Expand the Definition of a Public Assistance Household, 28608-28622 [2024-08364]
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 77 / Friday, April 19, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
• Submission type SC 13E1 has been
updated to remove the ‘‘Is Fee Table/
Exhibit included?’’ check box from the
‘‘Main’’ tab of the EDGARLink Online
interface. As a result, filers are now
required to attach an EX–FILING FEES
exhibit attachment on a SC 13E1 filing.
III. Amendments to Rule 301 of
Regulation S–T
Along with the adoption of the
updated Filer Manual, we are amending
Rule 301 of Regulation S–T to provide
for the incorporation by reference into
the Code of Federal Regulations of the
current revisions. This incorporation by
reference was approved by the Director
of the Federal Register in accordance
with 5 U.S.C. 552(a) and 1 CFR part 51.
The updated EDGAR Filer Manual is
available at https://www.sec.gov/edgar/
filerinformation/current-edgar-filermanual.
IV. Administrative Law Matters
Because the Filer Manual and rule
amendments relate solely to agency
procedures or practice and do not
substantially alter the rights and
obligations of non-agency parties,
publication for notice and comment is
not required under the Administrative
Procedure Act (‘‘APA’’).9 It follows that
the amendments do not require analysis
under requirements of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act 10 or a report to Congress
under the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996.11
The effective date for the updated
Filer Manual and related rule
amendments is April 19, 2024. In
accordance with the APA,12 we find that
there is good cause to establish an
effective date less than 30 days after
publication of these rules. The
Commission believes that establishing
an effective date less than 30 days after
publication of these rules is necessary to
coordinate the effectiveness of the
updated Filer Manual with the related
system upgrades.
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V. Statutory Basis
We are adopting the amendments to
Regulation S–T under the authority in
Sections 6, 7, 8, 10, and 19(a) of the
Securities Act of 1933,13 Sections 3, 12,
13, 14, 15, 15B, 23, and 35A of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934,14
Section 319 of the Trust Indenture Act
of 1939,15 and Sections 8, 30, 31, and 38
95
U.S.C. 553(b)(A).
U.S.C. 601 through 612.
11 5 U.S.C. 804(3)(c).
12 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3).
13 15 U.S.C. 77f, 77g, 77h, 77j, and 77s(a).
14 15 U.S.C. 78c, 78l, 78m, 78n, 78o, 78o–4, 78w,
and 78ll.
15 15 U.S.C. 77sss.
10 5
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of the Investment Company Act of
1940.16
List of Subjects in 17 CFR Part 232
Incorporation by reference, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements,
Securities.
Text of the Amendments
In accordance with the foregoing, title
17, chapter II of the Code of Federal
Regulations is amended as follows:
PART 232—REGULATION S–T—
GENERAL RULES AND REGULATIONS
FOR ELECTRONIC FILINGS
1. The general authority citation for
part 232 continues to read as follows:
Manual at NARA, visit
www.archives.gov/federal-register/cfr/
ibr-locations.html or email
fr.inspection@nara.gov. The EDGAR
Filer Manual may also be obtained from
https://www.sec.gov/edgar/
filerinformation/current-edgar-filermanual.
By the Commission.
Dated: March 18, 2024.
Vanessa A. Countryman,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2024–08091 Filed 4–18–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
■
SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77c, 77f, 77g, 77h, 77j,
77s(a), 77z–3, 77sss(a), 78c(b), 78l, 78m, 78n,
78o(d), 78w(a), 78ll, 80a–6(c), 80a–8, 80a–29,
80a–30, 80a–37, 80b–4, 80b–6a, 80b–10, 80b–
11, 7201 et seq.; and 18 U.S.C. 1350, unless
otherwise noted.
20 CFR Part 416
*
*
*
*
*
■ 2. Section 232.301 is revised to read
as follows:
§ 232.301
EDGAR Filer Manual.
Filers must prepare electronic filings
in the manner prescribed by the EDGAR
Filer Manual, promulgated by the
Commission, which sets forth the
technical formatting requirements for
electronic submissions. The
requirements for becoming an EDGAR
Filer and updating company data are set
forth in the EDGAR Filer Manual,
Volume I: ‘‘General Information,’’
Version 41 (December 2022). The
requirements for filing on EDGAR are
set forth in the updated EDGAR Filer
Manual, Volume II: ‘‘EDGAR Filing,’’
Version 69 (March 2024). All of these
provisions have been incorporated by
reference into the Code of Federal
Regulations, which action was approved
by the Director of the Federal Register
in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552(a) and
1 CFR part 51. You must comply with
these requirements in order for
documents to be timely received and
accepted. The EDGAR Filer Manual is
available for inspection at the
Commission and at the National
Archives and Records Administration
(NARA). The EDGAR Filer Manual is
available for website viewing and
printing in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549, on official
business days between the hours of 10
a.m. and 3 p.m. Operating conditions
may limit access to the Commission’s
Public Reference Room. For information
on the availability of the EDGAR Filer
16 15
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U.S.C. 80a–8, 80a–29, 80a–30, and 80a–37.
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[Docket No. SSA–2023–0015]
RIN 0960–AI81
Expand the Definition of a Public
Assistance Household
Social Security Administration.
Final rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
We are finalizing our
proposed rule to expand the definition
of a public assistance (PA) household
for purposes of our programs,
particularly the Supplemental Security
Income (SSI) program, to include the
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance
Program (SNAP) as an additional
means-tested public incomemaintenance (PIM) program. We are also
revising the definition of a PA
household from a household in which
every member receives some kind of
PIM payment to a household that has
both an SSI applicant or recipient, and
at least one other household member
who receives one or more of the listed
PIM payments (the any other
definition). If determined to be living in
a PA household, inside in-kind support
and maintenance (ISM) would no longer
need to be developed. The final rule
will decrease the number of SSI
applicants and recipients charged with
ISM from others within their household.
In addition, we expect this rule to
decrease the amount of income we
would deem to SSI applicants and
recipients because we will no longer
deem as income from ineligible spouses
and parents who live in the same
household: the value of the SNAP
benefits that they receive; any income
that was counted or excluded in figuring
the amount of that payment; or any
income that was used to determine the
amount of SNAP benefits to someone
else. These policy changes reduce
administrative burden for low-income
households and SSA.
SUMMARY:
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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.ssa.gov.
DATES:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
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The SSI program provides monthly
payments to: (1) adults and children
with a disability or blindness; and (2)
people aged 65 and older who have
little or no income and resources.
Eligible individuals must meet all the
requirements in the Social Security Act
(Act), including having resources and
income below specified amounts.1
Generally, the more income an
individual has, the less their SSI
payment will be. Under the SSI
program, resources are cash or other
liquid assets or any real or personal
property that an individual (or spouse,
if any) owns and could convert to cash
to be used for their support and
maintenance.2 Income, on the other
hand, is anything the SSI applicant or
recipient receives in cash or in-kind that
can be used to meet food and shelter
needs.3 Applicants’ and recipients’
resources may affect their SSI eligibility,
while their income may affect both their
SSI eligibility and payment amounts.
Once an applicant is found eligible for
SSI, their monthly payment is
determined by subtracting countable
monthly income from the Federal
benefit rate (FBR), which is the monthly
maximum Federal SSI payment.4 The
FBR for 2024 is $943 for an individual
and $1,415 for an eligible individual
with an eligible spouse.5 The Act and
1 See 42 U.S.C. 1382 and 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.
4 See 20 CFR 416.405 through 416.415. Some
States supplement the FBR amount.
5 88 FR 72803, 72804 (2023). A table of the
monthly maximum Federal SSI payment amounts
for an eligible individual, and for an eligible
individual with an eligible spouse, is available at
https://www.ssa.gov/oact/cola/SSIamts.html. When
the FBR is adjusted for the cost of living, the
amount of the potential ISM reduction adjusts
accordingly.
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our regulations 6 define income as
‘‘earned,’’ such as wages from work, and
‘‘unearned,’’ such as gifted cash or
ISM.7
ISM
As indicated above, income that
affects an individual’s monthly SSI
payment can be provided in cash or inkind. We calculate ISM considering any
shelter that is given to the individual or
that the individual receives because
someone else pays for it.8 For example,
if an applicant or recipient lives with
their sibling and does not pay rent, we
would consider the shelter that their
sibling provides to be ISM.
Like other forms of income, ISM can
reduce the amount of a recipient’s
monthly SSI payment. For example, we
reduce the SSI monthly payment by
one-third of the FBR if an individual is
living in another person’s household,
receives shelter from others living in the
household, and others within the
household pay for or provide the
individual with all of the individual’s
meals.9
Additional circumstances regarding
ISM are discussed further in our
regulations.10
Deeming Income
In addition to counting ISM that an
applicant or recipient receives, the SSI
program deems income of certain
individuals to the SSI applicant or
recipient.11 ‘‘Deeming’’ is the process of
considering a portion of another
person’s income to be the income of an
SSI applicant or recipient.12 When our
deeming rules apply, it does not matter
whether the other person’s income is
actually available to the applicant or
recipient.13 In determining an SSI
applicant’s or recipient’s eligibility and
payment amount, we consider both the
SSI applicant’s or recipient’s own
income as well as any relevant deemed
income from others. For example, when
a child who is applying for or receiving
SSI lives with a parent who is ineligible
for SSI, we deem a portion of that
parent’s income to the child through the
month in which the child reaches age
18.14 Likewise, when an adult who is
applying for or receiving SSI lives with
a spouse who is ineligible for SSI, we
deem a portion of the ineligible spouse’s
6 See 42 U.S.C. 1382a; 20 CFR 416.1102 through
416.1124.
7 See 20 CFR 416.1104.
8 See 20 CFR 416.1130(b).
9 See 20 CFR 416.1130(b)(2).
10 See 20 CFR 416.1130 through 416.1148.
11 See 42 U.S.C. 1382c(f); 20 CFR 416.1160.
12 See 20 CFR 416.1160.
13 See 20 CFR 416.1160, 416.1161.
14 See 20 CFR 416.1165.
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income to the applicant or recipient.15
We look at the deemor’s income to see
if we must deem a portion of it to the
applicant or recipient because we
expect the deemor, based on their
relationship with the SSI applicant or
recipient, to use some of their income to
take care of (some of) the applicant’s or
recipient’s needs. Ultimately, only some
of the deemor’s income is assigned to
the SSI applicant or recipient.
Some income from ineligible parents
and spouses is not deemed to the SSI
applicant or recipient. For example, our
policy excludes from deeming: the
amount of any PIM payments the
ineligible parents and spouses receive
under the programs listed in the PA
household definition; 16 any income that
those programs counted or excluded in
determining the amount of the PIM
payments they received; and any
income of the ineligible spouse or
parent that is used by a PIM program to
determine the amount of that program’s
benefit to someone else.17 For example,
if an ineligible spouse or parent receives
Temporary Aid for Needy Families
(TANF) assistance based on their
income of $400 per month, we do not
consider the TANF benefit amount or
the $400 in our income determination
for the SSI applicant or recipient. This
is based on the premise that the income
used to demonstrate eligibility for a PIM
program and the PIM payment itself are
required for that individual’s own
needs.
Prior Policy
We previously defined a PA
household as one in which every
member receives a PIM payment under
at least one of the following:
1. Title IV–A of the Social Security
Act (Temporary Assistance for Needy
Families or TANF);
2. Title XVI of the Social Security Act
(Supplemental Security Income or SSI);
3. The Refugee Act of 1980 (payments
based on need);
4. The Disaster Relief and Emergency
Assistance Act;
5. General assistance programs of the
Bureau of Indian Affairs;
6. State or local government
assistance programs based on need (tax
credits or refunds are not assistance
based on need); and
7. Department of Veterans Affairs
program (payments based on need).18
New Policy
We are making changes based on the
Commissioner of Social Security’s
15 See
20 CFR 416.1163.
20 CFR 416.1142(a).
17 See 20 CFR 416.1161(a)(2) and (3).
18 20 CFR 416.1142(a) (prior version).
16 See
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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. Under those sections, the
Commissioner may adopt rules
regarding, among other things, the
nature and extent of evidence needed to
establish benefit eligibility, as well as
methods of taking and furnishing such
evidence.
We are finalizing three changes
discussed in the Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (NPRM) that we published
on September 29, 2023.19 First, we are
finalizing a minor clarification to our
definition of a PA household at 20 CFR
416.1142(a). The term ‘‘public
assistance’’ may have implications
outside our programs. We are finalizing,
without change from the NPRM, the
clarification that our definition of
‘‘public assistance household,’’ which
we use as a term of art, applies only for
purposes of our programs. Second, we
are finalizing, without change from the
NPRM, our proposed revision to the
definition of a PA household in 20 CFR
416.1142(a) of adding SNAP to the
existing list of PIM programs.20 Third,
we are changing our definition of a PA
household from one in which every
member receives a PIM payment to one
in which the household has both an SSI
applicant or recipient, and at least one
other household member who receives
one or more of the listed PIM payments.
If determined to be living in a PA
household, inside ISM would no longer
need to be developed. We discussed this
potential change (from every to any
other) in the NPRM and invited public
comment; public commenters were
largely supportive of the change.21
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. Each of the three
changes can be implemented
independently of the others, and we
intend each of the three changes to be
severable from the others. The addition
of SNAP to our list of PIM programs in
20 CFR 416.1142(a) is independent of
our adoption of the any other
definition—adding SNAP could be
implemented separately even if we did
19 88
FR 67148.
more information on SNAP, visit https://
www.fns.usda.gov/snap/supplemental-nutritionassistance-program.
21 In the NPRM, we referred to this potential
change as from every to any other. In this final rule,
we are adopting that proposed change but, for
purposes of clarification, have slightly modified the
new language defining a PA household in 20 CFR
416.1142(a), such that the any other language is no
longer used. Because the substance of the new
definition is the same as the any other proposal, we
continue to refer to the new definition as the any
other definition throughout this final rule.
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not adopt the any other definition.
Likewise, expanding our definition of a
PA household by adopting the any other
definition could be fully implemented
whether or not SNAP is added to the list
of PIM programs in 20 CFR 416.1142(a).
