly payments to adults and children
with a disability or blindness, and to adults aged 65 and older. These
individuals must meet multiple eligibility requirements, including
having resources and income below specified amounts.\1\ Resources are
cash or other liquid assets or any real or personal property that
individuals (or their spouses, if any) own and could convert to cash to
be used for their support and maintenance.\2\ Income is anything
individuals receive in cash or in-kind that they can use to meet their
food and shelter needs.\3\ Individuals' resources may affect their SSI
eligibility, while their income may affect both their eligibility and
payment amounts.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See 20 CFR 416.202 for a list of the eligibility
requirements. See also 20 CFR 416.420 for general information on how
we compute the amount of the monthly payment by reducing the benefit
rate by the amount of countable income as calculated under the rules
in subpart K of 20 CFR part 416.
\2\ 20 CFR 416.1201(a).
\3\ 20 CFR 416.1102. See also 20 CFR 416.1103 for examples of
items that are not considered income.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Both earned income and unearned income include items received in-
kind.\4\ Generally, we value in-kind items at their current market
value, and we apply the various exclusions for both earned and unearned
income.\5\ However, we have special rules for valuing in-kind support
and maintenance (ISM) that is received as unearned income.\6\ On
February 15, 2023, we published a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM),
Omitting Food From In-Kind Support and Maintenance Calculations,\7\
which proposed updating our regulations to exclude food from the ISM
calculations and adding conforming language to our definition of
income.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See 20 CFR 416.1110 and 20 CFR 416.1120.
\5\ See 20 CFR 416.1111(d), 416.1112, 416.1123(c), and 416.1124.
\6\ See 20 CFR 416.1123(c) and 416.1131-1147.
\7\ 88 FR 9779.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are making these changes based on the Commissioner of Social
Security's rulemaking authority specified in sections 205(a),
702(a)(5), 1631(d)(1), 1631(e)(1)(A), and 1633(a) of the Social
Security Act. These sections of the Act give the Commissioner the
authority to adopt rules relating to, among other things, what data the
Commissioner determines is necessary for the agency to collect for the
effective and efficient administration of the SSI program, as well as
the nature and extent of the evidence applicants and recipients need to
provide to establish benefit eligibility. The modifications to our
policy regarding how we will calculate ISM are a proper exercise of the
Commissioner's rulemaking authority under the Act. The NPRM includes a
full discussion of the ISM policy as well as the rationale for and
analysis of this policy change, which we adopt in this final rule
except as indicated in the following modifications.
Under this final rule, we no longer consider food expenses in our
ISM calculations. Instead, we will consider only shelter expenses
(i.e., room, rent, mortgage payments, real property taxes, heating
fuel, gas, electricity, water, sewerage, and garbage collection
services). We will continue to use the Value of the One-Third Reduction
(VTR) rule \8\ and the Presumed Maximum Value (PMV) rule in determining
the value of ISM to an SSI applicant or recipient.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ When we apply the VTR rule, we count one-third of the
Federal Benefit Rate (FBR) as unearned income. See 42 U.S.C.
1382a(a)(2)(A); 20 CFR 416.1131(a). For information on the FBR, see
20 CFR 416.405 through 416.415. Some States supplement the FBR
amount.
\9\ When we apply the PMV rule, we count the set maximum value
as unearned income, unless the applicant or recipient rebuts this
presumption. See 20 CFR 416.1140. The set maximum value is one-third
of the FBR, plus the amount of the general income exclusion, see
id., which is currently $20, see 20 CFR 416.1124(c)(12).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Though we are omitting food expenses from our ISM calculations, we
will still ask a question about food for the narrow purpose of
determining whether to use the VTR rule or the PMV rule. Food expenses
would not be included in the actual calculation; they will only be
considered in determining whether to apply the VTR or PMV rule. When an
applicant or recipient \10\ tells us that they live in another person's
household, we will ask if others within the household pay for or
provide them with all their meals. If the applicant or recipient
answers ``no,'' we will value the shelter using the PMV rule. If the
applicant or recipient answers ``yes,'' we will then evaluate the
applicant's or recipient's shelter contribution to determine if the PMV
rule or the VTR rule applies. If the VTR rule does not apply, then we
will evaluate any ISM under the PMV rule. Asking only the one question
is a change from what we proposed. In the NPRM, we proposed asking
three questions to assess whether an applicant or recipient purchased
food separately from the household. These were: (1) do you buy food
separately from the household? (2) do you eat all meals out? and (3) do
you receive Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits?
\11\ In this final rule, we revised these three questions into one
single question to better enable us to identify applicants and
recipients who should have their shelter valued under the PMV rule
because they obtain food outside of their household. Our original three
questions might have disadvantaged some applicants and recipients
because they would not have identified all potential circumstances in
which the PMV rule currently applies (and because the PMV rule can be
rebutted, it is more advantageous in some circumstances). For example,
our original three questions would not have identified situations
where: applicants and recipients receive benefits from food-assistance
programs other than SNAP;
[[Page 21200]]
people outside of the household pay for or provide food or meals; or
applicants or recipients earmark contributions for a pro rata share of
the household's food expenses under the previous process.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ We refer to ``applicant or recipient'' here and throughout
this final rule when we mean ``applicant, recipient, or couple'' for
ease of reference, except where reference to the couple is
specifically relevant.
\11\ See 88 FR 9785.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We will apply the VTR rule when applicants or recipients (1) live
in another person's household throughout a month; (2) receive shelter
from others living in the household; and (3) others within the
household pay for or provide all the applicant's or recipient's meals.
By definition, claimants who live in their own households will not be
assessed under VTR. Alternatively, we will apply the PMV rule when an
applicant or recipient receives ISM, but the VTR rule does not apply.
This means we will apply the PMV rule when applicants or recipients:
(1) live in another person's household and receive shelter from others
living in the household, but others within the household do not pay for
or provide all the applicant's or recipient's meals; (2) live in their
own household, but someone helps provide them with shelter; or (3) live
in a non-medical institution as described in 20 CFR 416.1141(c). Under
the PMV rule, applicants and recipients may rebut the presumption that
shelter is worth the set maximum value by showing the actual value is
lower than the set maximum value.\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ If applicants or recipients successfully rebut that
presumption, we reduce their benefits by a smaller amount or not at
all. See 20 CFR 416.1140(2)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, we are updating our regulations with clarifying
language. Our previous regulations stated that for the VTR rule to
apply, applicants or recipients must receive both food and shelter from
the person in whose household they are living. In practice, when
determining whether to apply the VTR rule, we consider others in the
household as well. We are clarifying this longstanding practice in our
regulations. Specifically, in 20 CFR 416.1131(a)(2) and (3), we have
changed the language to indicate that we will consider food and shelter
received ``from others living in the household''--not just from the
person in whose household the applicant or recipient is living.
This final rule also clarifies that income may be received
``constructively.'' For purposes of the definition of income in 20 CFR
416.1102, income may be received ``actually'' or ``constructively.'' As
we explained in our NPRM, income is received constructively if it is
under the applicant's or recipient's control, or the applicant or
recipient can use it despite not actually receiving it, unless there
are significant restrictions on the applicant's or recipient's ability
to receive it.\13\ Constructive receipt of income is part of our
current policy, and this change makes it clearer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ 88 FR 9784 (Feb. 15, 2023).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Severability
In the event of an invalidation of any part of this rule, our
intent is to preserve the remaining portions of the rule to the fullest
possible extent. In particular, we intend the clarification of
consideration of others in the household in 20 CFR 416.1131 to be
severable, as it better explains our current policy and functions
independently of the other changes reflected in this final rule. We
also intend the clarification of constructive receipt of income in 20
CFR 416.1102 to be severable, as it better explains our current policy
and functions independently of the other changes reflected in this
final rule.
Justification for Change
We historically included in-kind receipt of food in our ISM
calculations because food assistance helps people meet their basic
needs. However, the complexities of our current food ISM policies
outweigh their utility. As discussed in the NPRM in much greater
detail, we are revising our policy for several purposes, including to
make our policies simpler (and thus easier to comprehend and use), and
to promote equity both by treating food assistance equally regardless
of the source and by not disadvantaging an already vulnerable
population when they receive food assistance.\14\ First, this final
rule simplifies SSI policy because it removes a variable from our ISM
calculations, which, in turn, will: reduce the amount of program rules
an applicant or recipient needs to understand; reduce the amount of
information that applicants or recipients must report; simplify and
shorten processing; and lead to fewer benefit recalculations and
payment errors. Second, this final rule promotes equity. SSI
recipients, by definition, have low income and resources. Because low-
income people disproportionately encounter barriers across a range of
social, health, and economic outcomes, our goal is to improve their
circumstances, thus improving equity. As we discussed in our NPRM,
disabled individuals are more likely to be food insecure, and this
policy change will remove critical barriers to receiving informal food
assistance from friends, family, and community networks of support.\15\
Under our current policy, this type of food assistance from family and
friends is treated differently than food support from charitable or
government sources.\16\ Thus, excluding food from the calculation of
ISM ensures that food assistance from public and private sources is
treated uniformly under our ISM rules.\17\ Overall, this final rule
promotes equity by: providing increased financial security to affected
beneficiaries; providing consistent treatment of food support
regardless of source; reducing reporting requirements and the effects
of reporting on applicants and recipients; and facilitating improved
food security among certain beneficiaries.\18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ Id.