The clarification that our definition of
‘‘public assistance household’’ is a term
of art that applies only for purposes of
our programs is a minor administrative
clarification that is not contingent on
the implementation of the two ways in
which we are expanding the definition
of a PA household with this final rule.
If any of these three changes were to be
invalidated, the others could still be
implemented fully, as these changes
relate to three separate aspects of the PA
household policy.
During the development of the NPRM,
we considered other programs which
are often considered means-tested
programs, including Medicaid,22 the
Low Income Home Energy Assistance
Program (LIHEAP),23 the Special
Supplemental Nutrition Program for
Women, Infants, and Children (WIC),24
the Housing Choice Voucher Program,25
Project Based Rental Assistance, and
Public Housing 26 which we discussed
in the ‘‘Rationale for the Proposed
Policy’’ in the NPRM.27 At this time, we
have decided to add SNAP with this
expansion and continue to explore
adding other programs in the future.
SNAP provides nutrition benefits via
an Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT)
card, which can be used to buy groceries
at authorized food stores and retailers.28
Everyone who lives together and
purchases and prepares meals together
is grouped together as one SNAP
household; and, in most cases, the
household must meet both gross and net
income limits, which vary with
household size, for the household to be
eligible for and receive SNAP benefits.29
If everyone in the SNAP household is
receiving TANF and/or SSI, the
household may be deemed
‘‘categorically eligible’’ for SNAP
because they have already been
22 For
more information on Medicaid, visit
https://www.medicaid.gov/.
23 For more information on LIHEAP, visit https://
www.acf.hhs.gov/ocs/low-income-home-energyassistance-program-liheap.
24 For more information on WIC, visit https://
www.fns.usda.gov/wic.
25 For more information on the Housing Choice
Voucher Program, visit https://www.hud.gov/hcv.
26 For more information on Public Housing, visit
https://www.hud.gov/program_offices/public_
indian_housing/programs/ph.
27 88 FR 67148, 67151.
28 See ‘‘How do I receive SNAP benefits?’’
available at https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/
recipient/eligibility.
29 See ‘‘Who is in a SNAP household?’’ and
‘‘What are the SNAP income limits?’’ available at:
https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/recipient/eligibility.
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determined eligible for another meanstested program.30 SNAP benefits meet
the definition of income in our
regulations.31 However, SNAP benefits
are excluded from our income counting
based on Federal statute.32 Because our
policy links the types of PIM payments
listed in 20 CFR 416.1142(a) with the
income of ineligible spouses and
parents that is excluded from deeming
under 20 CFR 416.1161(a)(2)–(3), adding
SNAP to the list of PIM programs will
decrease the amount of income that is
deemed to SSI applicants and
recipients. If an SSI-ineligible spouse or
parent is receiving SNAP benefits, the
value of the SNAP benefit, as well as
any income that was counted or
excluded in figuring the amount of the
SNAP benefits, would not be deemed to
the SSI applicant or recipient. In
addition, any income of the ineligible
spouse or parent that is used to
determine the amount of SNAP benefits
to someone else would not be deemed
to the SSI applicant or recipient.
We also discussed and invited public
comment on broadening our definition
of a PA household from one in which
every member receives a PIM payment
to one in which any member other than
the SSI applicant or recipient receives a
PIM payment. We have decided to adopt
this change. Thus, under our new
definition of PA household, if there is
an SSI applicant or recipient in a
household where at least one other
member receives one or more of the
listed PIM payments, the household will
be considered a PA household, and we
will not develop for inside ISM.33
As we discussed in the NPRM, the
previous definition of PA household
(requiring every member to receive a
PIM payment) may have disadvantaged
individuals in low-income households
where household members still needed
their income (and resources) to meet
their own needs but where a household
member was not receiving a PIM
payment for reasons unrelated to need.
30 See ‘‘What are the SNAP income limits?’’
available at: https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/
recipient/eligibility.
31 See 20 CFR 416.1102.
32 7 U.S.C. 2017(b); see also 20 CFR 416, Subpart
K, Appendix (I)(a).
33 ‘‘Inside ISM’’ is ISM that is provided to the SSI
applicant or recipient from others within the same
household in which the applicant or recipient is
living. See POMS SI 00835.465.B.; see also POMS
SI 00835.515. In contrast, ‘‘[w]hen a person who is
not a household member pays a vendor directly for
any of the household’s costs or provides the
household with [ISM] for less than the current
market value (CMV),’’ we consider this ‘‘outside
ISM.’’ See POMS SI 00835.465.C.; see also POMS
SI 00835.515. ISM that is neither inside, nor
outside—such as ISM provided to only one person
in the household—is considered ‘‘other ISM.’’ See
POMS SI 00835.630.E.
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For example, college students, who do
not meet a student exception for SNAP,
may not receive SNAP benefits even
though the rest of the household does.34
In such circumstances, under our
previous definition of PA household,
the household would not qualify. But
under the expanded definition of PA
household that we are adopting, the
household would not be disqualified as
a PA household simply because one
member was not receiving a PIM
payment. In fact, many commenters
supported the change we are now
adopting based on their experiences,
under the previous definition, of
households that did not qualify for
reasons unrelated to need.35
Additionally, when we first
established the PA household rule in
1980, we explained that our rule ‘‘relied
on the fact that other agencies have
determined that these individuals
[receiving PIM payments] need all their
income for their own needs.’’ 36 Because
SNAP and several of the other PIM
programs listed in our PA household
definition provide, or may provide,
benefits at the household (or family)
level instead of the individual level
(e.g., TANF, Refugee Act of 1980,
Disaster Relief and Emergency
Assistance Act, and general assistance
programs of the Bureau of Indian
Affairs), we note that in many
circumstances a needs-based
determination has been made for other
household members. We discuss further
justification for the change (from every
member to any other member) in the
Comments Summary section below.
Comments Summary
We received 221 public comments on
our NPRM from September 29 through
November 29, 2023. Of the total
comments, 219 are available for public
viewing at https://www.regulations.gov/
document/SSA-2023-0015-0001.37
These comments were from:
• Individuals; and
• Advocacy groups, such as the
National Organization of Social Security
Claimants’ Representatives and the
National Association of Disability
Representatives.
34 See
https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/students.
public comments in the rulemaking docket
at https://www.regulations.gov, under the docket
SSA–2023–0015. Examples include Center on
Budget and Policy Priorities; Justice in Aging; The
Legal Aid Society; and Community Legal Service of
Philadelphia.
36 45 FR 65542, https://www.federalregister.gov/
citation/45-FR-65542.
37 We excluded two comments. One comment
was identical from the same commenter, and one
was a partial submission that was missing pages
that was resubmitted by the commenter for
completeness.
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We carefully considered the public
comments we received. More than 95
percent of commenters supported the
proposals in the NPRM to add SNAP
and to adopt the change from every
member to any other member, meaning
the household has both an SSI applicant
or recipient, and at least one other
household member who receives one or
more of the listed PIM payments. Some
commenters agreed with the
overarching proposals but
recommended amendments. Other
commenters asked questions and offered
opinions on the potential financial and
legal implications of the proposals. A
few commenters disagreed with the
proposals altogether.
We received some comments that
were outside the scope of this
rulemaking because they did not relate
to our proposals either to add SNAP to
our list of PIM programs or to change
our definition from every member to any
other member. Even though outside the
scope, we address some of these other
comments where they related to ISM
more generally because a response
might help the public understand our
program better.
The next section summarizes and
responds to the public comments.
Comments and Responses
General Support
Comment: Many commenters broadly
supported, and encouraged us to
quickly finalize and implement, adding
SNAP to the list of PIM programs in our
definition of a PA household.
Response: We acknowledge and
appreciate the support for that change.
Comments Regarding Scope of Change
Comment: Many commenters
supported the proposed change in the
PA household definition from one in
which every member receives some kind
of PIM payments to one that has both an
SSI applicant or recipient, and at least
one other household member who
receives one or more of the listed PIM
payments. Some commenters stated that
the any other proposal would simplify
our processing of SSI claims, save time,
and increase the speed with which we
serve applicants and recipients. Some
commenters noted that some SNAP
households face barriers to SNAP
enrollment for all household members,
including households with: college
students who do not meet a student
exemption for SNAP; individuals with
Able-Bodied Adults Without Dependent
(ABAWD) status who are otherwise
eligible for SNAP, but who are generally
limited to no more than three months of
SNAP benefits within a three-year
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period if they are not meeting certain
work requirements or they do not
qualify for an exception; and
households with mixed immigration
status.38 These commenters stated that
such households, where some, but not
all, members may be eligible for SNAP,
would not benefit from the addition of
SNAP to our list of PIM programs unless
we adopted the any other proposal. In
support of this point, commenters stated
that the change to any other member
would be consistent with Executive
Order (E.O.) 13985.39
One commenter objected to the
examination and discussion of the any
other proposal because they want
further analysis and justification of the
change. The commenter suggested that
such a change should be explored
through an Advance Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking.
Response: We carefully considered
the comments on the any other proposal
and have decided to adopt the any other
change in this final rule.
First, the commenters cited examples
of how requiring every member of the
household to receive a PIM payment has
disadvantaged individuals in lowincome households under the previous
definition when there was a household
member who did not receive a PIM
payment for reasons unrelated to need.
We found these examples to be
persuasive. The commenters noted, for
example, that SNAP and TANF restrict
certain individuals in the household
from receiving benefits even if their
income is used to determine the
household’s eligibility for the benefits.40
Specifically, several commenters 41
pointed out that some members of a
household are not eligible to receive
SNAP because of their immigration
38 For additional details on USDA/FNS’s policy
regarding families with mixed immigration status,
see https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/eligibility/
citizen/non-citizen-policy.
39 Executive Order 13985. Advancing Racial
Equity and Support for Underserved Communities
Through the Federal Government. January 20, 2021.
Available at: https://www.federalregister.gov/
documents/2021/01/25/2021-01753/advancingracial-equity-and-support-for-underservedcommunities-through-the-federal-government.
40 For example, adults who have exceeded
eligibility time limits and certain non-citizens are
not eligible to receive TANF, even if their income
is used to determine a household’s eligibility for
TANF benefits. See ‘‘Characteristics and Financial
Circumstances of TANF Recipients Fiscal Year (FY)
2021,’’ available at https://www.acf.hhs.gov/sites/
default/files/documents/ofa/fy2021_
characteristics.pdf.
41 Comments are available to the public at https://
www.regulations.gov. Search for docket ‘‘SSA–
2023–0015.’’ See comments from: National
Organization of Social Security Claimants’
Representatives (NOSSCR); California Association
of Food Banks (CAFB); Californians for SSI
(CA4SSI); Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
(CBPP); Justice in Aging; and the Legal Aid Society.
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status, even if they would otherwise
qualify for SNAP benefits based on their
income (or need).42 In such a case,
under the previous policy, although the
SSI recipient lives in a household where
all but one of the other members are
receiving SNAP, we would not have
considered this a PA household because
not every member of the household was
receiving a PIM payment. As a result,
we may have treated the SSI recipient
as receiving inside ISM and would have
reduced their benefit despite the fact
that the household was still sufficiently
low income to qualify everyone in the
household for the PIM payments based
on financial need.
Second, for households with an SSI
applicant or recipient and at least one
other member who receives meanstested PIM payments, we find it
reasonable to conclude that members of
the household likely would not be able
to provide the SSI applicant or recipient
with inside ISM. This conclusion is
supported by the data we have about the
composition of households that receive
the types of PIM payments covered by
our PA household policy. This data
generally shows that individuals eligible
for PIM payments live in low-income
households. For example:
• The average monthly income for
TANF households is $958 (or under
$12,000 annually). These income levels
indicate that if someone in a household
is receiving TANF, the entire household
is likely to be low income.43
• In 2014, a study showed that
families who receive public assistance
are significantly lower income than
families who do not, with annual
incomes averaging $33,549 for a family
of four who receive at least one form of
public assistance versus $74,597 for a
family of four who do not receive any
assistance.44
• 70 percent of SSI recipients live in
households with family incomes below
$30,000, including income from
assistance benefits.45
42 See ‘‘Are non-citizens eligible for SNAP?’’ at
https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/recipient/eligibility.
43 See Table 40 (‘‘TANF Recipient Families by
Receipt of Non-TANF Income: FY 2021), available
at https://www.acf.hhs.gov/ofa/data/characteristicsand-financial-circumstances-tanf-recipients-fiscalyear-2021.
44 See Program participation and spending
patterns of families receiving government meanstested assistance: Monthly Labor Review: U.S.
Bureau of Labor Statistics, available at https://
www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/2018/article/programparticipation-and-spending-patterns-of-familiesreceiving-means-tested-assistance.htm.
45 Messel and Trenkamp. 2022. ‘‘Characteristics
of Noninstitutional DI, SSI, and OASI Program
Participants 2016 Update.’’ Research and Statistics
Note No. 2022–01. Washington, DC: SSA. Available
at: https://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/rsnotes/
rsn2022-01.html.
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• In FY 2020, 81 percent of SNAP
households had gross monthly income
less than or equal to the poverty line.46
• An analysis of families receiving
multiple public benefits (but not
necessarily where every member
received some form of public assistance)
found that higher levels of benefit
receipt are associated with lower
income, earnings, and employment, and
greater material hardship.47
• A 2013 study found that about 25
percent of SSI recipients lived in a
household where the total family
income was below 100 percent of the
applicable family poverty threshold,
even though the household contained at
least one member who was not receiving
PIM payments. This was true regardless
of whether the SSI recipients were
individuals/couples or noncouple
multi-recipient.48
• The 2019 Survey of Income and
Program Participation found that in
households that receive both TANF and
SSI, 85.7 percent (+/¥ 8.4 percent) have
incomes less than 200 percent of the
Federal poverty rate, even after all
transfers (that is, including the income
the household receives from all sources
of cash public assistance payments).49
• Lastly, related to the policy to add
SNAP to the list of PIM programs,
among households receiving SSI in
2021, 64.7 percent also qualified for and
received SNAP.50
Third, as discussed above and in our
NPRM, SNAP and several other listed
PIM programs provide, or may provide,
household-level (or family-level)
46 See USDA FNS. 2022. Characteristics of U.S.
Department of Agriculture’s Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance Program Households: Fiscal
Year 2020. Available at https://fns-prod.
azureedge.us/sites/default/files/resource-files/
Characteristics2020-Summary.pdf.
47 Edelstein, Pergamit, and Ratcliffe. 2014.
Characteristics of Families Receiving Multiple
Public Benefits. The Urban Institute. Available at
https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/
publication/22366/413044-Characteristics-ofFamilies-Receiving-Multiple-Public-Benefits.PDF.
48 Nicholas. 2013. Prevalence, Characteristics,
and Poverty Status of Supplemental Security
Income Multirecipients. Social Security Bulletin,
Vol. 73, No. 3. Washington, DC: SSA. Available at
https://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/ssb/v73n3/
v73n3p11.html.
49 We selected the 2019 (reference year 2018)
SIPP survey because it had the largest sample size
of pre-COVID 19 SIPP surveys. U.S. Census Bureau.
2019. Survey of Income and Program Participation.
Available at https://www.census.gov/library/
visualizations/interactive/social-safety-netbenefits.html. The most recent SIPP survey found
that 61.2 percent (+/¥ 21.4 percent) of these same
households had incomes less than 200 percent of
the Federal poverty rate. The 2021 SIPP is inclusive
of COVID-era stimulus payments and other transfer
programs that no longer exist.
50 U.S. Census Bureau. 2022. Who Is Receiving
Social Safety Net Benefits? available at https://
www.census.gov/library/stories/2022/05/who-isreceiving-social-safety-net-benefits.html.
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benefits (e.g., TANF, Refugee Act of
1980, Disaster Relief and Emergency
Assistance Act, and General assistance
programs of the Bureau of Indian
Affairs). This means a government
agency has already determined that a
household’s income is sufficiently low
such that the household is in need of
public assistance. Based on that finding,
it is reasonable for us to conclude that
household members require their own
income (and resources) to meet their
own needs.
Finally, regarding the suggestion that
we explore whether to adopt the any
other definition through an ANPRM, we
used the NPRM to explore this option.
In the NPRM, we discussed the possible
policy change, examined evidence that
supported the change, invited public
comment specifically on the proposed
change, and included an estimate and
cost analysis from our Office of the
Chief Actuary (OCACT) over the fiscal
years 2024 to 2033. The OCACT
estimate projected SSI payments, and
estimated changes for both recipients
and new individuals who will be
eligible under the revised any other
definition that would not have been
eligible under our previous rules.
Comment: Some commenters
encouraged us to go beyond the any
other proposal and change the
definition of a PA household to refer
simply to any member, including the
SSI applicants or recipients themselves.
Response: Under the commenters’
alternative proposal, every SSI recipient
would live in a PA household and, thus,
would be considered not to be receiving
ISM from other members of the
household (i.e., inside ISM). We do not
think that result would be supportable
because it would mean that we would
never apply the one-third reduction
(VTR) rule,51 which is based on a
provision in the Social Security Act.52
Comment: Many commenters
encouraged us to expand the definition
of PA household to include additional
programs, whether in this final rule or
in a future rulemaking, including:
Medicaid; LIHEAP and similar energy
assistance programs; housing assistance
from the Department of Housing and
Urban Development (HUD); WIC; CHIP;
and the earned income tax credit (EITC).
Response: As we discussed in the
NPRM,53 this is our first expansion of
the definition of a PA household since
1980, when the policy was first
established. Therefore, we decided to
add SNAP initially and will consider
other programs in the future; our
51 See
20 CFR 416.1131; POMS SI 00835.200.
42 U.S.C. 1382a(a)(2)(A).
53 88 FR 67152–67153.
52 See
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choosing not to do so now does not
preclude adding other programs via
future rulemaking. As discussed in our
NPRM, SNAP recipients have been
determined to be low-income and,
therefore, need their income (and
resources) to take care of their own
needs, which is consistent with the
rationale underlying our policy when it
was first established.54 The other
programs cited by the commenter do not
align as easily with the criteria we used.
For example, while the benefits of the
EITC are concentrated among lowincome households, some moderateincome taxpayers are eligible for a small
credit, including taxpayers with three or
more children earning up to $63,398
and with up to $11,000 in investment
income (in 2023). This demonstrates
that the EITC does not align with the
underlying intent of our initially
established PA household policy to the
extent that SNAP does.
In addition, SNAP has several
advantages over other programs that we
considered that make it the best fit for
this first expansion of our PA household
definition. First, SNAP eligibility and
receipt have relatively low State
variability because SNAP is a
nationwide program with relatively
uniform eligibility standards. In general,
net monthly income limits for SNAP
eligibility are set at 100 percent of the
poverty level.55 In contrast, Medicaid,
for example, has varying income limits
based on an individual’s State of
residence.56 Likewise, the upper
eligibility levels for CHIP vary by State
and range widely,57 as do the types of
CHIP programs and groups covered by
States. In contrast, the relative
uniformity in SNAP eligibility
requirements makes this initial
expansion of our PA household policy
more consistent and supportable.
Second, SNAP benefits are typically
certified for relatively longer periods
than other government benefit
programs. For example, many SNAP
participants are certified for 12 months,
and older individuals and individuals
with disabilities may be certified for up
to 24 or 36 months. In contrast, other
programs with shorter or less
predictable benefit periods might
require more frequent development of
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54 88
FR 67152.
‘‘What are the SNAP income limits?’’
available at https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/
recipient/eligibility. Note that Alaska and Hawaii
have separate, higher income eligibility standards
for the SNAP program.
56 https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/nationalmedicaid-chip-program-information/medicaidchildrens-health-insurance-program-basic-healthprogram-eligibility-levels/
57 Id.
55 See
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individuals’ living arrangements, which
could be burdensome for recipients and
our staff. For example, LIHEAP benefits,
which help low-income households pay
for heating or cooling, are typically
seasonal, meaning that eligibility can
vary within a 12-month period.
Moreover, SNAP does not have a cap
on enrollment, meaning those who
qualify or meet eligibility requirements
receive benefits. This ensures that we
can include the entire SNAP-eligible
population when we determine what
households qualify as PA households.
In contrast, programs like WIC, LIHEAP,
and HUD housing are capped based on
the availability of resources, which
means there are waiting lists for those
who are financially eligible and priority
levels to receive benefits.58 As we strive
for uniformity across the SSI program,
we are concerned that including
government benefit programs with
enrollment caps or waiting lists may
lead to disparate treatment of similarly
situated SSI applicants and recipients.
Finally, we note that SNAP
participation overlaps to a great extent
with participation in other means-tested
programs and, thus, by adding SNAP to
the definition of PA household, we
anticipate that we will also capture
many of the individuals who receive
benefits from other means-tested
programs. We would like to observe
how adding SNAP to the PA household
definition affects the SSI population
before we determine whether to add
additional programs, and if so, which
programs.
Despite the considerations cited
above, we are not precluding adding
other programs to the list of PIM
payments in our PA Household
definition. As well, changes to the
programs discussed here might also
cause us to reconsider them for
inclusion on the list. Expanding the
definition of PA household to include
additional programs would require
further, program-specific consideration.
Use of Data Sharing To Implement New
Policy
Comment: One commenter
encouraged us to proactively recalculate
benefits for existing recipients based on
this new rule, rather than waiting until
the recipients’ next scheduled
redetermination. The commenter
wanted us to do this to ensure recipients
received the benefit of the new policy as
soon as possible. The commenter also
stated that this process of proactive
58 Dorn, Stan, et al. (2013). Overlapping Eligibility
and Enrollment: Human Services and Health
Programs Under the Affordable Care Act. The Urban
Institute. https://aspe.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/
private/pdf/76961/rpt_integrationproject.pdf.
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recalculation could be simplified by
utilizing data we already receive
through existing data matches. The
commenter further stated that ‘‘SSA
should conduct Limited Issue reviews of
all VTR and ISM records in order to
comply with the new rules, as well as
of all claims denied in the previous
twelve months to identify erroneously
denied applicants.’’
Similarly, many commenters, in their
support for finalizing the proposed rule,
encouraged us to expand or implement
data sharing agreements with State
SNAP administrators across the country.
They advocated that expanded data
sharing with SNAP administrators
would be an improvement over using
redeterminations to identify and correct
‘‘over-reduction’’ of payment and
ineligibility decisions.
Response: We acknowledge and share
the commenter’s desire to ensure
existing recipients receive the benefit of
the new PA household policy as soon as
possible. However, due to limited
resources it is not administratively
feasible to conduct Limited Issue
reviews of all the VTR and ISM records.
Further, this final rule does not apply to
any claims denied before its effective
date.
Expanding or implementing data
sharing agreements with States across
the country would involve several
important considerations that are
outside the scope of this rulemaking,
including the interest, capacity, and
requirements of the States. We have an
established process for data exchanges
that we follow to implement any data
exchange, including establishing the
agreements. We currently have 174 data
sharing agreements with States/State
agencies under which we provide data
for the State/State agency to determine
entitlement and eligibility for federally
funded benefit programs, including
Medicaid, SNAP, and TANF.
Income From Family or Friends
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern that our regulations that deem
income create a disincentive for SSI
recipients to get married, and implied
tension or conflict with the Supreme
Court’s holding in Obergefell v.
Hodges,59 which holds that same-sex
couples may not be deprived of the
fundamental right to marry.
Response: In general, deeming from a
spouse is required by the Social
Security Act.60 In the context of this
rulemaking, as we explained in the
NPRM, adding SNAP to our list of PIM
programs will ‘‘decrease the amount of
59 576
60 42
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income we [will] deem to SSI applicants
and recipients because we [will] no
longer deem income from ineligible
spouses . . . who receive SNAP benefits
and live in the same household.’’ There
is no tension or conflict between
spouse-to-spouse deeming and the
Supreme Court’s holding in Obergefell:
spouse-to-spouse deeming applies
equally to opposite-sex couples and
same-sex couples.
Comment: Several commenters made
a broad suggestion to entirely eliminate
ISM because counting ISM discourages
friends and family from providing
assistance to disabled loved ones, while
one commenter acknowledged that a
statutory change would be required to
eliminate ISM.
Response: We acknowledge the
commenters’ desired policy change, but
as the one commenter stated, entirely
removing ISM from our income
calculations would require a statutory
change.61
Opposition to the Rule
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Comment: One commenter opposed
the proposed rulemaking because the
NPRM did not extensively discuss the
distinctions in the definitions of
household composition for SSI and
SNAP.
Response: This rulemaking does not
change the definition of a household for
SSI purposes 62 or for SNAP purposes.63
The commenter did not explain how the
distinctions in the household
composition definitions are relevant to
our addition of SNAP, and we do not
believe that the distinctions preclude us
from adding SNAP to our regulatory list.
Comment: One commenter asserted
that because a federal food-stamp
program existed in 1980, when the PA
household policy was first created, the
relative increase in SNAP participation
since that time does not sufficiently
justify the change to include SNAP in
the list of PIM programs in our
definition of a PA household. The
commenter further noted that ‘‘the large
increase in SNAP users and concurrent
decline in the poverty rate since 1980
. . . is not a relevant indication of
increased need.’’
Response: When we first established
the PA household policy in 1980, we
explained that it was based on the idea
that if the other individuals in the
61 See
42 U.S.C. 1382a(a)(2)(A).
SI 00835.020—Definitions of
Terms Used in Living Arrangements (LA) and InKind Support and Maintenance (ISM)
Instructions—8/2023. https://secure.ssa.gov/
apps10/poms.nsf/lnx/0500835020.
63 See ‘‘Who is in a SNAP household?’’ at SNAP
Eligibility | Food and Nutrition Service (usda.gov).
https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/recipient/eligibility.
62 SSA—POMS:
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household were receiving a PIM
payment, they needed their income (and
resources) to meet their own needs. This
meant they could not support the SSI
applicant or recipient because they had
no extra income (or resources) to share.
The determination of need, made by the
applicable Federal or State agency
providing the PIM payments, supported
the assumption that the others in the
household could not provide ISM to the
SSI applicant or recipient. The
fluctuations in the overall poverty rate
in the United States are not directly
relevant to whether the household
members are able to provide ISM to the
SSI applicant or recipient. As we
discussed in the NPRM, when the PA
household policy was first created in
1980, the list of PIM programs in our
definition of a PA household reflected
the most widely used means-tested
public benefit programs at that time.64
The nationwide food-stamp program
began in 1974—just six years before the
establishment of the PA household
policy—and had approximately 21.1
million participants in 1980.65 In
contrast, approximately 42.1 million
people receive SNAP benefits today,66
making SNAP now one of the most
widely used public benefit programs. As
we discussed in the NPRM, we have not
updated our list of PIM programs for the
PA household policy since 1980,
despite the significant shifts in the
landscape of public assistance programs
since that time. SNAP recipients have
been determined to be low-income and,
therefore, need their income (and
resources) to meet their own needs.67
Indeed, a USDA report from 2019
showed that approximately 80 percent
of all SNAP households had gross
monthly income that was less than or
equal to the Federal poverty level.68
Comment: One commenter opposed
adding other programs, such as ‘‘in-kind
assistance programs like food and
medical care,’’ that are not cash
assistance programs, to the programs
listed in our definition of a PA
household. Further, the commenter
64 See
88 FR 67151–52.
Congressional Budget Office, ‘‘The Food
Stamp Program: Eligibility and Participation,’’ Nov.
1988, p. 2, available at https://www.cbo.gov/sites/
default/files/100th-congress-1987-1988/reports/88cbo-0010.pdf.
66 See USDA Food and Nutrition Service (FNS),
SNAP Data Tables, ‘‘FY19 through FY23 National
View Summary,’’ Sept. 2023, available at https://
www.fns.usda.gov/pd/supplemental-nutritionassistance-program-snap.