\15\ Id. at 9786-87.
\16\ Id. at 9787.
\17\ Id.
\18\ Id. at 9786-88.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, as we discussed in the NPRM, food costs are quite
variable and valuing food is inherently challenging because it is
difficult to accurately estimate food expenses.\19\ Individuals receive
food at different intervals, in different amounts, and from different
sources, and the price of food can fluctuate significantly over a
relatively short period of time. When any of these food-related factors
changes, under our current policy, applicants and recipients must
immediately report the change or else risk a potential over- or
underpayment.\20\ This creates significant burdens for the SSI
applicants and recipients and also for the agency to process frequent
changes related to food ISM and ensure that payments are accurate. As
we noted in the NPRM, our ISM calculations have historically been a
significant cause of payment errors.\21\ We anticipate that eliminating
a highly variable expense, such as food, from our ISM calculations will
help us achieve greater program efficiency and payment accuracy.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ Id. at 9785.
\20\ Id. at 9785-86.
\21\ Id. at 9786-88.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For a more detailed explanation of how we expect the final rule to
function in these ways, we refer to Justification for Change section of
the NPRM.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ Id. at 9784-9788.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Modifications From NPRM
In several places, this final rule differs slightly from the CFR
text we set out in the NPRM. As discussed earlier, we revised the
language because our original three questions might have disadvantaged
applicants and recipients who obtain food outside of their household.
We anticipate that the revised question will be more comprehensive than
the original three
[[Page 21201]]
questions we proposed in the NPRM. In addition, we eliminated the
phrase we proposed related to receiving shelter from a ``combination of
others living inside the household and others living outside the
household.'' In these instances, this final rule retains existing CFR
language, which references only receipt of shelter from ``others living
in the household.'' We detail these changes below.
We revised paragraph (h) of 20 CFR 416.1121. In the NPRM,
we stated that one rule (the VTR rule) applies if ``you are living
throughout a month in another person's household receiving all your
shelter from others living in the household.'' \23\ This final rule
revises this to ``you are living in another person's household, you
receive shelter from others living in the household, and others within
the household pay for or provide you with all of your meals.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ 88 FR 9794 (Feb. 15, 2023).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We revised paragraph (c) of 20 CFR 416.1130 and
redesignated it as paragraph (b)(2). In the NPRM, we stated that the
VTR rule applies if you (applicants or recipients) are living in the
household of a person who provides you with shelter, ``unless we
determine that you buy your food separately from the household, eat all
meals out, or receive Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program
benefits.'' \24\ This final rule revises this to ``and others within
the household pay for or provide you with all of your meals.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We revised paragraph (a)(2) of 20 CFR 416.1131 to
eliminate the phrase, ``combination of others living inside the
household and others living outside the household.'' \25\ We also
revised paragraph (a)(3) of 20 CFR 416.1131. In the NPRM, we stated
that the VTR rule applies when you (applicants or recipients), ``[d]o
not buy food separately from the household, eat all meals out, or
receive Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits.'' This
final rule revises this to when ``[o]thers within the household pay for
or provide you with all of your meals.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We revised paragraph (a) of 20 CFR 416.1141. In the NPRM,
we did not propose changes to this section. The previous regulatory
text stated that the PMV rule applies if applicants or recipients are
living in another person's household ``but not receiving both food and
shelter from that person.'' The final rule revises this to ``you
receive shelter from others living in the household; and others within
the household do not pay for or provide you with all of your meals.''
We revised paragraphs (a) and (b) of 20 CFR 416.1147 to
eliminate the phrase, ``combination of others living inside the
household and others living outside the household.'' \26\ We further
revised paragraph (a) of 20 CFR 416.1147. In the NPRM, we stated,
``When both of you live in another person's household throughout a
month and receive shelter from others living in the household or a
combination of others living inside the household and others living
outside the household,'' then the VTR rule applies to the couple. The
final rule revises this to ``When both of you live in another person's
household throughout a month, receive shelter from others living in the
household, and others within the household pay for or provide you with
all of your meals. . . .'' We further revised paragraph (b) of 20 CFR
416.1147. In the NPRM we stated, ``If one of you is living in the
household of another person who provides you with shelter'' and the
other person is temporarily absent and ineligible, then we compute
benefits as if the two are separately eligible individuals. The final
rule revises this to ``If one of you is living in the household of
another person and receives shelter from others living in the
household, and others within the household pay for or provide you with
all of your meals. . . .''
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\26\ 88 FR 9795 (Feb. 15, 2023).
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Listening Sessions
During the public comment period, we held two listening sessions,
as described in Executive Order (E.O.) 12866, at the request of
advocacy groups. Notes from those sessions are available at https://www.regulations.gov/document/SSA-2021-0014-0003 under the ``Supporting
& Related Material'' tab. The issues raised during those sessions are
also addressed in the ``Comments Summary'' section of this final rule.
Comments Summary
We received 4,386 public comments on our NPRM from February 15
through April 17, 2023. Of the total comments, 4,320 are available for
public viewing at https://www.regulations.gov/docket/SSA-2021-0014.\27\
These comments were from:
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\27\ We excluded comments that were unrelated to the proposal or
were exact duplicates submitted by the same commenter. Because of
the nature of sorting and processing comments, some exact duplicates
may have been posted publicly.
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Individuals;
Advocacy groups for claimant representatives, such as the
National Organization of Social Security Claimants' Representatives and
the National Association of Disability Representatives; and
Other advocacy groups.
We carefully considered the public comments we received. More than
95% of commenters supported the proposals in the NPRM. Some commenters
agreed with the overarching proposal but recommended amendments to it.
Other commenters asked questions and offered opinions on the potential
financial and legal implications of the proposal. A few commenters
disagreed with the proposal altogether.
We received some comments that were outside the scope of this rule
because they did not relate to our proposal to remove food from the ISM
calculations. Even though outside the scope, we address some of these
comments where they related to ISM more generally and a response might
help the public understand our programs better.
The next section summarizes and responds to the public comments.
Comments and Responses
Requests To Modify the New Policy Outlined in the NPRM
Comment: A commenter suggested we should no longer apply ISM
retroactively, and that we should provide advance notice of ISM
reduction. The commenter expressed that applicants and recipients
should have the opportunity to understand the effects of ISM and to
begin contributing a fair share towards the household expenses before
ISM reduction is applied. The commenter asserted that by ceasing the
retroactive application of the ISM rule for SSI applicants, SSA would
greatly reduce ``negative effects'' and ``stop penalizing recipients
for the long wait time it takes for applications and appeals
processing.''
Response: In general, we determine an individual's eligibility for
SSI payments for a month based on the individual's (and eligible
spouse's, if any) income, resources, and other relevant characteristics
in that month.\28\ But, for a variety of reasons, we may have to
calculate payments for a particular month after the fact (for example,
because it takes time to process a new claim, or we did not receive
timely information about a change in circumstances). Doing so does not
make our application of ISM ``retroactive.'' Additionally, we provide
written advance notice of a planned adverse action, where SSI payments
would be reduced, suspended, or terminated.\29\
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\28\ See 42 U.S.C. 1382(c)(1).
\29\ See 20 CFR 416.1336.
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[[Page 21202]]
We agree that individuals should have the opportunity to understand
ISM and its potential effects. Individuals may contact us directly to
ask questions, and we provide a variety of resources to explain our
rules in plain language, like instructions on our forms and reader-
friendly publications we make available online, by mail, and in our
offices.
Comment: Several commenters suggested that we change ISM rules to
reflect a rebuttable presumption that the SSI recipient has no
countable ISM, because ``only rarely'' is the ISM received of ``true
market value.''
Response: It is not clear to us what the legal and policy basis
would be to presume that the individual has no countable ISM. The
Social Security Act states ``that relevant information will be verified
from independent or collateral sources and additional information
obtained as necessary in order to assure that . . . benefits are only
provided to eligible individuals (or eligible spouses) and that the
amounts of such benefits are correct.'' \30\ Further, it is not clear
to us who would rebut the presumption. Nor is it clear to us what is
meant by the statement that the ISM received rarely is of ``true market
value.''
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\30\ 42 U.S.C. 1383(e)(1)(B)(i).
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Comment: One commenter recommended that we create a PMV rebuttal
form and make changes to the Rebuttal Rights Notice. The commenter
stated that such a form should plainly advise recipients that they have
a right to rebut PMV, clearly explain what kinds of evidence recipients
could submit and how to do so and provide space for recipients to
provide further information to the agency. The commenter expressed that
many SSI recipients are ``unaware of the PMV rebuttal procedures'' and
are ``denied crucial additional benefits to which they are entitled
because they fail to rightfully rebut the PMV's maximum one-third
reduction.''
Response: Generally, our technicians discuss the PMV rebuttal
process with applicants and recipients when they assist them by phone
or in person at the time of the application or post-eligibility
event.\31\ Sometimes, our technicians are unable to discuss the PMV
rebuttal process upfront, such as when an applicant applies
electronically or by mail. Under those circumstances, we send them the
Rebuttal Rights Notification. This letter serves as a prompt for
applicants and recipients to contact us directly to ensure they
understand PMV rebuttal rights and how to rebut the PMV. While we
appreciate this commenter's feedback, we need to conduct additional
analysis prior to determining if a form would improve certain
applicants' and recipients' ability to understand and utilize the PMV
rebuttal process, or if people would find it more burdensome. As a
result, while this final rule does not include the adoption of a new
form, in FY 2024 we intend to initiate a separate Paperwork Reduction
Act (PRA) process. As part of this PRA process, we would propose the
Rebuttal Rights Notification Form, and would solicit feedback on the
proposed form.
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\31\ See Program Operations Manual System (POMS) SI 00835.320.
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Comment: One commenter expressed that the SSI program would be
better served by eliminating the VTR framework altogether and instead
assessing all recipients under the PMV framework.
Response: We are unable to eliminate the VTR because it is required
by the Social Security Act in 42 U.S.C. 1382a(a)(2)(A), which states:
``in the case of any individual (and his eligible spouse, if any)
living in another person's household and receiving support and
maintenance in-kind from such person, the dollar amounts otherwise
applicable to such individual (and spouse) . . . shall be reduced by 33
\1/3\ percent in lieu of including such support and maintenance in the
unearned income of such individual (and spouse). . . .''
Comment: A commenter suggested there is an alternative
simplification: assigning a set value to food received with a
possibility of rebuttal.
Response: The commenter's suggestion would be difficult to
implement, as it is not clear how we would fairly assign a set value to
food received, particularly since food prices can be volatile.
Additionally, because rebutting the presumption would require evidence
of food costs, it would present the same challenges and burdens that
currently exist.
Miscellaneous Comments Regarding Various Aspects of the New Rule
Comment: A commenter expressed that it may be efficient to use data
matches with State agencies to establish SNAP receipt, and to allow
applicants and recipients the opportunity to rebut the results of the
match.
Response: The commenter's suggested use of a data match with State
agencies for SNAP benefits related to our original proposal to ask
three food-related questions--one of which asked directly about SNAP
receipt. However, as noted above, instead of the three food-related
questions we proposed in the NPRM, we will ask only one food-related
question, for the limited purpose of determining whether ISM should be
valued under the VTR or PMV rule: do others within the household pay
for or provide you with all of your meals? We separately ask about an
applicant's or recipient's receipt of food-assistance benefits for
purposes other than determining their living arrangement and will
continue to do so. We will work to add appropriate internal guidance to
the question ``Do others within the household pay for or provide you
with all of your meals?'' to direct technicians to review whether the
applicant or recipient has separately indicated they receive food-
assistance benefits. This will ensure that when an individual has
indicated they receive food-assistance benefits they are treated under
PMV. Further, the receipt of SNAP benefits will also continue to be
relevant to our proposed rulemaking: Expand the Definition of a Public
Assistance Household,\32\ which proposes to expand our definition of a
public assistance household to include SNAP as an additional means-
tested public income-maintenance (PIM) program under 20 CFR
416.1142(a). The agency will use data matches with State agencies if
appropriate for these other purposes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ See 88 FR 67148.
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Comment: One commenter noted that the Medicare Part D Extra Help
program does not count ISM in determining eligibility, and the
commenter expressed that the ``incentive structure of the Extra Help
subsidy could ultimately decrease the same individual's SSI
assistance'' when individuals are eligible under both programs.
Further, the commenter expressed that removing shelter inputs from ISM
entirely would make SSI and the Extra Help program eligibility
methodologies more uniform. The commenter stated that, in an ideal
system, eligibility criteria for low-income assistance programs would
be consistent.
Response: The Social Security Act requires that we treat ISM
differently for SSI than for Extra Help. While the Act specifies that
income for Extra Help is generally calculated the same way as for SSI,
it also says that for Extra Help ``support and maintenance furnished
in-kind shall not be counted as income.'' \33\ We do not anticipate
changes in our ISM calculations will impact the Extra Help program.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ See 42 U.S.C. 1395w-114(a)(3)(C)(i); POMS HI 03020.045.
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Comment: One commenter recommended simplifying our ISM regulations
for increased readability and digestibility. The commenter expressed
that SSI recipients and applicants
[[Page 21203]]
typically require ``extensive and time-consuming client counseling to
translate dense terminology and complex rule structure into plain
language.'' For example, the commenter said that the language in 20 CFR
416.1102 is challenging because it presents ``in-kind support and
maintenance'' as an exception to a general rule. The commenter
expressed there is also a broader readability problem with ``in-kind
income,'' because it is an ``uncommon and unfamiliar term that confuses
most people and prevents them from understanding their reporting
requirements.'' In addition, they suggested the possibility of renaming
ISM with a term like ``value of free shelter'' or ``free shelter
reduction.''
Response: Although we appreciate the suggestion to simplify and
improve the readability and digestibility of our regulations, it is not
possible to eliminate all technical language. Sometimes it is necessary
for us to use terms that may be technical, unique to the SSI program,
or both because they reflect complex statutory requirements and other
unique aspects of the SSI program. The use of such terms is often
because the requirements and language are set by statute.
In addition, the terms ``value of free shelter'' or ``free shelter
reduction'' might not be accurate and might be confused with other
policies in our program, such as ``rent-free shelter.'' \34\ Further,
it is important to keep our terms consistent throughout our policies,
forms, publications, and outreach efforts. Revising a widely used term
like ``ISM'' would be a significant undertaking and would likely lead
to confusion for the people who receive benefits from, or work with
recipients of, our program currently and are already familiar with the
terms we use now.
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\34\ See POMS SI 00835.370.
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However, we acknowledge that our regulations are complex. For that
reason, we provide a variety of resources to explain our rules in plain
language, like instructions on our forms and reader-friendly
publications we make available online, by mail, and in our offices.
Individuals may also contact us directly to ask questions.
Comment: Multiple commenters expressed concerns about, or advised
against, continuing to ask applicants and recipients the three
questions about food \35\ to determine whether to use the VTR or PMV
rule. They said asking these questions and continuing to consider food,
even in this limited way, would result in complexity and confusion for
applicants, recipients, and SSA staff.
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\35\ As mentioned above, the questions we proposed in the NPRM
were: (1) do you buy food separately from the household? (2) do you
eat all meals out? and (3) do you receive SNAP benefits?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Conversely, another commenter supported our proposal to continue
asking the food questions. The commenter said, ``While we acknowledge
that asking these three questions of all SSI recipients does not
streamline the ISM process for applicants and recipients, that is
clearly outweighed by the fact that this approach will enable more
applicants and recipients to be assessed under the PMV rule, thereby
avoiding a potential ISM reduction that is greater than the actual
value of the ISM received.'' Another commenter similarly supported
continuing to ask the food questions by urging us to ``take care not to
inadvertently penalize recipients using their monthly benefits to
contribute to their household's food expenses'' and provided an example
of a former client who was ``eligible to receive her maximum FBR
because she paid for her household's food, though she was allowed to
live in that household rent-free.''
Response: We acknowledge that it would simplify our process further
if we stopped asking SSI applicants and recipients questions about
food. Instead of asking three questions as proposed in the NPRM, we
will instead ask one question to make the process simpler. Receipt of
food from outside the household can determine whether the PMV rule
applies, and the PMV can be advantageous in some circumstances because
it provides an opportunity for applicants and recipients to rebut the
value of ISM provided. Therefore, we think it is important to continue
to ask about food in this limited way.
Comment: A commenter asserted that support and maintenance means
room and board as evidenced by the context of the law,\36\ where the
``exclusion of a residence in a nonprofit retirement home is given, and
room and board is clearly understood, as in [Program Operations Manual
System (POMS)] SI 00830.605.'' In addition, the commenter mentioned a
2008 Bulletin article cited in the NPRM.\37\ The commenter added that
PMV must emulate VTR, and therefore that removal of food from ISM is
not to be considered as within the law.
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\36\ The commenter cited ``1612a(2)(A).'' We believe the
intended reference was to section 1612(a)(2)(A) of the Social
Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1382a(a)(2)(A)).
\37\ See Balkus, Richard; Sears, James; Wilschke, Susan; and
Wixon, Bernard. ``Simplifying the Supplemental Security Income
Program: Options for Eliminating the Counting of In-kind Support and
Maintenance.'' Social Security Bulletin, vol. 68, no. 4, 2008,
www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/ssb/v68n4/v68n4p15.html.
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Response: We are removing food from the calculations of ISM.
Regarding the statute's provision on residing in a nonprofit retirement
home or similar nonprofit institution,\38\ we did not change the
regulations that apply when someone lives in a nonprofit retirement
home or similar institution.\39\ Regarding the comments on POMS SI
00830.605 (Home Energy Assistance and Support and Maintenance
Assistance (HEA/SMA)),\40\ we did not change the regulations on support
and maintenance assistance.\41\
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\38\ Section 1612(a)(2)(A) of the Social Security Act, as
amended (42 U.S.C. 1382a(a)(2)(A)).