67 See 88 FR 67152.
68 See USDA, ‘‘Characteristics of Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance Program Households: Fiscal
Year 2019,’’ March 2021, Report No. SNAP–20–
CHAR, available at: https://fns-prod.azureedge.us/
sites/default/files/resource-files/
Characteristics2019.pdf.
65 See
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asserted that we had taken an
inconsistent stance by calling our
treatment of food ‘‘insignificant’’ in a
different rulemaking 69 but ‘‘including
SNAP . . . as significant’’ in this PA
household rulemaking.
Response: Regarding the commenter’s
statement that we should not add inkind assistance programs like food and
medical care to our PA household
definition, we have determined that
means-tested programs largely have
shifted over the last several decades
from cash assistance programs toward
voucher-based or in-kind support
programs. Because of this shift over
time, we have a reduced ability to
effectively identify the individuals we
intended to serve under our PA
household definition.
As we noted in the NPRM, SNAP
benefits meet our definition of income
in 20 CFR 416.1102.70 The commenter’s
reference to our NPRM on Omitting
Food from In-Kind Support and
Maintenance is generally outside the
scope of this rulemaking. However, we
note that, contrary to the commenter’s
assertion, we have not described food
assistance as ‘‘insignificant,’’ nor is food
assistance treated inconsistently under
the two rules. Here, we are adding
SNAP benefits to the list of PIM
programs under the PA household
policy. This change means that if the
household has both an SSI applicant or
recipient, and at least one other
household member who receives SNAP
benefits (or other PIM payments listed
in the PA household definition), we will
not develop inside ISM because we
consider that the household is
sufficiently low income such that the
members need all of their income (and
resources) to meet their own needs—
they are not able to share with or
provide ISM to the SSI applicant or
recipient. In contrast, under the final
rule Omitting Food from In-Kind
Support and Maintenance, we removed
food from our calculations of ISM. More
importantly, it is less accurate to
compare potentially partial, inconsistent
food assistance that an individual
receives from family or friends with
something like SNAP, a Federal benefit
one can only qualify for after
demonstrating they do not have enough
income or resources to fulfill their own
basic nutrition needs.
Comment: One commenter described
the NPRM as incomplete because there
was ‘‘no federalism, no distributional
69 The commenter appears to be referring to the
NPRM the agency published on ‘‘Omitting Food
from In-Kind Support and Maintenance.’’ See 88 FR
9779 (Feb. 15, 2023).
70 See 88 FR 67151.
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analysis, no alternatives considered[.]’’
The commenter also desired estimates
of costs from Medicaid, and other
programs using an SSI Financial
Eligibility Model (FEM). The same
commenter asserted that data from the
Survey of Income and Program
Participation (SIPP) was better for this
rulemaking than the Current Population
Survey (CPS) data used in our proposed
rule. The commenter asserted that CPS
data undercounts income and suggested
our estimates might be incorrect.
Response: Regarding federalism,
section 1(a) of E.O. 13132 defines
‘‘policies that have federalism
implications’’ as ‘‘refer[ring] to
regulations, legislative comments or
proposed legislation, and other policy
statements or actions that have
substantial direct effects on the States,
on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government.’’ 71 As stated in
the NPRM and this final rule, we
analyzed the rule in accordance with
the principles and criteria established
by E.O. 13132 and determined that the
rule will not have sufficient federalism
implications to warrant the preparation
of a federalism assessment. As also
stated in the NPRM and this final rule,
we also determined that the rule will
not preempt any State law or State
regulation or affect States’ abilities to
discharge traditional State governmental
functions. We maintain that those
determinations are accurate, and the
commenter did not give any reason to
believe they are not.
As a matter of protocol, the estimates
prepared by SSA’s Office of the Chief
Actuary (OCACT) focus on the impact
on SSA. The commenter is incorrect in
stating regarding the NPRM that ‘‘no
alternatives [were] considered[.]’’ For
example, the reasons that we provided
in support of the proposal, particularly
in the ‘‘Rationale for the Proposed
Policy’’ section of the NPRM,
demonstrate that we considered the
proposal against the alternative of
making no change.72 Also, as we stated
in the ‘‘Proposed Policy’’ section of the
NPRM, ‘‘[d]uring the development of
[the NPRM], we considered other
means-tested programs, including
Medicaid, the Low Income Home
Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP),
the Special Supplemental Nutrition
Program for Women, Infants, and
Children (WIC), the Housing Choice
Voucher Program, Project Based Rental
71 See https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR1999-08-10/html/99-20729.htm.
72 See 88 FR 67148, 67151–52 (Sept. 29, 2023).
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Assistance, and Public Housing, which
we discuss[ed] in the ‘Rationale for the
Proposed Policy’ section’’ of the
NPRM.73
With regard to the commenter’s
assertion that SIPP data was better for
this rulemaking than CPS data, in our
development of the estimated Federal
SSI program cost effects, we did not use
the income fields from the CPS to
estimate the effects of this proposal. The
CPS was only used for the purpose of
determining how many SSI households
were also receiving SNAP and would
thus be impacted by implementation of
the proposal. Regarding the research
cited in the NPRM that used the CPS,
the CPS Annual Social and Economic
Supplement (CPS ASEC) is the source of
official poverty measures, and we
consider it sufficiently reliable for other
government estimates. A chief
advantage of the CPS ASEC over the
SIPP (used by the FEM) is larger sample
size. Because PA households represent
a small fraction of the SSI caseload, we
rely on the larger data source to make
more precise estimates. Even the CPS
ASEC does not include enough cases to
support the additional detailed analyses
that the commenter would like to see.
Comment: Two commenters stated
that the NPRM should comply with the
Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023,
known as the Administrative Pay-AsYou-Go Act of 2023.74
Response: This rule complies with the
Administrative Pay-As-You-Go Act of
2023. That Act does not impose
requirements at the NPRM stage.
Additionally, this final rule is not
subject to the Act’s requirements
because it is not estimated to increase
direct spending by at least $100 million
for FY 2024 (the first fiscal year during
the 10-year period). See section 266 of
the Act.
Comment: One commenter opposed
the proposed rule based on the
administrative implementation cost of
$105 million because, in the
commenter’s view, it conflicts with our
anticipated administrative burden
reduction from simplified calculations.
The commenter also stated that there
will be more redeterminations and more
applications because of the new policy.
Response: To clarify, administrative
costs to implement a new regulation
(stemming from a variety of sources,
such as new systems) are distinct from
non-financial administrative burden
sources such as time, ease, and
efficiency. Administrative costs and
non-financial burdens, then, will not
necessarily move in the same direction.
73 Id.
at 67150–51 (footnotes omitted).
Law 118–5, div. B, title III.
74 Public
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As explained in the NPRM, we
anticipate this policy change will result
in administrative costs that will be only
partially offset by administrative
savings. At the same time, we expect
processing time savings because
employees will spend less time
developing household expenses and
making inside ISM determinations.
Nonetheless, as the comment suggests,
we estimated that there will be costs to
process additional claims,
reconsiderations, and appeals. As we
stated in the NPRM, we anticipate that
this expansion of our PA household
policy will increase the amount of
monthly SSI benefits for those to whom
the policy applies and make more
individuals eligible for SSI benefits.
Consequently, we anticipate that there
will be additional costs to process
redeterminations and post-eligibility
actions associated with this rule change.
In summary, we acknowledge what
the commenter is expressing, and we
provided revised estimate text in the
preamble to clarify that the
administrative burden would be
reduced in a subset of cases, which
would only partially offset the greater
amount of costs from newly eligible
recipients. However, as further
discussed in the preamble and in the
Regulatory Impact Analysis, we have
determined that the benefits of the rule
justify the costs, and that the rule can
have administrative benefits even while
it imposes administrative costs.
Comment: One commenter asserted
that using SNAP to confirm SSI
eligibility will result in overpayments in
multiple programs, thereby increasing
financial burdens on beneficiaries to
repay the funds. The commenter stated
that ‘‘SNAP income and asset testing
has changed dramatically with the
creation and expansion of Broad-Based
Categorical Eligibility (BBCE). This has
contributed to a massive increase in
SNAP participation rolls and a greater
reliance on recipient self-attestation—
the number one contributor to program
overpayments.’’ The commenter also
asserted that our proposed rule ‘‘will
increase the participation in SSI, not
decrease as imagined in [the] NPRM.’’
Response: Under this final rule,
receipt of SNAP is not dispositive of the
applicant’s or recipient’s SSI eligibility.
It is true that under this final rule,
receipt of SNAP by one or more
household members (other than the SSI
applicant or recipient) may factor into
our determination of whether the SSI
applicant or recipient lives in a PA
household, but this is advantageous to
the individual applying for or receiving
SSI. If the SSI applicant or recipient
lives in a PA household, that means
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only that we consider the SSI applicant
or recipient not to be receiving ISM
from members of the household—not
necessarily that the SSI applicant or
recipient is eligible for SSI.
We carefully considered the
commenter’s reservations about SNAP.
However, we continue to maintain that
adding SNAP is consistent with the
rationales and purposes of our PA
household policy, as discussed in the
NPRM and in this final rule. We would
add, first, that we find it reasonable and
supportable to consider a needs-based
eligibility determination by a
government entity, on a matter within
its competence, as reliable. Second, an
overpayment determination for a given
type of benefit does not necessarily
mean that the applicant or recipient was
not entitled or eligible to receive any
such benefits for the period at issue; and
our PA household policy looks at
receipt of a PIM payment generally, not
the amount of the PIM payment. Third,
if we determined, in light of another
government entity’s overpayment
determination, that a household
member did not receive a PIM payment,
we could and would make a correction,
as appropriate and subject to all our
usual rules, including administrative
finality.75 Fourth, BBCE ‘‘is a policy in
which households may become
categorically eligible for SNAP because
they qualify for a non-cash Temporary
Assistance for Needy Families (TANF)
or state maintenance of effort (MOE)
funded benefit.’’ 76 BBCE is consistent
with our longstanding list of PIM
programs, which includes both TANF
and State or local government assistance
programs based on need.77
Lastly, contrary to the commenter’s
statement, our proposed rule did not
indicate that we anticipated a decrease
in SSI participation. In the NPRM, we
stated that there would be a ‘‘decrease
[in] the number of SSI applicants and
recipients charged with in-kind support
and maintenance (ISM)’’ and a
‘‘decrease [in] the amount of income we
would deem to SSI applicants or
recipients because we would no longer
deem income from ineligible spouses
and parents who receive SNAP benefits
and live in the same household.’’ 78
Comment: One commenter suggested
reducing administrative burden when
we determine eligibility by conducting
mandatory verifications of all income
and assets in SSI applications, because
self-attestation creates ‘‘an environment
75 See
favorable to first and third-party
fraud[.]’’ The commenter stated that
‘‘the ‘pay and chase’ implications in
overpayment recoveries infers an
administrative burden upon state and
local welfare agencies.’’
Response: Verification of ‘‘all income
and assets in SSI applications’’ is
outside the scope of this rulemaking.
However, we note that in administering
the SSI program, we carefully ensure
that our policies and procedures are
consistent with the requirement in the
Social Security Act: ‘‘that eligibility for
[SSI] benefits . . . will not be
determined solely on the basis of
declarations by the applicant
concerning eligibility factors or other
relevant facts, and 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 provided only to eligible
individuals (or eligible spouses) and
that the amounts of such benefits are
correct.’’ 79
Regarding our PA household policy,
we do not rely on self-attestation alone.
For initial claims, we ‘‘substantiate
receipt of PA payments’’ (or PIM
payments) with ‘‘evidence . . . [in] the
form of an award letter, report of contact
with the paying agency, etc.’’; and, in
post-eligibility situations, we
appropriately document or substantiate
PIM payments depending on indications
of a changed living arrangement.80
Lastly, after over 40 years of applying
our PA household policy, we are aware
of no evidence that the policy as such
leads to overpayments or that
overpayments occur with respect to PA
household determinations more than
other comparable determinations.
Miscellaneous Comments
Comment: One commenter asserted
the proposed rule would not benefit the
quality of life of all U.S. citizens and
that ‘‘[t]here is no defined option to
revert changes if [the rulemaking]
proves to be incorrect.’’
Response: Under the Social Security
Act, we have broad authority to make
and revise rules and regulations,
consistent with the Act, that are
necessary or appropriate for the
administration of our programs,
including the SSI program.81 Adding
SNAP to the list of PIM programs in our
definition of a PA household and
adopting the any other definition are
proper exercises of the Commissioner’s
20 CFR 416.1488.
76 https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/broad-based-
categorical-eligibility.
77 See 20 CFR 416.1142(a)(1), (6).
78 88 FR 67148, 67148.
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79 42
U.S.C. 1383(e)(1)(B)(i).
SI 00835.130E.
81 See 42 U.S.C. 405(a), 902(a)(5), 1383(d)(1),
1383b(a).
80 POMS
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rulemaking authority under the Act, and
these changes are appropriate and
justified. For the reasons articulated in
the NPRM and this final rule, we believe
these changes will help us administer
the SSI program and provide better
support to individuals with limited
income and resources. Administering
the SSI program as we have been
charged to do benefits the public more
broadly and the common good.
Comment: One commenter opposed
the proposed rule in light of inflation,
which ‘‘is presenting challenges for low/
no income individuals with their SSI
payment and SNAP benefits taken
together. Any cuts to their SSI payment
at this time will place such individuals
at a disadvantage in paying their bills
and living with dignity in their
households.’’ The commenter also
suggested that we tax ‘‘the super-rich’’
and ‘‘[s]top illegal immigrants at the
border and stop them from exploiting
the benefits budgeted for legal residents
with genuine needs.’’
Response: This rulemaking will not
result in cuts to SSI payments. We
anticipate that the expansion of our PA
household policy will increase SSI
payments for those to whom the policy
applies. Taxation and border control are
outside our administrative authority and
outside the scope of this rulemaking.
Immigration status may be relevant for
SSI purposes, but changes to national
immigration policy are outside the
scope of this rulemaking.
Regulatory Procedures
E.O. 12866, as Amended by E.O. 14094
We consulted with the OMB, and
OMB determined that this final rule
meets the criteria for a significant
regulatory action under section (3)(f)(1)
of E.O. 12866, as amended by E.O.