\39\ 20 CFR 416.1144.
\40\ We note also that our sub-regulatory guidance, including
our POMS, does not carry the weight of regulations.
\41\ 20 CFR 416.1157.
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The 2008 Bulletin referenced by the commenter generally supports
simplification such as removing food from the ISM calculations: ``One
of the founding principles of SSI is that, as a program that is
national in scope, it should be based on a `flat grant' approach that
does not involve program administrators in the detailed household
budgets of millions of recipients. The law creating the SSI program
included the one-third reduction provision so that SSA would not have
to determine the actual value of room and board when a recipient lived
with a friend or relative. . . . SSA created the PMV rule and the pro
rata share concept through regulations in an attempt to better address
equity among recipients. However, these regulations compromised the
simplification objective of the `flat grant' approach[.]''
Finally, it is not clear what it would mean for the PMV rule to
emulate the VTR rule with respect to removal of food from the
calculation of ISM. The changes here will remove food from the
calculation of ISM under both rules.
Comment: A commenter asserted that the 2005 precedent of the
removal of clothing, used to support the proposal, actually achieves
the opposite. The commenter said that clothing is a ``semi-durable''
good and may be thought to be unlike consumption goods and services
like food and shelter. The commenter pointed to text from the 2005 rule
which says: ``unlike food and shelter, clothing generally is not
received every month. Items of clothing are more likely to be received
infrequently and sporadically, and they generally have no substantial
value.'' The commenter asked if the same could be said for food.
[[Page 21204]]
Response: We did not make the same simplification for food that we
did for clothing. In 2005, we removed clothing from the definition of
income and the definition of ISM.\42\ Here, we are removing food from
the calculations of ISM. The comparison that we drew in the NPRM--
``Like the 2005 simplification, this proposal would simplify the ISM
calculations with respect to a factor for which it is difficult to
obtain accurate, verifiable estimates. Like clothing, food is an
expense that fluctuates from month to month and may be provided from
different sources at different intervals.''--is accurate. Furthermore,
while the 2005 rule included specific rationale justifying why it was
appropriate to treat clothing differently than food or shelter,
including the argument the commenter raised, in developing this
rulemaking we presented specific rationale as to why it is appropriate
to remove food from the calculation of ISM.\43\
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\42\ 70 FR 6340.
\43\ 88 FR 9785 (Feb. 15, 2023).
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Comments Regarding Potential Financial Effects of This Policy
Comment: A commenter asked how much of the estimated SSI program
cost of $1.5 billion is due to an estimated increase in the number of
applications that might result following publication of this rule.
Response: The Office of the Chief Actuary (OCACT) estimated that
roughly $0.2 billion of the estimated total increase in Federal SSI
payments, from fiscal years (FY) 2024 through 2033, is due to
applications that would not be filed under current rules but are
expected to be filed under the new rules. This is equivalent to an
increase of 26,000 Federal SSI recipients in FY 2033.
Comment: A commenter asserted that the administrative burden
reduction and cost savings to the agency and the public are small,
while many beneficiaries will be ``harmed'' by the consequences of the
change. The commenter said the ``entire regime of reporting and
investigations is still needed for housing support and indeed several
food questions are still going to be asked.'' The commenter also stated
that, because SSI is considered in decisions regarding SNAP (and
housing assistance), some recipients could see reductions in these food
(and housing) benefits. Further, the commenter suggested that we should
use the Financial Eligibility Model (FEM) to model and consider these
effects. In addition, the commenter expressed that this rule will
``encourage the migration of beneficiaries from living in their
family's home and receiving ample food support to either staying in
their family's home with no food support or moving on their own.''
Response: Though removing food from the calculations of ISM is
limited, we anticipate that removing even just this one variable from
our calculations will simplify the process.
When we use this final rule, we will ask fewer questions, not
require details about food expenses and costs, and not require
verification of food-related amounts. This reduces burdens for
applicants and recipients. As noted in our NPRM, we expect time-savings
related to this rule to have associated cost-savings for applicants,
recipients, and our agency.
Regarding the comment on potential reductions in SNAP or other
benefits, though we cannot speak fully to the rule change's effects on
programs that we do not administer, we note that when SNAP benefits are
affected by increased income, such as an SSI payment, they are
generally reduced by 30% of the increase, up to the point of
ineligibility.\44\
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\44\ See the Food and Nutrition Services, U.S. Department of
Agriculture's SNAP Eligibility page available at: https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/recipient/eligibility. The SNAP program has an
exception to the 30% reduction, which applies in some circumstances
to one- or two-person households that would still receive the
minimum benefit (i.e., would have benefits reduced by less than 30%
of the increases in income). See the Congressional Research
Service's The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP):
Categorical Eligibility, summary, available at https://sgp.fas.org/crs/misc/R42054.pdf.
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The FEM is an internal tool developed by SSA that we have used
historically to match survey data with administrative records to
evaluate financial eligibility for SSI and other programs. The FEM is
not capable of estimating the impact of SSI changes on other programs,
nor was it designed for that purpose.
Lastly, we have not made this rule change to provide incentives for
people to change their living arrangements or the way they obtain food,
including food assistance. For the reasons stated in the NPRM, we
anticipate this regulation will improve the administration of our
program.
Comment: One commenter said, ``Medicaid impacts do not appear to be
discussed,'' and opined that there could be a substantial effect on
Medicaid expenditures. The commenter asked if a discussion of Medicaid
impacts will be included with the final rule.
Response: As a matter of protocol, the estimates prepared by SSA's
OCACT focus on the impact on SSA.
Comment: A commenter expressed that States may be harmed by the
proposed change because some individuals currently not receiving
benefits will become eligible and State expenses for supplemental
benefits will increase.
Response: We did not calculate the effect on State supplemental
payments as this is outside the scope of our standard actuarial work.
State supplements are relatively small compared to the Federal Benefit
Rate (FBR) and payments depend on living arrangements defined by each
State. We anticipate that some individuals will become eligible for
Federal SSI payments under this rule change, but a small number of
those who remain ineligible for a Federal payment could become eligible
for a State payment as well.\45\ We are unable to speak to State-
administered SSI supplement effects.
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\45\ State eligibility requirements vary by State, and State and
Federal income requirements may be different. In some instances, an
applicant's or recipient's income may make them ineligible for
Federal SSI payments but they may still qualify for State SSI
payments.
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Comments on the Rulemaking Process and Associated Legal Issues
Comment: One commenter stated that the regulation will cost
taxpayers $1.5 billion over ten years \46\ and asserted (without
further explanation) that the regulation violates the major questions
doctrine of the United States Supreme Court. Further, the commenter
expressed that we gave no justification for the timing of the proposal.
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\46\ The commenter referred to figures provided in the NPRM. In
the NPRM, we estimated that the transfer from the government to SSI
recipients, for the period of FYs2023 through 2032, represents an
increase in Federal SSI payments of 0.2%.
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Response: The Commissioner of Social Security has ``full power and
authority to make rules and regulations to establish procedures'' that
are ``not inconsistent with the provisions of'' the Social Security Act
and are ``necessary or appropriate to carry out such provisions.'' \47\
The Supreme Court has described this particular Congressional grant of
authority as ``exceptionally broad .'' \48\ In addition, the
Commissioner has authority to prescribe the requirements for filing
applications,
[[Page 21205]]
data to be furnished, and the reporting of events and changes in
circumstances ``as may be necessary for the effective and efficient
administration'' of the SSI program.\49\ The commenter did not
articulate why, in their view, there is any ``reason to hesitate before
concluding that Congress meant to confer'' authority to adopt this
rule.\50\
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\47\ 42 U.S.C. 405(a); see also 42 U.S.C. 1383(d)(1) (stating
that the provisions of 42 U.S.C. 405(a) shall apply for relevant
title XVI purposes ``to the same extent as they apply in the case of
title II''); 42 U.S.C. 902(a)(5) (``The Commissioner may prescribe
such rules and regulations as the Commissioner determines necessary
or appropriate to carry out the functions of the Administration.'').
\48\ Heckler v. Campbell, 461 U.S. 458, 466 (1983) (``Congress
has conferred on the [Commissioner] exceptionally broad authority to
prescribe standards for applying certain sections of the Social
Security Act.'') (cleaned up, citations omitted).
\49\ 42 U.S.C. 1383(e)(1)(A); see also 42 U.S.C. 1383b(a).
\50\ West Virginia v. EPA, 142 S. Ct. 2587, 2608 (2022)
(quotation omitted).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regarding timing, we are always looking for ways to improve and
simplify our program rules and policies.
Comment: A commenter expressed that there are technical
inadequacies in the NPRM, such as ``no evidence'' that the estimated 16
percent of recipients currently evaluated under the VTR rule would now
be evaluated under the PMV rule, and that the Consumer Price Index
(CPI), which excludes food from its assessment, is irrelevant to the
analysis.
Response: SSA's OCACT used information about whether recipients
receive SNAP benefits, which is collected during the initial claim and
redetermination processes, among other administrative data, to estimate
that roughly 16% of recipients who are evaluated under the VTR
according to current rules would be evaluated under the PMV according
to the rules as stated in the NPRM. As discussed above, we have revised
the questions we ask about food, and will instead ask a single question
that does not directly address SNAP. However, we assume that recipients
who receive SNAP do not have all their meals provided by others within
their household and, thus, would also be evaluated under the PMV rule.
OCACT estimates that additional recipients who would have been
evaluated under the VTR rule under the NPRM will now be evaluated under
the PMV rule. However, OCACT estimates that very few such recipients
would have a change in SSI payment. Further, our reference to certain
types of CPI measures that exclude food was meant to illustrate that
many economic analysts consider food prices to be significantly more
volatile than the prices of most other types of goods and services. We
did not use these types of CPI measures in our quantitative analysis of
the rule.
Comment: One commenter asked us to post separately all the
citations they provided in their comments as part of our formal
administrative record for purposes of the Administrative Procedure Act.
Response: Consistent with our standard procedures, we posted
publicly all relevant comments \51\ and made them available within
docket SSA-2021-0014 on www.regulations.gov. We consider public
comments as part of the rulemaking record. Any citations commenters
provided within public comment submissions are viewable by the public
within the comment submissions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\51\ We excluded comments that were exact duplicates submitted
by the same commenter.
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Request for Further Policy Changes in the Overall Area of ISM
Comment: Some commenters expressed that this proposal was a good
``first step,'' but advised that we should make additional reforms,
such as omitting ISM from our program entirely, revising calculations
for married recipients, raising benefit amounts, and raising savings
limits.
Response: We are unable to consider eliminating ISM entirely,
because it is required by the Social Security Act.\52\ We acknowledge
the commenters' suggestions regarding revising calculations for married
recipients, raising payment amounts, and raising savings limits.
However, such suggestions unrelated to the consideration of food in the
ISM calculations are outside the scope of this rulemaking. Similarly,
the additional ISM-related rules that commenters suggested are outside
the scope of this rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ See 42 U.S.C. 1382a(a)(2)(A).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: Multiple commenters suggested changes related to how we
consider shelter expenses and contributions in our ISM calculations.
For example, one commenter suggested that ISM based on shelter costs
should apply only when the shelter is fixed and stable, and should not
apply for recipients who are transient with no fixed abode.
Other commenters suggested that we redefine how we count shelter
assistance and minimize housing expenses in the calculations of ISM.
They expressed that we could more narrowly define shelter to include
assistance with utilities or omit utilities from shelter expenses--
because rent and mortgage payments pay for access to shelter--and
utilities could be seen as amenities in some cases.
Another commenter suggested that we accept self-verification of
housing costs and contributions, because it can be difficult for SSI
recipients to obtain statements from their landlords or friends with
whom they are staying and to confirm their precise living arrangement
because many living arrangements are verbal. According to the
commenter, people who themselves do not receive SSI, but who rent a
room to an SSI recipient, may be reluctant to provide information about
their mortgage, utility costs, or property tax payments to an agency
from which they receive no direct support.
Response: We acknowledge the suggestions related to the
consideration of shelter expenses and contributions. However, these
suggestions are outside the scope of this rulemaking.
Comment: One commenter recommended changing the way we treat cash
gifts received directly by an SSI applicant or recipient. The commenter
asserted that, in the context of ``rent help'' from a family member or
friend, the distinction we make between third-party payments (ISM) and
cash gifts has material consequences, because the SSI reduction from
third-party payments (ISM) is capped at the one-third ISM limit, while
there is no cap for cash gift income. The commenter characterized this
distinction as ``arbitrary and meaningless for SSI recipients because
the intent and effect in both instances is identical (i.e., covering
rent).''
Response: This suggestion is not related to removing food from the
ISM calculations and is outside the scope of this rulemaking.
Comment: Some commenters suggested publishing regulations to expand
the definition of ``public assistance household,'' to expand the
applicability of a rental subsidy policy, and to exclude from the
definition of ISM items with no current market value.
Response: Our Regulatory Agenda includes two proposed rules similar
to these suggestions: Expand the Definition of a Public Assistance (PA)
Household, RIN 0960-AI81; and Nationwide Expansion of the Rental
Subsidy Policy for SSI Recipients, 0960-AI82. We listed these proposed
rules in the Spring 2023 Unified Agenda (Agenda) of Regulatory and
Deregulatory Actions. The Agenda comprises regulatory items we are
actively pursuing and is available at https://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/eAgendaMain. On August 24, 2023, we published an NPRM, Expansion of
the Rental Subsidy Policy for Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
Applicants and Recipients, which proposes to revise our regulations by
applying nationwide the ISM rental subsidy exception, currently in
place for SSI applicants and recipients residing in seven States, that
recognizes a ``business arrangement'' exists when the amount of
required monthly rent equals or exceeds the
[[Page 21206]]
PMV.\53\ Likewise, on September 29, 2023, we published another NPRM,
Expand the Definition of a Public Assistance Household,\54\ which
proposes to expand our definition of a public assistance household to
include SNAP as an additional means-tested public income-maintenance
(PIM) program under 20 CFR 416.1142(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ See 88 FR 57910.
\54\ See 88 FR 67148. We note that as part of this NPRM we are
seeking public comment on expanding the definition of a public
assistance household to include households in which any other (as
opposed to every other) member receives public assistance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Opposition to the New Policy
Comment: One commenter maintained that ISM should continue and said
that because SSI is a ``needs-based'' program, if someone is receiving
food assistance, their ``needs-based'' benefit should be reduced.
Further, the commenter stated that if the change is implemented, we
should revise POMS to include SNAP as income and eliminate the earned
and unearned income exclusion(s). The commenter also asserted that the
proposal is just a way for us to address insufficient staffing by
making SSI program administration easier by ``passing on the burden to
the taxpayers.'' According to the commenter, our proposal was
``speculative'' when we assumed that individuals will, for example, pay
more for shelter if they no longer have to pay food expenses. Further,
the commenter stated that recipients are ``receiving welfare from U.S.
taxpayers without contributing to the system'' and should therefore be
subjected to ``additional scrutiny for each benefit'' they receive, and
that such benefits should reduce recipients' monthly payments.
Response: We will continue to consider ISM in our payment
calculations. Although we are removing a variable from the ISM
calculations, we will still require applicants and recipients to
establish that their income and resources are below existing limits to
receive payments.
Regarding the suggestion to revise POMS to include SNAP as income
and eliminate the earned and unearned income exclusion(s), changes to
the way we consider SNAP benefits and changes to the earned and
unearned income exclusion(s) are outside the scope of this rulemaking.
Further, income exclusions are provided by Federal statute, whether the
Social Security Act \55\ or another Federal statute,\56\ meaning that
we could not eliminate them through administrative action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ See 42 U.S.C. 1382a(b).
\56\ For example, the income exclusion for SNAP benefits is
provided by the Food and Nutrition Act, at 7 U.S.C. 2017(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lastly, we carefully review the details of each case to ensure we
pay the correct benefits to the correct individual at the correct time.
Comment: Several commenters expressed concerns based on
misunderstandings about the perceived effects or consequences of our
proposal. For example, commenters asserted that the rule would: require
recipients to work; cut benefits for recipients; have negative
consequences for recipients in light of rising housing costs across the
country; and motivate people to falsify information to receive the
maximum benefit possible. Additional commenters expressed concerns that
the only benefit of the proposal is simplifying the SSI application
process; the money received from SSI might not be enough to keep up
with increasing food costs; and we should keep the current rules
because there are people outside of the U.S. that need help, too.
Response: This final rule does not require applicants and
recipients to work; is anticipated to be advantageous to many
applicants and recipients; and is not projected to have consequences
related to housing costs. Regarding motivating people to falsify
information, we remain committed to preventing, detecting, and
eliminating fraud in our programs and encourage anyone with concerns
about fraud to visit https://www.ssa.gov/fraud.\57\ In addition, while
removing food from the ISM calculation may help ease the burden of
rising food costs for some recipients, increasing SSI payments is not
within the scope of this rulemaking. Regarding assisting people outside
the U.S., the scope of this rulemaking is limited to SSI applicants and
recipients. Because SSI payments are available to eligible individuals
who live in the 50 States, Washington, DC, and the Northern Mariana
Islands, the geographic scope of this rule is limited to residents of
these places.\58\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\57\ In addition, we are required to verify information. 42
U.S.C. 1383(e)(1)(B) requires, ``that relevant information will be
verified from independent or collateral sources and additional
information obtained as necessary in order to assure that such
benefits are only provided to eligible individuals (or eligible
spouses) and that the amounts of such benefits are correct.''
\58\ 20 CFR 416.215.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comments in Support of the Policy
Comment: The majority of the comments were supportive of the new
policy. Many commenters cited a family member or friend they thought
might be helped by this regulation. Others expressed that people should
be able to accept meals without considering if their payments would be
reduced. Some advocacy groups expressed the opinion that calculating
SSI payments using a food cost estimate can be ``arbitrary'' and
``inaccurate,'' and so they were supportive of removing that
requirement. Yet others asserted that the proposed changes would
simplify our rules and reduce burdens on SSI recipients. Additional
commenters said the rule would promote equity by not disadvantaging an
already vulnerable population, and that the rule would incentivize SSI
recipients to use their community support with ``less anxiety'' about
negative impacts that could result from this support. Another commenter
stated that the proposed rule might facilitate increased food security,
which could lead to a ``greater sense of well-being and better health
outcomes.''