14094, and is subject to OMB review.
Anticipated Transfers to Our Program
The primary anticipated impact of
this rule is an increase in monetary
transfers from the government to SSI
recipients. Our Office of the Chief
Actuary (OCACT) estimates that
implementation of this rule would
result in a total increase in Federal SSI
payments of $15 billion over fiscal years
2024 through 2033, assuming
implementation of this rule beginning
on September 30, 2024. When the
effects of implementing this rule are
fully realized, the annual increase in
Federal SSI payments is estimated to be
about two percent relative to what
would have occurred under previous
rules. To estimate the impact, OCACT
used the Annual and Social Economic
Supplement (ASEC) to the Current
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Population Survey (CPS) and our
administrative data. We expect that
adding SNAP to the list of PIM
programs and changing to the any other
definition of a PA household will
increase the number of PA households
for which we do not charge inside ISM,
which will increase Federal SSI
payments for these recipients. In
addition, we expect that no longer
deeming income from ineligible spouses
and parents whose income is used to
determine eligibility for or amount of
SNAP payments will also increase
Federal SSI payments. We expect that
implementation of this final rule will
also cause some individuals to receive
Federal SSI payments who would not
have been eligible under the previous
rules.
According to our Office of the Chief
Information Officer, Office of Benefit
Information Systems, as of January
2023, there were 303,609 SSI recipients
living in a PA household according to
the previous definition, approximately
four percent of our total 7.5 million SSI
recipients.82 We expect the share of SSI
recipients living in a PA household, as
defined under this rule, to increase
substantially when this final rule is
implemented. Specifically, OCACT
estimates that once this rule is
implemented and the effects have
stabilized, in fiscal year 2033 roughly
277,000 Federal SSI recipients (4
percent of all SSI recipients) will have
an increase in monthly payments
compared to current rules, and an
additional 109,000 individuals (1
percent increase) will receive Federal
SSI payments who would not have been
eligible under current rules.
Additionally, the expansions of our
PA household definition could result in
a reduction of SNAP benefits due to
potential interaction between SSI and
SNAP. For example, if an ineligible
spouse or parent were receiving SNAP,
we would no longer deem their income
to an SSI applicant or recipient. Not
deeming income for SSI purposes could
lead to an increase in the SSI payment,
which could in turn cause the
household to receive a SNAP reduction
that is 30 percent of the SSI increase, up
to the point of ineligibility.83 The
household’s ineligibility for SNAP
could mean, in turn, that the SSI
recipient is no longer part of a PA
household for SSI purposes. Our
understanding is that: an individual or
household generally would prefer cash
to SNAP benefits; an increase in SSI
could not result in a decrease in SNAP
benefits greater than the increase in SSI;
and, in the main, the increase in SSI
that may result from the expansions of
our definition of a PA household will be
favorable on net to individuals and
households. However, we recognize that
the interplay among various benefit
types, as well as the relationships and
financial interests of the SSI individual
and other household members, can be
complicated. We cannot necessarily
predict how the change could affect
individuals participating in other
programs within these households.
82 Annual Statistical Supplement, 2023—
Summary of SSI. Available at: https://www.ssa.gov/
policy/docs/statcomps/supplement/2023/7a.html.
83 Because SNAP households are expected to
spend about 30 percent of their own resources on
food, the maximum monthly allotment is calculated
by multiplying a household’s net monthly income
by 0.3 and subtracting the result from the maximum
monthly allotment for the household size. See
‘‘How much could I receive in SNAP benefits?’’ at
https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/recipient/eligibility.
Anticipated Qualitative Costs & Benefits
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Anticipated Net Administrative Cost to
the Social Security Administration
The Office of Budget, Finance, and
Management estimates that this
proposal will result in a total net
administrative cost of $83 million for
the 10-year period from FY 2024 to FY
2033. This estimate includes costs to
update our systems, to send notices to
inform current recipients of the policy
changes, to address inquiries from the
notices, to verify receipt of SNAP
benefits, and to perform additional posteligibility actions to account for changes
in living arrangements. Under this final
rule, more individuals will be newly
eligible for SSI benefits than under the
current rule, resulting in additional
costs to process additional claims,
reconsiderations, appeals,
redeterminations, and post-eligibility
actions. In addition to the costs, our
estimate also includes processing time
savings as field office employees will
not have to spend time developing for
household expenses/contributions or
the full income of deemors (ineligible
parents and spouses) or go through the
inside ISM determination process
during initial claims, pre-effectuation
reviews, redeterminations, and posteligibility actions. While our estimate
includes savings due to the reduction in
processing times for affected cases, we
expect that the costs to process new
claims, reconsiderations, and appeals
for additional newly eligible individuals
will outweigh the savings.
We anticipate qualitative benefits
from the revision of adding SNAP to the
PA household definition, thereby
ensuring that ISM and income deeming
do not undermine the economic security
of households who receive nutrition
assistance.
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Additionally, the revision will reduce
administrative burdens for SSI
applicants or recipients. Under our
finalized policy, the list of PIM
programs includes SNAP, and the
definition of PA household has changed
to refer to a household which has both
the SSI applicant or recipient, and at
least one other household member who
receives a PIM payment. Once we
identify that an SSI applicant or
recipient lives in a PA household, the
applicant or recipient would not have to
provide household expenses
information.
Our change from every member to any
other member receiving a PIM payment
to meet the definition of a PA household
further simplifies the development of
living arrangements and ISM, reduces
SSA’s administrative costs and
compliance costs during initial
determinations and redeterminations for
applicants and recipients living in PA
households, and reduces ISM
complexities that lead to payment
errors. Removing the requirement that
every member be in receipt of a PIM
payment will help ensure that we reach
more SSI applicants and recipients
based on their need, especially in cases
where one individual in a household
was categorically ineligible for a PIM
payment for reasons unrelated to their
potential need. For example, the change
to any other will save time for
individuals, household members, and
us, since we will no longer have to
develop for the entire household once
we identify one other person in the
household receiving a PIM payment. We
acknowledge that if the individual
receiving the PIM payment leaves the
household we would subsequently
inquire if there is another household
member also receiving a PIM payment,
and this would impose a small
administrative burden. However, this
burden is not meaningfully different
from those caused by other changes in
circumstances that would lead us to
verify whether the SSI recipient remains
eligible for SSI benefits. We anticipate
this final rule will still reduce
administrative burden overall.
We also anticipate some qualitative
costs. Specifically, because of our new
definition of a ‘‘public assistance
household,’’ the SSI applicant or
recipient will now need to answer new
questions and provide documentation
about the public assistance they and
others in their household receive, so we
can accurately determine if they live in
a ‘‘public assistance household.’’ As
well, since SNAP is being added to the
list of programs considered for PA
household determinations, processing
times may temporarily increase as we
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verify receipt of SNAP benefits. This
additional information is a qualitative
cost of the regulation, although
ultimately, providing the information
may be beneficial to the SSI applicant
or recipient.
Additionally, the rule change may
impose quantitative costs on us due to
our increased need for additional
development in certain circumstances.
For instance, it is possible our
regulatory change may incentivize
current SSI recipients to change living
arrangements to co-locate with family or
friends who are receiving SNAP. This is
similar to our current policy that
requires SSI applicants and recipients to
notify us of changes in their living
arrangements. SSI applicants and
recipients will need to ask ineligible
spouses or parents whether their income
was used to determine eligibility for, or
the amount of, the SNAP benefits. If it
was, and if this information is verified
by SSA during the initial claim, we
would exclude the income for deeming
purposes in the SSI program.84
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).
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E.O. 13132 (Federalism)
We analyzed this rule in accordance
with the principles and criteria
established by E.O. 13132 and
determined that the rule will not have
sufficient federalism implications to
warrant the preparation of a federalism
assessment. We also determined that
this 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 rule will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
because it affects individuals only.
Therefore, a regulatory flexibility
analysis is not required under the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, as amended.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The final rule requires minor
revisions to our existing information
collections to expand our definition of
PA Household and include SNAP as an
example of a PIM program. In addition,
the application of the revisions to these
rules causes a burden change to our
currently approved information
collections under the following
information collection requests: 0960
0174, the SSA–8006, Statement of
Living Arrangements, In Kind Support
and Maintenance; 0960–0456, the SSA–
8011, Statement of Household Expense
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and Contributions; and 0960–0529, the
SSA–5062, Claimant Statement about
Loan of Food or Shelter, and the SSA
L5063–F3, Statement about Food or
Shelter Provided to Another. We also
anticipate a small burden reduction per
response for the SSA 8006 (0960–0174)
as respondents will not need to develop
the responses about their household. In
addition, we anticipate a 50% reduction
in the number of respondents based on
those who indicate they are part of a
Public Assistance Household and who
may not need to complete the follow-up
forms SSA–5062, SSA L5063, SSA–
8006, and SSA 8011. We anticipate this
will result in a reduction in the overall
burden for these information
collections.
We published a notice of proposed
rulemaking on September 29, 2023, at
88 FR 67148. In that notice, we solicited
comments under the PRA on the burden
estimate; 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. The comments
section above includes our responses to
the PRA-related public comments we
received under the NPRM.
The following chart shows the
reduction in time burden information
associated with the final rule:
BILLING CODE 4191–02–P
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OMB#;
Form#;
Number of
Respondents
Frequency Current
Average
of
Response
09600174
Burden
Per
Response
(minutes)
Current
Estimated
Total
Burden
(hours)
Anticipated
New
Number of
Respondents
Under
Regulation
Anticipated
New
Burden Per
Response
Under
Regulation
(minutes)
12,160
6
Anticipated
Estimated
Total
Burden
Estimated
Burden
Savings
(hours)
Under
Regulation
(hours)
1,216
203
10,944
1,824
12,160
1
7
1,419
109,436
1
7
12,768
109,436
21,000
l
15
5,250
10,500
2,625
2,625
398,759
1
15
99,690
199,380
49,845
49,845
29,026
1
30
14,513
14,513
7,257
7,256
29,026
1
20
9,675
14,513
4,838
4,837
29,026
1
30
14,513
14,513
7,257
7,256
29,026
1
20
9,675
14,513
4,838
4,837
167,503
389,528
88,820
78,693
SSA8006
(Paper
Form)
09600174
6
SSA8006
(SSI
Claims
Svstem)
09600456
SSA8011-F3
(Paper
Form)
09600456
Personal
Interview
(SSI
Claims
Svstem)
09600529
SSA5062
(Paper
version)
09600529
SSA5062
(SST
claim
svstem)
09600529
SSAL5063
(Paper
version)
09600529
SSAL5063
Totals
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The following chart shows the
reduction in theoretical cost burdens
associated with the final rule:
Anticipated
New Number
of
Respondents
Estimated
Anticipated
Burden Per
Response
from Chart
Above
(minutes)
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)**
Anticipated Annual
Opportunity Cost
(dollars)***
09600174
SSA-8006
(Paper
Form)
12,160
6
1,216
$13.30*
24**
$80,864***
09600174
SSA-8006
(SSI
Claims
System)
109,436
6
10,944
$13.30*
24**
$727, 749***
09600456
SSA-8011
(Paper
Form)
09600456
Personal
Interview
(SSI
Claims
System)
10,500
15
2,625
$31.48
21**
$198,324***
199,380
15
49,845
$31.48
21**
$3,765,889***
09600529
SSA-5062
(Paper
version)
14,513
30
7,257
$22.39*
24**
$292,458***
09600529
SSA-5062
(SSI
claim
system)
14,513
20
4,838
$22.39*
24**
$238,297***
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22:15 Apr 18, 2024
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OMB#;
Form#;
28621
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 77 / Friday, April 19, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
OMB#;
Form#;
Anticipated
New Number
of
Respondents
09600529
SSAL5063
(Paper
version)
09600529
SSAL5063
(SSI
claim
system)
Totals
14,513
30
7,257
$22.39*
24**
$292,458***
14,513
20
4,838
$22.39*
24**
$238,297***
Estimated
Anticipated
Burden Per
Response
from Chart
Above
(minutes)
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)**
Anticipated Annual
Opportunity Cost
(dollars)***
389,528
88,820
* We based this figure on the average DI payments based on SSA's current FY 2024 data
$5,834,336***
(https://www.ssa.gov/legislation/2024FactSheet.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); as
well as the combined theoretical wages for both Dl Payments and Average U.S. Workers.
** We based this figure 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
SSA submitted a single new Information Collection Request which encompasses revisions to
information collections currently under 0MB Numbers 0960-0174, 0960-0456, and 0960-0529
VerDate Sep<11>2014
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charge to respondents to complete the application.
28622
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 77 / Friday, April 19, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
to 0MB for the approval of the changes due to the final rule. After approval at the final rule
stage, we will adjust the figures associated with the current 0MB numbers for these forms to
As we have revised the associated
burdens for the above-mentioned forms
since we made revisions to the final rule
which were not included at the NPRM
stage, we are currently soliciting
comment on the burden for the forms as
shown in the charts above. If you would
like to submit comments, please send
them to the following locations:
BILLING CODE 4191–02–C
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:
OR.Reports.Clearance@ssa.gov
You can submit comments until May
20, 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.
2. Amend § 416.1142 by revising
paragraphs (a) introductory text, (a)(6)
and (7) and adding paragraph (a)(8) to
read as follows:
■
§ 416.1142 If you live in a public
assistance household.
(a) Definition. For purposes of our
programs, a public assistance household
is one that has both an SSI applicant or
recipient, and at least one other
household member who receives one or
more of the listed public income
maintenance payments. These are
payments made under—
*
*
*
*
*
(6) State or local government
assistance programs based on need (tax
credits or refunds are not assistance
based on need);
(7) U.S. Department of Veterans
Affairs programs (those payments based
on need); and
(8) The Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program (SNAP).
*
*
*
*
*
List of Subjects in 20 CFR Part 416
[FR Doc. 2024–08364 Filed 4–18–24; 8:45 am]
Administrative practice and
procedure, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Supplemental Security
Income (SSI).
The Commissioner of Social Security,
Martin O’Malley, having reviewed and
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.
BILLING CODE 4191–02–P
Faye I. Lipsky,
Federal Register Liaison, Office of Legislation
and Congressional Affairs, Social Security
Administration.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, we amend 20 CFR chapter III,
part 416, as follows:
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES
and 1383b; sec. 211, Pub. L. 93–66, 87 Stat.
154 (42 U.S.C. 1382 note).
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: 42 U.S.C. 902(a)(5), 1381a,
1382, 1382a, 1382b, 1382c(f), 1382j, 1383,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
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DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms,
and Explosives
27 CFR Part 478
[Docket No. ATF 2022R–09; AG Order No.
5921–2024]
RIN 1140–AA57
Bipartisan Safer Communities Act
Conforming Regulations
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
Firearms, and Explosives, Department of
Justice.
ACTION: Direct final rule.
AGENCY:
The Department of Justice
(‘‘Department’’) is amending Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and
Explosives (‘‘ATF’’) regulations to
implement firearms-related definitions
and requirements established by the
Bipartisan Safer Communities Act
(‘‘BSCA’’) and the NICS Denial
Notification Act (‘‘NDNA’’). These
statutes went into effect on June 25,
SUMMARY:
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2022, and October 1, 2022, respectively.
It is necessary to make conforming
changes to ensure that ATF’s regulations
are current and consistent with the
applicable statutes. For this reason, this
direct final rule incorporates many of
the BSCA and NDNA provisions that are
applicable to ATF.
DATES: This final rule is effective on July
18, 2024, unless ATF receives any
significant adverse comment by May 20,
2024. If ATF receives a significant
adverse comment within the stated time
that warrants revising the rule (as
described under the Public Participation
heading in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section of this regulation),
the Department will publish notification
in the Federal Register, withdrawing
this direct final rule before its effective
date.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by docket number ATF
2022R–09, by either of the following
methods—
• Federal eRulemaking portal:
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Mail: ATF Rulemaking Comments,
Mail Stop 6N–518, Office of Regulatory
Affairs, Enforcement Programs and
Services; Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
Firearms, and Explosives; 99 New York
Ave. NE, Washington, DC 20226; ATTN:
ATF 2022R–09.
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the agency name and
docket number (ATF 2022R–09) for this
direct final rule. All properly completed
comments received through either of the
methods described above will be posted
without change to the Federal
eRulemaking portal,
www.regulations.gov. This includes any
personal identifying information (‘‘PII’’)
submitted in the body of the comment
or as part of a related attachment.
Commenters who submit through the
Federal eRulemaking portal and who do
not want any of their PII posted on the
internet should omit PII from the body
of their comment or in any uploaded
attachments. Commenters who submit
through mail should likewise omit their
PII from the body of the comment and
provide any PII on the cover sheet only.
For detailed instructions on submitting
comments, the scope of comments for
this rulemaking, and additional
information on the rulemaking process,
E:\FR\FM\19APR1.SGM
19APR1
EN19AP24.109
reflect the new burden.
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 77 (Friday, April 19, 2024)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 28608-28622]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-08364]
=======================================================================
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SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION
20 CFR Part 416
[Docket No. SSA-2023-0015]
RIN 0960-AI81
Expand the Definition of a Public Assistance Household
AGENCY: Social Security Administration.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We are finalizing our proposed rule to expand the definition
of a public assistance (PA) household for purposes of our programs,
particularly the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program, to include
the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) as an additional
means-tested public income-maintenance (PIM) program. We are also
revising the definition of a PA household from a household in which
every member receives some kind of PIM payment to a household that has
both an SSI applicant or recipient, and at least one other household
member who receives one or more of the listed PIM payments (the any
other definition). If determined to be living in a PA household, inside
in-kind support and maintenance (ISM) would no longer need to be
developed. The final rule will decrease the number of SSI applicants
and recipients charged with ISM from others within their household. In
addition, we expect this rule to decrease the amount of income we would
deem to SSI applicants and recipients because we will no longer deem as
income from ineligible spouses and parents who live in the same
household: the value of the SNAP benefits that they receive; any income
that was counted or excluded in figuring the amount of that payment; or
any income that was used to determine the amount of SNAP benefits to
someone else. These policy changes reduce administrative burden for
low-income households and SSA.
[[Page 28609]]
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.ssa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The SSI program provides monthly payments to: (1) adults and
children with a disability or blindness; and (2) people aged 65 and
older who have little or no income and resources. Eligible individuals
must meet all the requirements in the Social Security Act (Act),
including having resources and income below specified amounts.\1\
Generally, the more income an individual has, the less their SSI
payment will be. Under the SSI program, resources are cash or other
liquid assets or any real or personal property that an individual (or
spouse, if any) owns and could convert to cash to be used for their
support and maintenance.\2\ Income, on the other hand, is anything the
SSI applicant or recipient receives in cash or in-kind that can be used
to meet food and shelter needs.\3\ Applicants' and recipients'
resources may affect their SSI eligibility, while their income may
affect both their SSI eligibility and payment amounts.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See 42 U.S.C. 1382 and 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.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Once an applicant is found eligible for SSI, their monthly payment
is determined by subtracting countable monthly income from the Federal
benefit rate (FBR), which is the monthly maximum Federal SSI
payment.\4\ The FBR for 2024 is $943 for an individual and $1,415 for
an eligible individual with an eligible spouse.\5\ The Act and our
regulations \6\ define income as ``earned,'' such as wages from work,
and ``unearned,'' such as gifted cash or ISM.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See 20 CFR 416.405 through 416.415. Some States supplement
the FBR amount.
\5\ 88 FR 72803, 72804 (2023). A table of the monthly maximum
Federal SSI payment amounts for an eligible individual, and for an
eligible individual with an eligible spouse, is available at https://www.ssa.gov/oact/cola/SSIamts.html. When the FBR is adjusted for
the cost of living, the amount of the potential ISM reduction
adjusts accordingly.
\6\ See 42 U.S.C. 1382a; 20 CFR 416.1102 through 416.1124.
\7\ See 20 CFR 416.1104.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ISM
As indicated above, income that affects an individual's monthly SSI
payment can be provided in cash or in-kind. We calculate ISM
considering any shelter that is given to the individual or that the
individual receives because someone else pays for it.\8\ For example,
if an applicant or recipient lives with their sibling and does not pay
rent, we would consider the shelter that their sibling provides to be
ISM.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ See 20 CFR 416.1130(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Like other forms of income, ISM can reduce the amount of a
recipient's monthly SSI payment. For example, we reduce the SSI monthly
payment by one-third of the FBR if an individual is living in another
person's household, receives shelter from others living in the
household, and others within the household pay for or provide the
individual with all of the individual's meals.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ See 20 CFR 416.1130(b)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additional circumstances regarding ISM are discussed further in our
regulations.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ See 20 CFR 416.1130 through 416.1148.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Deeming Income
In addition to counting ISM that an applicant or recipient
receives, the SSI program deems income of certain individuals to the
SSI applicant or recipient.\11\ ``Deeming'' is the process of
considering a portion of another person's income to be the income of an
SSI applicant or recipient.\12\ When our deeming rules apply, it does
not matter whether the other person's income is actually available to
the applicant or recipient.\13\ In determining an SSI applicant's or
recipient's eligibility and payment amount, we consider both the SSI
applicant's or recipient's own income as well as any relevant deemed
income from others. For example, when a child who is applying for or
receiving SSI lives with a parent who is ineligible for SSI, we deem a
portion of that parent's income to the child through the month in which
the child reaches age 18.\14\ Likewise, when an adult who is applying
for or receiving SSI lives with a spouse who is ineligible for SSI, we
deem a portion of the ineligible spouse's income to the applicant or
recipient.\15\ We look at the deemor's income to see if we must deem a
portion of it to the applicant or recipient because we expect the
deemor, based on their relationship with the SSI applicant or
recipient, to use some of their income to take care of (some of) the
applicant's or recipient's needs. Ultimately, only some of the deemor's
income is assigned to the SSI applicant or recipient.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See 42 U.S.C. 1382c(f); 20 CFR 416.1160.
\12\ See 20 CFR 416.1160.
\13\ See 20 CFR 416.1160, 416.1161.
\14\ See 20 CFR 416.1165.
\15\ See 20 CFR 416.1163.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some income from ineligible parents and spouses is not deemed to
the SSI applicant or recipient. For example, our policy excludes from
deeming: the amount of any PIM payments the ineligible parents and
spouses receive under the programs listed in the PA household
definition; \16\ any income that those programs counted or excluded in
determining the amount of the PIM payments they received; and any
income of the ineligible spouse or parent that is used by a PIM program
to determine the amount of that program's benefit to someone else.\17\
For example, if an ineligible spouse or parent receives Temporary Aid
for Needy Families (TANF) assistance based on their income of $400 per
month, we do not consider the TANF benefit amount or the $400 in our
income determination for the SSI applicant or recipient. This is based
on the premise that the income used to demonstrate eligibility for a
PIM program and the PIM payment itself are required for that
individual's own needs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ See 20 CFR 416.1142(a).
\17\ See 20 CFR 416.1161(a)(2) and (3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Prior Policy
We previously defined a PA household as one in which every member
receives a PIM payment under at least one of the following:
1. Title IV-A of the Social Security Act (Temporary Assistance for
Needy Families or TANF);
2. Title XVI of the Social Security Act (Supplemental Security
Income or SSI);
3. The Refugee Act of 1980 (payments based on need);
4. The Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act;
5. General assistance programs of the Bureau of Indian Affairs;
6. State or local government assistance programs based on need (tax
credits or refunds are not assistance based on need); and
7. Department of Veterans Affairs program (payments based on
need).\18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ 20 CFR 416.1142(a) (prior version).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
New Policy
We are making changes based on the Commissioner of Social
Security's
[[Page 28610]]
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.
Under those sections, the Commissioner may adopt rules regarding, among
other things, the nature and extent of evidence needed to establish
benefit eligibility, as well as methods of taking and furnishing such
evidence.
We are finalizing three changes discussed in the Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (NPRM) that we published on September 29, 2023.\19\ First,
we are finalizing a minor clarification to our definition of a PA
household at 20 CFR 416.1142(a). The term ``public assistance'' may
have implications outside our programs. We are finalizing, without
change from the NPRM, the clarification that our definition of ``public
assistance household,'' which we use as a term of art, applies only for
purposes of our programs. Second, we are finalizing, without change
from the NPRM, our proposed revision to the definition of a PA
household in 20 CFR 416.1142(a) of adding SNAP to the existing list of
PIM programs.\20\ Third, we are changing our definition of a PA
household from one in which every member receives a PIM payment to one
in which the household has both an SSI applicant or recipient, and at
least one other household member who receives one or more of the listed
PIM payments. If determined to be living in a PA household, inside ISM
would no longer need to be developed. We discussed this potential
change (from every to any other) in the NPRM and invited public
comment; public commenters were largely supportive of the change.\21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ 88 FR 67148.
\20\ For more information on SNAP, visit https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/supplemental-nutrition-assistance-program.
\21\ In the NPRM, we referred to this potential change as from
every to any other. In this final rule, we are adopting that
proposed change but, for purposes of clarification, have slightly
modified the new language defining a PA household in 20 CFR
416.1142(a), such that the any other language is no longer used.
Because the substance of the new definition is the same as the any
other proposal, we continue to refer to the new definition as the
any other definition throughout this final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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. Each of the three changes can be implemented
independently of the others, and we intend each of the three changes to
be severable from the others. The addition of SNAP to our list of PIM
programs in 20 CFR 416.1142(a) is independent of our adoption of the
any other definition--adding SNAP could be implemented separately even
if we did not adopt the any other definition. Likewise, expanding our
definition of a PA household by adopting the any other definition could
be fully implemented whether or not SNAP is added to the list of PIM
programs in 20 CFR 416.1142(a). The clarification that our definition
of ``public assistance household'' is a term of art that applies only
for purposes of our programs is a minor administrative clarification
that is not contingent on the implementation of the two ways in which
we are expanding the definition of a PA household with this final rule.
If any of these three changes were to be invalidated, the others could
still be implemented fully, as these changes relate to three separate
aspects of the PA household policy.
During the development of the NPRM, we considered other programs
which are often considered means-tested programs, including
Medicaid,\22\ the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program
(LIHEAP),\23\ the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women,
Infants, and Children (WIC),\24\ the Housing Choice Voucher
Program,\25\ Project Based Rental Assistance, and Public Housing \26\
which we discussed in the ``Rationale for the Proposed Policy'' in the
NPRM.\27\ At this time, we have decided to add SNAP with this expansion
and continue to explore adding other programs in the future.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ For more information on Medicaid, visit https://www.medicaid.gov/.
\23\ For more information on LIHEAP, visit https://www.acf.hhs.gov/ocs/low-income-home-energy-assistance-program-liheap.
\24\ For more information on WIC, visit https://www.fns.usda.gov/wic.
\25\ For more information on the Housing Choice Voucher Program,
visit https://www.hud.gov/hcv.
\26\ For more information on Public Housing, visit https://www.hud.gov/program_offices/public_indian_housing/programs/ph.
\27\ 88 FR 67148, 67151.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
SNAP provides nutrition benefits via an Electronic Benefit Transfer
(EBT) card, which can be used to buy groceries at authorized food
stores and retailers.\28\ Everyone who lives together and purchases and
prepares meals together is grouped together as one SNAP household; and,
in most cases, the household must meet both gross and net income
limits, which vary with household size, for the household to be
eligible for and receive SNAP benefits.\29\ If everyone in the SNAP
household is receiving TANF and/or SSI, the household may be deemed
``categorically eligible'' for SNAP because they have already been
determined eligible for another means-tested program.\30\ SNAP benefits
meet the definition of income in our regulations.\31\ However, SNAP
benefits are excluded from our income counting based on Federal
statute.\32\ Because our policy links the types of PIM payments listed
in 20 CFR 416.1142(a) with the income of ineligible spouses and parents
that is excluded from deeming under 20 CFR 416.1161(a)(2)-(3), adding
SNAP to the list of PIM programs will decrease the amount of income
that is deemed to SSI applicants and recipients. If an SSI-ineligible
spouse or parent is receiving SNAP benefits, the value of the SNAP
benefit, as well as any income that was counted or excluded in figuring
the amount of the SNAP benefits, would not be deemed to the SSI
applicant or recipient. In addition, any income of the ineligible
spouse or parent that is used to determine the amount of SNAP benefits
to someone else would not be deemed to the SSI applicant or recipient.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ See ``How do I receive SNAP benefits?'' available at
https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/recipient/eligibility.