Response: We acknowledge the comments submitted in support of this
rulemaking.
Regulatory Procedures
E.O. 12866, as Supplemented by E.O.s 13563 and Amended by 14094
We have consulted with the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
and OMB has determined that this final rule meets the criteria for a
significant regulatory action under E.O. 12866, as supplemented by E.O.
13563 and amended by E.O. 14094, and is subject to OMB review.
Anticipated Transfers to Our Program
Our Office of the Chief Actuary estimates that implementation of
this final rule for all eligibility and payment determinations
effective April 1, 2024, and later will result in an increase in
Federal SSI payments of a total of about $1.6 billion over the period
of FYs 2024 through 2033. We refer the reader to the NPRM for our
detailed analysis.
Anticipated Administrative Costs and Cost-Savings to the Social
Security Administration
The Office of Budget, Finance, and Management estimates that this
regulation will result in a total net administrative savings of $26
million for the 10-year period from fiscal year (FY) 2024 to FY 2033.
This estimate includes processing time savings as field office
employees will not have to spend time explaining and developing food as
part of ISM during initial claims, pre-effectuation reviews,
redeterminations, and post-eligibility actions. The aforementioned
savings are partially offset by costs to update our systems to remove
food from the ISM calculations, to send notices to inform current
recipients of the policy changes, and to
[[Page 21207]]
address inquiries from the notices. Under the final rule, more
individuals will be eligible for SSI payments than under the current
regulation, resulting in costs to process additional claims,
reconsiderations, appeals, continuing disability reviews,
redeterminations, and post-eligibility actions.
Anticipated Time-Savings and Qualitative Benefits
As discussed in the NPRM, we anticipate qualitative benefits from
this final rule because it will simplify our policy and make the SSI
claims process easier for applicants and recipients. The public
benefits from simplifications to our program because it may take less
time and effort to understand our program and its requirements and may
make it easier to comply with the program's requirements. Also, because
SSI applicants and recipients will not need to report as much
information related to food expenses, they may save time that they
otherwise would have spent gathering information and contacting us to
report this information. See the Paperwork Reduction Act section of the
NPRM's preamble for more details on the burden reduction associated
with this rule.
The time we save on processing SSI applications is only a limited
component of the overall time-savings to the public. Recipients will no
longer need to report monthly changes in the value of food support they
receive. Additionally, reporting food support, whether on the initial
application or at a later point during post-award eligibility review,
oftentimes requires us to further develop this support, which may
require completion of a variety of information collections and forms as
discussed in the Paperwork Reduction Act section of the NPRM's
preamble. Time savings in completing these forms not only benefits
applicants and recipients, but also third parties. While we do not
maintain administrative data on the volume of post-award information
collections pertaining to food-support reporting, we anticipate
administrative time savings.
In many situations, recipients fail to timely report receiving food
support. This requires us to develop the issue after a recipient's
monthly payment amount has been paid. This, in turn, may create an
overpayment, which would require us to develop the issue further and
contact the recipient for an interview. As discussed in the NPRM, we
expect that simplifying the ISM calculation may reduce improper
payments. The overpayment recovery process can be a time-intensive
process to navigate, particularly for recipients seeking to have their
overpayment waived or reconsidered. While we have not quantified the
amount of time recipients spend working to resolve overpayments related
to food ISM, we anticipate that this final rule may result in time
savings associated with reduced improper payments.
Further, as discussed in the NPRM, there are potential qualitative
benefits to this final rule such as reduced food insecurity, enhanced
social support networks, reduced frustration and anxiety among the SSI
population associated with understanding and complying with complicated
food-support ISM policies, potentially enhanced dignity with
elimination of the need to report receipt of food to the government
(which may appear intrusive to some applicants and recipients), and
more consistent and equitable treatment of applicants' and recipients'
various sources of food assistance.
Congressional Review Act
Pursuant to the Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.),
the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs designated this rule
as meeting the criteria in 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
E.O. 13132 (Federalism)
We analyzed this final rule in accordance with the principles and
criteria established by E.O. 13132, and determined that the final rule
will not have sufficient federalism implications to warrant the
preparation of a federalism assessment. We also determined that this
final rule will not preempt any State law or State regulation or affect
the States' abilities to discharge traditional State governmental
functions.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
We certify that this final rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities, as it
affects individuals or States only. Therefore, a regulatory flexibility
analysis is not required under the Regulatory Flexibility Act, as
amended.
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
Since under this final rule we will no longer need to consider food
expenses for in-kind support and maintenance calculations, we are
making minor changes to Forms SSA-8202-BK, Statement for Determining
Continuing Eligibility for Supplemental Security Income Payment (OMB
Control No. 0960-0145); SSA-8006, Statement of Living Arrangements, In-
Kind Support and Maintenance (OMB Control No. 0960-0174); SSA-8000-BK,
Application for Supplemental Security Income (OMB Control No. 0960-
0229); SSA-8203-BK, Statement for Determining Continuing Eligibility
for Supplemental Security Income Payment (OMB Control No. 0960-0416);
SSA-8011, Statement of Household Expenses and Contributions (OMB
Control No. 0960-0456); and SSA-5062 & SSA-L5063, Claimant Statement
about Loan of Food or Shelter and Statement about Food or Shelter
Provided to Another (OMB Control No. 0960-0529).
The form changes will result in a burden reduction of one minute
per response, for a total burden savings of 95,668 hours. This figure
represents the difference between the previous and new total estimated
annual burden (as shown in the chart below).
Below are charts showing the revised burden estimates that will be
effective upon the effective date of the final rule.
The following chart shows the time burden information associated
with the final rule:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Anticipated
Current Current Anticipated estimated Estimated
Number of Frequency average estimated new burden per total burden burden
OMB #; form #; CFR citations respondents of response burden per total response under under savings
response burden regulation regulation (hours)
(minutes) (hours) (minutes) (hours)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0960-0145 SSA-8202 (Paper Form)........................ 67,698 1 21 23,694 20 22,566 1,128
0960-0145 SSA-8202 Claims System)...................... 1,764,207 1 20 588,069 19 558,666 29,403
0960-0174 SSA-8006 (Paper Form)........................ 12,160 1 7 1,419 6 1,216 203
0960-0174 SSA-8006 (SSI Claims System)................. 109,436 1 7 12,768 6 10,944 1,824
0960-0229 SSA-8000 (Paper Form)........................ 705 1 40 470 39 458 12
0960-0229 SSA-8000 (SSI Claims System)................. 1,646,520 1 35 960,470 34 933,028 27,442
0960-0416 SSA-8203 (Paper Form)........................ 135,357 1 20 45,119 19 42,863 2,256
0960-0416 SSA-8203 (SSI Claims System)................. 1,468,220 1 19 464,936 18 440,466 24,470
0960-0456 SSA-8011 (Paper Form)........................ 21,000 1 15 5,250 14 4,900 350
[[Page 21208]]
0960-0456 SSA-8011 (SSI Claims System)................. 398,759 1 15 99,690 14 93,044 6,646
0960-0529 SSA-5062 (Paper Forms)....................... 29,026 1 30 14,513 29 14,029 484
0960-0529 SSA-5062 (SSI Claims System)................. 29,026 1 20 9,675 19 9,192 483
0960-0529 SSA-L5063 (Paper Forms)...................... 29,026 1 30 14,513 29 14,029 484
0960-0529 SSA-L5063 (SSI Claims System)................ 29,026 1 20 9,675 19 9,192 483
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Totals............................................. 5,740,116 ........... ........... 2,250,261 .............. 2,154,593 95,668
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The following chart shows the theoretical cost burdens associated
with the final rule:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Anticipated Average
estimated Average combined wait
total burden theoretical time in field Total annual
OMB #; form # Number of under hourly cost office and/or opportunity cost
respondents regulation amount teleservice (dollars) ***
from chart (dollars) * centers
above (hours) (minutes) **
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0960-0145 SSA-8202 (Paper 67,698 22,566 * $12.81 ** 24 *** $635,952
Form)......................
0960-0145 SSA-8202 Claims 1,764,207 558,666 * 12.81 ** 21 *** 15,066,328
System)....................
0960-0174 SSA-8006 (Paper 12,160 1,216 * 12.81 ** 24 *** 77,885
Form)......................
0960-0174 SSA-8006 (SSI 109,436 10,944 * 12.81 ** 21 *** 630,854
Claims System).............
0960-0229 SSA-8000 (Paper 705 458 * 21.29 ** 21 *** 15,009
Form)......................
0960-0229 SSA-8000 (SSI 1,646,520 933,028 * 21.29 ** 21 *** 32,133,210
Claims System).............
0960-0416 SSA-8203 (Paper 135,357 42,863 * 21.29 ** 21 *** 1,921,167
Form)......................