\29\ See ``Who is in a SNAP household?'' and ``What are the SNAP
income limits?'' available at: https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/recipient/eligibility.
\30\ See ``What are the SNAP income limits?'' available at:
https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/recipient/eligibility.
\31\ See 20 CFR 416.1102.
\32\ 7 U.S.C. 2017(b); see also 20 CFR 416, Subpart K, Appendix
(I)(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We also discussed and invited public comment on broadening our
definition of a PA household from one in which every member receives a
PIM payment to one in which any member other than the SSI applicant or
recipient receives a PIM payment. We have decided to adopt this change.
Thus, under our new definition of PA household, if there is an SSI
applicant or recipient in a household where at least one other member
receives one or more of the listed PIM payments, the household will be
considered a PA household, and we will not develop for inside ISM.\33\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ ``Inside ISM'' is ISM that is provided to the SSI applicant
or recipient from others within the same household in which the
applicant or recipient is living. See POMS SI 00835.465.B.; see also
POMS SI 00835.515. In contrast, ``[w]hen a person who is not a
household member pays a vendor directly for any of the household's
costs or provides the household with [ISM] for less than the current
market value (CMV),'' we consider this ``outside ISM.'' See POMS SI
00835.465.C.; see also POMS SI 00835.515. ISM that is neither
inside, nor outside--such as ISM provided to only one person in the
household--is considered ``other ISM.'' See POMS SI 00835.630.E.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As we discussed in the NPRM, the previous definition of PA
household (requiring every member to receive a PIM payment) may have
disadvantaged individuals in low-income households where household
members still needed their income (and resources) to meet their own
needs but where a household member was not receiving a PIM payment for
reasons unrelated to need.
[[Page 28611]]
For example, college students, who do not meet a student exception for
SNAP, may not receive SNAP benefits even though the rest of the
household does.\34\ In such circumstances, under our previous
definition of PA household, the household would not qualify. But under
the expanded definition of PA household that we are adopting, the
household would not be disqualified as a PA household simply because
one member was not receiving a PIM payment. In fact, many commenters
supported the change we are now adopting based on their experiences,
under the previous definition, of households that did not qualify for
reasons unrelated to need.\35\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ See https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/students.
\35\ See public comments in the rulemaking docket at https://www.regulations.gov, under the docket SSA-2023-0015. Examples
include Center on Budget and Policy Priorities; Justice in Aging;
The Legal Aid Society; and Community Legal Service of Philadelphia.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, when we first established the PA household rule in
1980, we explained that our rule ``relied on the fact that other
agencies have determined that these individuals [receiving PIM
payments] need all their income for their own needs.'' \36\ Because
SNAP and several of the other PIM programs listed in our PA household
definition provide, or may provide, benefits at the household (or
family) level instead of the individual level (e.g., TANF, Refugee Act
of 1980, Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act, and general
assistance programs of the Bureau of Indian Affairs), we note that in
many circumstances a needs-based determination has been made for other
household members. We discuss further justification for the change
(from every member to any other member) in the Comments Summary section
below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ 45 FR 65542, https://www.federalregister.gov/citation/45-FR-65542.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comments Summary
We received 221 public comments on our NPRM from September 29
through November 29, 2023. Of the total comments, 219 are available for
public viewing at https://www.regulations.gov/document/SSA-2023-0015-0001.\37\ These comments were from:
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\37\ We excluded two comments. One comment was identical from
the same commenter, and one was a partial submission that was
missing pages that was resubmitted by the commenter for
completeness.
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Individuals; and
Advocacy groups, such as the National Organization of
Social Security Claimants' Representatives and the National Association
of Disability Representatives.
We carefully considered the public comments we received. More than
95 percent of commenters supported the proposals in the NPRM to add
SNAP and to adopt the change from every member to any other member,
meaning the household has both an SSI applicant or recipient, and at
least one other household member who receives one or more of the listed
PIM payments. Some commenters agreed with the overarching proposals but
recommended amendments. Other commenters asked questions and offered
opinions on the potential financial and legal implications of the
proposals. A few commenters disagreed with the proposals altogether.
We received some comments that were outside the scope of this
rulemaking because they did not relate to our proposals either to add
SNAP to our list of PIM programs or to change our definition from every
member to any other member. Even though outside the scope, we address
some of these other comments where they related to ISM more generally
because a response might help the public understand our program better.
The next section summarizes and responds to the public comments.
Comments and Responses
General Support
Comment: Many commenters broadly supported, and encouraged us to
quickly finalize and implement, adding SNAP to the list of PIM programs
in our definition of a PA household.
Response: We acknowledge and appreciate the support for that
change.
Comments Regarding Scope of Change
Comment: Many commenters supported the proposed change in the PA
household definition from one in which every member receives some kind
of PIM payments to one that has both an SSI applicant or recipient, and
at least one other household member who receives one or more of the
listed PIM payments. Some commenters stated that the any other proposal
would simplify our processing of SSI claims, save time, and increase
the speed with which we serve applicants and recipients. Some
commenters noted that some SNAP households face barriers to SNAP
enrollment for all household members, including households with:
college students who do not meet a student exemption for SNAP;
individuals with Able-Bodied Adults Without Dependent (ABAWD) status
who are otherwise eligible for SNAP, but who are generally limited to
no more than three months of SNAP benefits within a three-year period
if they are not meeting certain work requirements or they do not
qualify for an exception; and households with mixed immigration
status.\38\ These commenters stated that such households, where some,
but not all, members may be eligible for SNAP, would not benefit from
the addition of SNAP to our list of PIM programs unless we adopted the
any other proposal. In support of this point, commenters stated that
the change to any other member would be consistent with Executive Order
(E.O.) 13985.\39\
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\38\ For additional details on USDA/FNS's policy regarding
families with mixed immigration status, see https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/eligibility/citizen/non-citizen-policy.
\39\ Executive Order 13985. Advancing Racial Equity and Support
for Underserved Communities Through the Federal Government. January
20, 2021. Available at: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2021/01/25/2021-01753/advancing-racial-equity-and-support-for-underserved-communities-through-the-federal-government.
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One commenter objected to the examination and discussion of the any
other proposal because they want further analysis and justification of
the change. The commenter suggested that such a change should be
explored through an Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking.
Response: We carefully considered the comments on the any other
proposal and have decided to adopt the any other change in this final
rule.
First, the commenters cited examples of how requiring every member
of the household to receive a PIM payment has disadvantaged individuals
in low-income households under the previous definition when there was a
household member who did not receive a PIM payment for reasons
unrelated to need. We found these examples to be persuasive. The
commenters noted, for example, that SNAP and TANF restrict certain
individuals in the household from receiving benefits even if their
income is used to determine the household's eligibility for the
benefits.\40\ Specifically, several commenters \41\ pointed out that
some members of a household are not eligible to receive SNAP because of
their immigration
[[Page 28612]]
status, even if they would otherwise qualify for SNAP benefits based on
their income (or need).\42\ In such a case, under the previous policy,
although the SSI recipient lives in a household where all but one of
the other members are receiving SNAP, we would not have considered this
a PA household because not every member of the household was receiving
a PIM payment. As a result, we may have treated the SSI recipient as
receiving inside ISM and would have reduced their benefit despite the
fact that the household was still sufficiently low income to qualify
everyone in the household for the PIM payments based on financial need.
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\40\ For example, adults who have exceeded eligibility time
limits and certain non-citizens are not eligible to receive TANF,
even if their income is used to determine a household's eligibility
for TANF benefits. See ``Characteristics and Financial Circumstances
of TANF Recipients Fiscal Year (FY) 2021,'' available at https://www.acf.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/documents/ofa/fy2021_characteristics.pdf.
\41\ Comments are available to the public at https://www.regulations.gov. Search for docket ``SSA-2023-0015.'' See
comments from: National Organization of Social Security Claimants'
Representatives (NOSSCR); California Association of Food Banks
(CAFB); Californians for SSI (CA4SSI); Center on Budget and Policy
Priorities (CBPP); Justice in Aging; and the Legal Aid Society.
\42\ See ``Are non-citizens eligible for SNAP?'' at https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/recipient/eligibility.
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Second, for households with an SSI applicant or recipient and at
least one other member who receives means-tested PIM payments, we find
it reasonable to conclude that members of the household likely would
not be able to provide the SSI applicant or recipient with inside ISM.
This conclusion is supported by the data we have about the composition
of households that receive the types of PIM payments covered by our PA
household policy. This data generally shows that individuals eligible
for PIM payments live in low-income households. For example:
The average monthly income for TANF households is $958 (or
under $12,000 annually). These income levels indicate that if someone
in a household is receiving TANF, the entire household is likely to be
low income.\43\
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\43\ See Table 40 (``TANF Recipient Families by Receipt of Non-
TANF Income: FY 2021), available at https://www.acf.hhs.gov/ofa/data/characteristics-and-financial-circumstances-tanf-recipients-fiscal-year-2021.
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In 2014, a study showed that families who receive public
assistance are significantly lower income than families who do not,
with annual incomes averaging $33,549 for a family of four who receive
at least one form of public assistance versus $74,597 for a family of
four who do not receive any assistance.\44\
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\44\ See Program participation and spending patterns of families
receiving government means-tested assistance: Monthly Labor Review:
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, available at https://www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/2018/article/program-participation-and-spending-patterns-of-families-receiving-means-tested-assistance.htm.
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70 percent of SSI recipients live in households with
family incomes below $30,000, including income from assistance
benefits.\45\
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\45\ Messel and Trenkamp. 2022. ``Characteristics of
Noninstitutional DI, SSI, and OASI Program Participants 2016
Update.'' Research and Statistics Note No. 2022-01. Washington, DC:
SSA. Available at: https://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/rsnotes/rsn2022-01.html.
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In FY 2020, 81 percent of SNAP households had gross
monthly income less than or equal to the poverty line.\46\
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\46\ See USDA FNS. 2022. Characteristics of U.S. Department of
Agriculture's Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program Households:
Fiscal Year 2020. Available at https://fns-prod.azureedge.us/sites/default/files/resource-files/Characteristics2020-Summary.pdf.
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An analysis of families receiving multiple public benefits
(but not necessarily where every member received some form of public
assistance) found that higher levels of benefit receipt are associated
with lower income, earnings, and employment, and greater material
hardship.\47\
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\47\ Edelstein, Pergamit, and Ratcliffe. 2014. Characteristics
of Families Receiving Multiple Public Benefits. The Urban Institute.
Available at https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/22366/413044-Characteristics-of-Families-Receiving-Multiple-Public-Benefits.PDF.
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A 2013 study found that about 25 percent of SSI recipients
lived in a household where the total family income was below 100
percent of the applicable family poverty threshold, even though the
household contained at least one member who was not receiving PIM
payments. This was true regardless of whether the SSI recipients were
individuals/couples or noncouple multi-recipient.\48\
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\48\ Nicholas. 2013. Prevalence, Characteristics, and Poverty
Status of Supplemental Security Income Multirecipients. Social
Security Bulletin, Vol. 73, No. 3. Washington, DC: SSA. Available at
https://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/ssb/v73n3/v73n3p11.html.
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The 2019 Survey of Income and Program Participation found
that in households that receive both TANF and SSI, 85.7 percent (+/-
8.4 percent) have incomes less than 200 percent of the Federal poverty
rate, even after all transfers (that is, including the income the
household receives from all sources of cash public assistance
payments).\49\
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\49\ We selected the 2019 (reference year 2018) SIPP survey
because it had the largest sample size of pre-COVID 19 SIPP surveys.
U.S. Census Bureau. 2019. Survey of Income and Program
Participation. Available at https://www.census.gov/library/visualizations/interactive/social-safety-net-benefits.html. The most
recent SIPP survey found that 61.2 percent (+/- 21.4 percent) of
these same households had incomes less than 200 percent of the
Federal poverty rate. The 2021 SIPP is inclusive of COVID-era
stimulus payments and other transfer programs that no longer exist.
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Lastly, related to the policy to add SNAP to the list of
PIM programs, among households receiving SSI in 2021, 64.7 percent also
qualified for and received SNAP.\50\
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\50\ U.S. Census Bureau. 2022. Who Is Receiving Social Safety
Net Benefits? available at https://www.census.gov/library/stories/2022/05/who-is-receiving-social-safety-net-benefits.html.
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Third, as discussed above and in our NPRM, SNAP and several other
listed PIM programs provide, or may provide, household-level (or
family-level) benefits (e.g., TANF, Refugee Act of 1980, Disaster
Relief and Emergency Assistance Act, and General assistance programs of
the Bureau of Indian Affairs). This means a government agency has
already determined that a household's income is sufficiently low such
that the household is in need of public assistance. Based on that
finding, it is reasonable for us to conclude that household members
require their own income (and resources) to meet their own needs.
Finally, regarding the suggestion that we explore whether to adopt
the any other definition through an ANPRM, we used the NPRM to explore
this option. In the NPRM, we discussed the possible policy change,
examined evidence that supported the change, invited public comment
specifically on the proposed change, and included an estimate and cost
analysis from our Office of the Chief Actuary (OCACT) over the fiscal
years 2024 to 2033. The OCACT estimate projected SSI payments, and
estimated changes for both recipients and new individuals who will be
eligible under the revised any other definition that would not have
been eligible under our previous rules.
Comment: Some commenters encouraged us to go beyond the any other
proposal and change the definition of a PA household to refer simply to
any member, including the SSI applicants or recipients themselves.