0960-0416 SSA-8203 (SSI 1,468,220 440,466 * 21.29 ** 21 *** 20,317,962
Claims System).............
0960-0456 SSA-8011 (Paper 21,000 4,900 * 29.76 ** 21 *** 364,560
Form)......................
0960-0456 SSA-8011 (SSI 398,759 93,044 * 29.76 ** 21 *** 6,922,474
Claims System).............
0960-0529 SSA-5062 (Paper 29,026 14,029 * 21.29 ** 24 *** 545,854
Forms).....................
0960-0529 SSA-5062 (SSI 29,026 9,192 * 21.29 ** 21 *** 411,983
Claims System).............
0960-0529 SSA-L5063 (Paper 29,026 14,029 * 21.29 ** 24 *** 545,854
Forms).....................
0960-0529 SSA-L5063 (SSI 29,026 9,192 * 21.29 ** 21 *** 411,983
Claims System).............
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Totals.................. 5,740,116 2,154,593 .............. ............... *** 80,001,075
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* We based these figures on the average Disability Insurance (DI) payments based on SSA's current FY 2023 data
(https://www.ssa.gov/legislation/2023factsheet.pdf); on the average U.S. citizen's hourly salary, as reported
by Bureau of Labor Statistics data (https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm); and the average of both DI
payments and the average U.S. citizen's hourly salary.
** We based these figures on the average FY 2024 wait times for field offices and hearings office, as well as by
averaging both the average FY 2024 wait times for field offices and teleservice centers, based on SSA's
current management information data.
*** This figure does not represent actual costs that SSA is imposing on recipients of Social Security payments
to complete this application; rather, these are theoretical opportunity costs for the additional time
respondents will spend to complete the application. There is no actual charge to respondents to complete the
application.
SSA is submitting a single new Information Collection Request (ICR)
which encompasses the revisions to above listed information collections
(currently under OMB Numbers 0960-0145, 0960-0174, 0960-0229, 0960-
0416, 0960-0454, and 0960-0529) to OMB for the approval of the changes
due to the final rule. After approval of this combined ICR, we will
adjust the figures associated with the current OMB numbers for these
forms to reflect the new burden via Change Request.
We published a notice of proposed rulemaking on February 15, 2023,
at 88 FR 9779. In response to that NPRM, individual submitted comments
on PRA-related issues such as the need for the information; its
practical utility; ways to enhance its quality, utility, and clarity;
and on ways to minimize the burden on respondents, including the use of
automated collection techniques or other forms of information
technology. Please see the Comments section of the preamble for PRA-
related comments and SSA's response.
Since the publication of the NPRM, we removed language and
requirements, which reduces the burden on the public. Accordingly, we
are currently soliciting comment on these changes and their associated
burden reductions. If you would like to submit comments, please send
them to the following locations:
Office of Management and Budget, Attn: Desk Officer for SSA, Fax
Number: 202-395-6974
Social Security Administration, OLCA, Attn: Reports Clearance Director,
3100 West High Rise, 6401 Security Blvd., Baltimore, MD 21235, Fax:
410-966-2830, Email address: [email protected]
You can submit comments until April 26, 2024, which is 30 days
after the publication of this notice. To receive a copy of the OMB
clearance package, contact the SSA Reports Clearance Officer using any
of the above contact methods. We prefer to receive comments by email or
fax.
List of Subjects in 20 CFR Part 416
Administrative practice and procedure, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Supplemental Security Income (SSI).
The Commissioner of Social Security, Martin O'Malley, having
reviewed and
[[Page 21209]]
approved this document, is delegating the authority to electronically
sign this document to Faye I. Lipsky, who is the primary Federal
Register Liaison for SSA, for purposes of publication in the Federal
Register.
Faye I. Lipsky,
Federal Register Liaison, Office of Legislation and Congressional
Affairs, Social Security Administration.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, we amend 20 CFR chapter
III, part(s) 416, as set forth below:
PART 416--SUPPLEMENTAL SECURITY INCOME FOR THE AGED, BLIND, AND
DISABLED
Subpart K--Income
0
1. The authority citation for subpart K of part 416 continues to read
as follows:
Authority: Secs. 702(a)(5), 1602, 1611, 1612, 1613, 1614(f),
1621, 1631, and 1633 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C.
902(a)(5), 1381a, 1382, 1382a, 1382b, 1382c(f), 1382j, 1383, and
1383b); sec. 211, Pub. L. 93-66, 87 Stat. 154 (42 U.S.C. 1382 note).
0
2. Revise Sec. 416.1102 to read as follows:
Sec. 416.1102 What is income?
Income is anything that you receive in cash or in-kind that you can
use to meet your needs for food or shelter. For purposes of this
definition, income may be received actually or constructively. Income
is received constructively, unless there are significant restrictions
on your ability to receive it, if it is under your control or you can
use it despite not actually receiving it. Sometimes income also
includes more or less than you actually receive (see Sec. Sec.
416.1110 and 416.1123(b)). In-kind income is not cash but is something
else that you can use to meet your needs for food or shelter.
Exception: Food is not included in the calculations of in-kind support
and maintenance, which is a type of unearned income that we have
special rules for valuing (see Sec. Sec. 416.1130 through 416.1148).
0
3. Amend Sec. 416.1103 by revising paragraphs (a)(4), (b)(2), the
example in paragraph (g) and paragraph (j) to read as follows:
Sec. 416.1103 What is not income?
(a) * * *
(4) In-kind assistance (except shelter) provided under a
nongovernmental program whose purpose is to provide medical care or
medical services;
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) In-kind assistance (except shelter) provided under a
nongovernmental program whose purpose is to provide social services; or
* * *
* * * * *
(g) * * *
Examples: If your daughter uses her own money to pay your mortgage
payment directly to the mortgage lender, the payment itself is not your
income because you do not receive it. However, because of your
daughter's payment, the transaction provides you with shelter; the
mortgage payment is in-kind income for shelter to you. Similarly, if
you book a hotel room on credit and your son later pays the bill, the
payment to the hotel is not income to you, but the payment of the bill
is in-kind income for shelter to you. In this example, if your son pays
for the hotel bill in a month after the month of the hotel stay, we
will count the in-kind income to you in the month in which he pays the
bill. On the other hand, if your brother pays a lawn service to mow
your grass, the payment is not income to you because the mowing cannot
be used to meet your needs for food or shelter. Therefore, the payment
for the lawn service is not in-kind income as defined in Sec.
416.1102.
* * * * *
(j) Receipt of certain noncash items. Any item you receive (except
shelter as defined in Sec. 416.1130) which would be an excluded
nonliquid resource (as described in subpart L of this part) if you kept
it, is not income.
Example 1: A community takes up a collection to buy you a specially
equipped van, which is your only vehicle. The value of this gift is not
income because the van does not provide you with food or shelter and
will become an excluded nonliquid resource under Sec. 416.1218 in the
month following the month of receipt.
Example 2: You inherit a house which is your principal place of
residence. The value of this inheritance is income because the house
provides you with shelter and shelter is income. However, we value the
house under the rule in Sec. 416.1140.
0
4. Amend Sec. 416.1104 by revising the fourth sentence and removing
the fifth sentence in the paragraph to read as follows:
Sec. 416.1104 Income we count.
* * * One type of unearned income is in-kind support and
maintenance (shelter), which we value depending on your living
arrangement.
* * * * *
0
5. Amend Sec. 416.1121 by revising paragraph (h) to read as follows:
Sec. 416.1121 Types of unearned income.
* * * * *
(h) Support and maintenance in-kind. This is shelter furnished to
you that we value depending on your living arrangement. (Food is not
included in the calculations of in-kind support and maintenance.) We
use one rule if you are living in another person's household, you
receive shelter from others living in the household, and others within
the household pay for or provide you with all of your meals. We use
different rules for other situations in which you receive shelter. We
discuss all of the rules in Sec. Sec. 416.1130 through 416.1148.
0
6. Revise Sec. 416.1130 to read as follows:
Sec. 416.1130 Introduction.
(a) General. Both earned income and unearned income include items
received in- kind (see Sec. 416.1102). Generally, we value in-kind
items at their current market value, and we apply the various
exclusions for both earned and unearned income. However, we have
special rules for valuing shelter that is received as in-kind support
and maintenance (a type of unearned income). This section and the ones
that follow discuss these rules. In these sections (i.e., Sec. Sec.
416.1130 through 416.1148) we use the in-kind support and maintenance
you receive in the month as described in Sec. 416.420 to determine
your SSI benefit. We value the in-kind support and maintenance using
the Federal benefit rate for the month in which you receive it.
Exception: For the first 2 months for which a cost-of-living adjustment
applies, we value in-kind support and maintenance you receive using the
VTR or PMV based on the Federal benefit rate as increased by the cost-
of-living adjustment.
Example: Mr. Jones resides in his son's house and receives all of
his meals from his son. Mr. Jones receives a monthly SSI Federal
benefit rate that is reduced by one-third. This one-third represents
the value of the in-kind support and maintenance he receives because he
lives, throughout a month, in the household of his son, who provides
all of his food and shelter. In January, we increase his SSI benefit
because of a cost-of-living adjustment. For that month, we determine
that the VTR rule applies by considering the food and shelter he
received from his son two months earlier in November, and we calculate
the SSI payment using the Federal benefit rate for January.
(b) How we calculate in-kind support and maintenance. (1) We
calculate in-kind support and maintenance considering any shelter that
is given to you or that you receive because
[[Page 21210]]
someone else pays for it. Shelter includes room, rent, mortgage
payments, real property taxes, heating fuel, gas, electricity, water,
sewerage, and garbage collection services. You are not receiving in-
kind support and maintenance in the form of room or rent if you are
paying the amount charged under a business arrangement. A business
arrangement exists when the amount of monthly rent required to be paid
equals the current market rental value (see Sec. 416.1101). Exception:
In the States in the Seventh Circuit (Illinois, Indiana, and
Wisconsin), a business arrangement exists when the amount of monthly
rent required to be paid equals or exceeds the presumed maximum value
described in Sec. 416.1140(a)(1). In those States, if the required
amount of rent is less than the presumed maximum value, we will
consider as in-kind support and maintenance the difference between the
required amount of rent and either the presumed maximum value or the
current market value, whichever is less. In addition, cash payments
made to uniformed service members as allowances for on-base housing or
privatized military housing are in-kind support and maintenance.
(2) We have two rules for valuing the in-kind support and
maintenance that we count. The one-third reduction rule applies if you
are living in another person's household, you receive shelter from
others living in the household, and others within the household pay for
or provide you with all of your meals (see Sec. Sec. 416.1131 through
416.1133). The presumed value rule applies in all other situations in
which you receive countable in-kind support and maintenance (see
Sec. Sec. 416.1140 through 416.1145). If certain conditions exist, we
do not count in-kind support and maintenance. These conditions are
discussed in Sec. Sec. 416.1141 through 416.1145.
0
7. Amend Sec. 416.1131 by revising paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) and
adding paragraph (a)(3) to read as follows:
Sec. 416.1131 The one-third reduction rule.
(a) * * *
(1) Live in another person's household (see Sec. 416.1132) for a
full calendar month except for temporary absences (see Sec. 416.1149);
and
(2) Receive shelter from others living in the household. (If you do
not receive shelter from others living in the household, see Sec.
416.1140); and
(3) Others within the household pay for or provide you with all of
your meals. If others within the household do not pay for or provide
you with all of your meals, any ISM received for shelter will be
calculated under the PMV rule (see Sec. 416.1140).
* * * * *
0
8. Amend Sec. 416.1133 by revising the last sentence of paragraph (a)
and the first sentence of paragraph (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 416.1133 What is a pro rata share of household operating
expenses.
(a) * * * (If you are receiving shelter from someone outside the
household, we value it under the rule in Sec. 416.1140.)
* * * * *
(c) Household operating expenses are the household's total monthly
expenditures for rent, mortgage, property taxes, heating fuel, gas,
electricity, water, sewerage, and garbage collection service. * * *
0
9. Revise Sec. 416.1140 to read as follows:
Sec. 416.1140 The presumed value rule.
(a) How we apply the presumed value rule. (1) When you receive in-
kind support and maintenance and the one-third reduction rule does not
apply, we use the presumed value rule. Instead of determining the
actual dollar value of any shelter you receive, we presume that it is
worth a maximum value. This maximum value is one-third of your Federal
benefit rate plus the amount of the general income exclusion described
in Sec. 416.1124(c)(12).
(2) The presumed value rule allows you to show that your in-kind
support and maintenance is not equal to the presumed value. We will not
use the presumed value if you show us that--
(i) The current market value of any shelter you receive, minus any
payment you make for it, is lower than the presumed value; or
(ii) The actual amount someone else pays for your shelter is lower
than the presumed value.
(b) How we determine the amount of your ISM under the presumed
value rule. (1) If you choose not to question the use of the presumed
value, or if the presumed value is less than the actual value of the
shelter you receive, we use the presumed value to figure your ISM.
(2) If you show us, as provided in paragraph (a)(2) of this
section, that the presumed value is higher than the actual value of the
shelter you receive, we use the actual amount to figure your ISM.
0
10. Amend Sec. 416.1141 by revising the introductory paragraph and
paragraphs (a) and (b) to read as follows:
Sec. 416.1141 When the presumed value rule applies.
The presumed value rule applies whenever we count in-kind support
and maintenance as unearned income and the one-third reduction rule
does not apply. This means that the presumed value rule applies if you
are living--
(a) In another person's household (as described in Sec.
416.1132(b)); you receive shelter from others living in the household;
and others within the household do not pay for or provide you with all
of your meals;
(b) In your own household (as described in Sec. 416.1132(c)). For
exceptions, see Sec. 416.1142 if you are in a public assistance
household and Sec. 416.1143 if you are in a noninstitutional case
situation; or
* * * * *
0
11. Amend Sec. 416.1147 by revising paragraph (a), the paragraph
heading in paragraph (b), the first sentence in paragraph (b)(1),
paragraph (c), and the third sentence in paragraph (d)(1) to read as
follows:
Sec. 416.1147 How we value in-kind support and maintenance for a
couple.
(a) Both members of a couple live in another person's household and
receive shelter and all of their meals from others living in the
household. When both of you live in another person's household
throughout a month, receive shelter from others living in the
household, and others within the household pay for or provide you with
all of your meals, we apply the one-third reduction to the Federal
benefit rate for a couple (Sec. 416.1131).
(b) One member of a couple is in a medical institution and the
other member of the couple lives in another person's household and
receives shelter and all of their meals from others living in the
household. (1) If one of you is living in the household of another
person and receives shelter from others living in the household, and
others within the household pay for or provide you with all of your
meals, and the other is temporarily absent from the household as
provided in Sec. 416.1149(c)(1) (in a medical institution that
receives substantial Medicaid payments for their care (Sec.
416.211(b))), and is ineligible in the month for either benefit payable
under Sec. 416.212, we compute your benefits as if you were separately
eligible individuals (see Sec. 416.414(b)(3)). * * *
(c) Both members of a couple are subject to the presumed value
rule. If the presumed value rule applies to both of you, we value any
shelter you and your spouse receive at one-third of the Federal benefit
rate for a couple plus the
[[Page 21211]]
amount of the general income exclusion (Sec. 416.1124(c)(12)), unless
you can show that its value is less as described in Sec.
416.1140(a)(2).
(d) * * *
(1) * * * We value any shelter received by the one outside of the
medical institution at one-third of an eligible individual's Federal
benefit rate, plus the amount of the general income exclusion (Sec.
416.1124(c)(12)), unless you can show that its value is less as
described in Sec. 416.1140(a)(2). * * *
* * * * *
0
12. Amend Sec. 416.1148 by revising paragraph (b) to read as follows:
Sec. 416.1148 If you have both in-kind support and maintenance and
income that is deemed to you.
* * * * *
(b) The presumed value rule and deeming of income. (1) If you live
in the same household with someone whose income can be deemed to you
(Sec. Sec. 416.1160 through 416.1169), or with a parent whose income
is not deemed to you because of the provisions of Sec. 416.1165(i),
any shelter that person provides is not income to you. However, if you
receive any shelter from another source, it is income and we value it
under the presumed value rule (Sec. 416.1140). We also apply the
deeming rules.
(2) If you are a child under age 18 who lives in the same household
with an ineligible parent whose income may be deemed to you, and you
are temporarily absent from the household to attend school (Sec.
416.1167(b)), any shelter you receive at school is income to you unless
your parent purchases it. Unless otherwise excluded, we value this
income under the presumed value rule (Sec. 416.1140). We also apply
the deeming rules to you (Sec. 416.1165).
0
13. Amend Sec. 416.1149 by revising paragraph (c)(1) to read as
follows:
Sec. 416.1149 What is a temporary absence from your living
arrangement.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(1)(i) If you enter a medical treatment facility where you are
eligible for the reduced benefits payable under Sec. 416.414 for full
months in the facility, and you are not eligible for either benefit
payable under Sec. 416.212 (and you have not received such benefits
during your current period of confinement) and you intend to return to
your prior living arrangement, we consider this a temporary absence
regardless of the length of your stay in the facility. We use the rules
that apply to your permanent living arrangement to value any shelter
you receive during the month (for which reduced benefits under Sec.
416.414 are not payable) you enter or leave the facility. During any
full calendar month you are in the medical treatment facility, you
cannot receive more than the Federal benefit rate described in Sec.
416.414(b)(1). We do not consider shelter provided during a medical
confinement to be income.
(ii) If you enter a medical treatment facility and you are eligible
for either benefit payable under Sec. 416.212, we also consider this a
temporary absence from your permanent living arrangement. We use the
rules that apply to your permanent living arrangement to value any
shelter you receive during the month you enter the facility and
throughout the period you are eligible for these benefits. We consider
your absence to be temporary through the last month benefits under
Sec. 416.212 are paid unless you are discharged from the facility in
the following month. In that case, we consider your absence to be
temporary through the date of discharge.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2024-06464 Filed 3-26-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4191-02-P