Response: Under the commenters' alternative proposal, every SSI
recipient would live in a PA household and, thus, would be considered
not to be receiving ISM from other members of the household (i.e.,
inside ISM). We do not think that result would be supportable because
it would mean that we would never apply the one-third reduction (VTR)
rule,\51\ which is based on a provision in the Social Security Act.\52\
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\51\ See 20 CFR 416.1131; POMS SI 00835.200.
\52\ See 42 U.S.C. 1382a(a)(2)(A).
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Comment: Many commenters encouraged us to expand the definition of
PA household to include additional programs, whether in this final rule
or in a future rulemaking, including: Medicaid; LIHEAP and similar
energy assistance programs; housing assistance from the Department of
Housing and Urban Development (HUD); WIC; CHIP; and the earned income
tax credit (EITC).
Response: As we discussed in the NPRM,\53\ this is our first
expansion of the definition of a PA household since 1980, when the
policy was first established. Therefore, we decided to add SNAP
initially and will consider other programs in the future; our
[[Page 28613]]
choosing not to do so now does not preclude adding other programs via
future rulemaking. As discussed in our NPRM, SNAP recipients have been
determined to be low-income and, therefore, need their income (and
resources) to take care of their own needs, which is consistent with
the rationale underlying our policy when it was first established.\54\
The other programs cited by the commenter do not align as easily with
the criteria we used. For example, while the benefits of the EITC are
concentrated among low-income households, some moderate-income
taxpayers are eligible for a small credit, including taxpayers with
three or more children earning up to $63,398 and with up to $11,000 in
investment income (in 2023). This demonstrates that the EITC does not
align with the underlying intent of our initially established PA
household policy to the extent that SNAP does.
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\53\ 88 FR 67152-67153.
\54\ 88 FR 67152.
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In addition, SNAP has several advantages over other programs that
we considered that make it the best fit for this first expansion of our
PA household definition. First, SNAP eligibility and receipt have
relatively low State variability because SNAP is a nationwide program
with relatively uniform eligibility standards. In general, net monthly
income limits for SNAP eligibility are set at 100 percent of the
poverty level.\55\ In contrast, Medicaid, for example, has varying
income limits based on an individual's State of residence.\56\
Likewise, the upper eligibility levels for CHIP vary by State and range
widely,\57\ as do the types of CHIP programs and groups covered by
States. In contrast, the relative uniformity in SNAP eligibility
requirements makes this initial expansion of our PA household policy
more consistent and supportable.
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\55\ See ``What are the SNAP income limits?'' available at
https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/recipient/eligibility. Note that
Alaska and Hawaii have separate, higher income eligibility standards
for the SNAP program.
\56\ https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/national-medicaid-chip-program-information/medicaid-childrens-health-insurance-program-basic-health-program-eligibility-levels/
\57\ Id.
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Second, SNAP benefits are typically certified for relatively longer
periods than other government benefit programs. For example, many SNAP
participants are certified for 12 months, and older individuals and
individuals with disabilities may be certified for up to 24 or 36
months. In contrast, other programs with shorter or less predictable
benefit periods might require more frequent development of individuals'
living arrangements, which could be burdensome for recipients and our
staff. For example, LIHEAP benefits, which help low-income households
pay for heating or cooling, are typically seasonal, meaning that
eligibility can vary within a 12-month period.
Moreover, SNAP does not have a cap on enrollment, meaning those who
qualify or meet eligibility requirements receive benefits. This ensures
that we can include the entire SNAP-eligible population when we
determine what households qualify as PA households. In contrast,
programs like WIC, LIHEAP, and HUD housing are capped based on the
availability of resources, which means there are waiting lists for
those who are financially eligible and priority levels to receive
benefits.\58\ As we strive for uniformity across the SSI program, we
are concerned that including government benefit programs with
enrollment caps or waiting lists may lead to disparate treatment of
similarly situated SSI applicants and recipients.
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\58\ Dorn, Stan, et al. (2013). Overlapping Eligibility and
Enrollment: Human Services and Health Programs Under the Affordable
Care Act. The Urban Institute. https://aspe.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/private/pdf/76961/rpt_integrationproject.pdf.
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Finally, we note that SNAP participation overlaps to a great extent
with participation in other means-tested programs and, thus, by adding
SNAP to the definition of PA household, we anticipate that we will also
capture many of the individuals who receive benefits from other means-
tested programs. We would like to observe how adding SNAP to the PA
household definition affects the SSI population before we determine
whether to add additional programs, and if so, which programs.
Despite the considerations cited above, we are not precluding
adding other programs to the list of PIM payments in our PA Household
definition. As well, changes to the programs discussed here might also
cause us to reconsider them for inclusion on the list. Expanding the
definition of PA household to include additional programs would require
further, program-specific consideration.
Use of Data Sharing To Implement New Policy
Comment: One commenter encouraged us to proactively recalculate
benefits for existing recipients based on this new rule, rather than
waiting until the recipients' next scheduled redetermination. The
commenter wanted us to do this to ensure recipients received the
benefit of the new policy as soon as possible. The commenter also
stated that this process of proactive recalculation could be simplified
by utilizing data we already receive through existing data matches. The
commenter further stated that ``SSA should conduct Limited Issue
reviews of all VTR and ISM records in order to comply with the new
rules, as well as of all claims denied in the previous twelve months to
identify erroneously denied applicants.''
Similarly, many commenters, in their support for finalizing the
proposed rule, encouraged us to expand or implement data sharing
agreements with State SNAP administrators across the country. They
advocated that expanded data sharing with SNAP administrators would be
an improvement over using redeterminations to identify and correct
``over-reduction'' of payment and ineligibility decisions.
Response: We acknowledge and share the commenter's desire to ensure
existing recipients receive the benefit of the new PA household policy
as soon as possible. However, due to limited resources it is not
administratively feasible to conduct Limited Issue reviews of all the
VTR and ISM records. Further, this final rule does not apply to any
claims denied before its effective date.
Expanding or implementing data sharing agreements with States
across the country would involve several important considerations that
are outside the scope of this rulemaking, including the interest,
capacity, and requirements of the States. We have an established
process for data exchanges that we follow to implement any data
exchange, including establishing the agreements. We currently have 174
data sharing agreements with States/State agencies under which we
provide data for the State/State agency to determine entitlement and
eligibility for federally funded benefit programs, including Medicaid,
SNAP, and TANF.
Income From Family or Friends
Comment: One commenter expressed concern that our regulations that
deem income create a disincentive for SSI recipients to get married,
and implied tension or conflict with the Supreme Court's holding in
Obergefell v. Hodges,\59\ which holds that same-sex couples may not be
deprived of the fundamental right to marry.
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\59\ 576 U.S. 644 (2015).
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Response: In general, deeming from a spouse is required by the
Social Security Act.\60\ In the context of this rulemaking, as we
explained in the NPRM, adding SNAP to our list of PIM programs will
``decrease the amount of
[[Page 28614]]
income we [will] deem to SSI applicants and recipients because we
[will] no longer deem income from ineligible spouses . . . who receive
SNAP benefits and live in the same household.'' There is no tension or
conflict between spouse-to-spouse deeming and the Supreme Court's
holding in Obergefell: spouse-to-spouse deeming applies equally to
opposite-sex couples and same-sex couples.
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\60\ 42 U.S.C. 1382c(f)(1).
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Comment: Several commenters made a broad suggestion to entirely
eliminate ISM because counting ISM discourages friends and family from
providing assistance to disabled loved ones, while one commenter
acknowledged that a statutory change would be required to eliminate
ISM.
Response: We acknowledge the commenters' desired policy change, but
as the one commenter stated, entirely removing ISM from our income
calculations would require a statutory change.\61\
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\61\ See 42 U.S.C. 1382a(a)(2)(A).
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Opposition to the Rule
Comment: One commenter opposed the proposed rulemaking because the
NPRM did not extensively discuss the distinctions in the definitions of
household composition for SSI and SNAP.
Response: This rulemaking does not change the definition of a
household for SSI purposes \62\ or for SNAP purposes.\63\ The commenter
did not explain how the distinctions in the household composition
definitions are relevant to our addition of SNAP, and we do not believe
that the distinctions preclude us from adding SNAP to our regulatory
list.
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\62\ SSA--POMS: SI 00835.020--Definitions of Terms Used in
Living Arrangements (LA) and In-Kind Support and Maintenance (ISM)
Instructions--8/2023. https://secure.ssa.gov/apps10/poms.nsf/lnx/0500835020.
\63\ See ``Who is in a SNAP household?'' at SNAP Eligibility
[verbar] Food and Nutrition Service (usda.gov). https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/recipient/eligibility.
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Comment: One commenter asserted that because a federal food-stamp
program existed in 1980, when the PA household policy was first
created, the relative increase in SNAP participation since that time
does not sufficiently justify the change to include SNAP in the list of
PIM programs in our definition of a PA household. The commenter further
noted that ``the large increase in SNAP users and concurrent decline in
the poverty rate since 1980 . . . is not a relevant indication of
increased need.''
Response: When we first established the PA household policy in
1980, we explained that it was based on the idea that if the other
individuals in the household were receiving a PIM payment, they needed
their income (and resources) to meet their own needs. This meant they
could not support the SSI applicant or recipient because they had no
extra income (or resources) to share. The determination of need, made
by the applicable Federal or State agency providing the PIM payments,
supported the assumption that the others in the household could not
provide ISM to the SSI applicant or recipient. The fluctuations in the
overall poverty rate in the United States are not directly relevant to
whether the household members are able to provide ISM to the SSI
applicant or recipient. As we discussed in the NPRM, when the PA
household policy was first created in 1980, the list of PIM programs in
our definition of a PA household reflected the most widely used means-
tested public benefit programs at that time.\64\ The nationwide food-
stamp program began in 1974--just six years before the establishment of
the PA household policy--and had approximately 21.1 million
participants in 1980.\65\ In contrast, approximately 42.1 million
people receive SNAP benefits today,\66\ making SNAP now one of the most
widely used public benefit programs. As we discussed in the NPRM, we
have not updated our list of PIM programs for the PA household policy
since 1980, despite the significant shifts in the landscape of public
assistance programs since that time. SNAP recipients have been
determined to be low-income and, therefore, need their income (and
resources) to meet their own needs.\67\ Indeed, a USDA report from 2019
showed that approximately 80 percent of all SNAP households had gross
monthly income that was less than or equal to the Federal poverty
level.\68\
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\64\ See 88 FR 67151-52.
\65\ See Congressional Budget Office, ``The Food Stamp Program:
Eligibility and Participation,'' Nov. 1988, p. 2, available at
https://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/100th-congress-1987-1988/reports/88-cbo-0010.pdf.
\66\ See USDA Food and Nutrition Service (FNS), SNAP Data
Tables, ``FY19 through FY23 National View Summary,'' Sept. 2023,
available at https://www.fns.usda.gov/pd/supplemental-nutrition-assistance-program-snap.
\67\ See 88 FR 67152.
\68\ See USDA, ``Characteristics of Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program Households: Fiscal Year 2019,'' March 2021,
Report No. SNAP-20-CHAR, available at: https://fns-prod.azureedge.us/sites/default/files/resource-files/Characteristics2019.pdf.
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Comment: One commenter opposed adding other programs, such as ``in-
kind assistance programs like food and medical care,'' that are not
cash assistance programs, to the programs listed in our definition of a
PA household. Further, the commenter asserted that we had taken an
inconsistent stance by calling our treatment of food ``insignificant''
in a different rulemaking \69\ but ``including SNAP . . . as
significant'' in this PA household rulemaking.
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\69\ The commenter appears to be referring to the NPRM the
agency published on ``Omitting Food from In-Kind Support and
Maintenance.'' See 88 FR 9779 (Feb. 15, 2023).
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Response: Regarding the commenter's statement that we should not
add in-kind assistance programs like food and medical care to our PA
household definition, we have determined that means-tested programs
largely have shifted over the last several decades from cash assistance
programs toward voucher-based or in-kind support programs. Because of
this shift over time, we have a reduced ability to effectively identify
the individuals we intended to serve under our PA household definition.
As we noted in the NPRM, SNAP benefits meet our definition of
income in 20 CFR 416.1102.\70\ The commenter's reference to our NPRM on
Omitting Food from In-Kind Support and Maintenance is generally outside
the scope of this rulemaking. However, we note that, contrary to the
commenter's assertion, we have not described food assistance as
``insignificant,'' nor is food assistance treated inconsistently under
the two rules. Here, we are adding SNAP benefits to the list of PIM
programs under the PA household policy. This change means that if the
household has both an SSI applicant or recipient, and at least one
other household member who receives SNAP benefits (or other PIM
payments listed in the PA household definition), we will not develop
inside ISM because we consider that the household is sufficiently low
income such that the members need all of their income (and resources)
to meet their own needs--they are not able to share with or provide ISM
to the SSI applicant or recipient. In contrast, under the final rule
Omitting Food from In-Kind Support and Maintenance, we removed food
from our calculations of ISM. More importantly, it is less accurate to
compare potentially partial, inconsistent food assistance that an
individual receives from family or friends with something like SNAP, a
Federal benefit one can only qualify for after demonstrating they do
not have enough income or resources to fulfill their own basic
nutrition needs.
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\70\ See 88 FR 67151.
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Comment: One commenter described the NPRM as incomplete because
there was ``no federalism, no distributional
[[Page 28615]]
analysis, no alternatives considered[.]'' The commenter also desired
estimates of costs from Medicaid, and other programs using an SSI
Financial Eligibility Model (FEM). The same commenter asserted that
data from the Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) was
better for this rulemaking than the Current Population Survey (CPS)
data used in our proposed rule. The commenter asserted that CPS data
undercounts income and suggested our estimates might be incorrect.
Response: Regarding federalism, section 1(a) of E.O. 13132 defines
``policies that have federalism implications'' as ``refer[ring] to
regulations, legislative comments or proposed legislation, and other
policy statements or actions that have substantial direct effects on
the States, on the relationship between the national government and the
States, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government.'' \71\ As stated in the NPRM and this
final rule, we analyzed the rule in accordance with the principles and
criteria established by E.O. 13132 and determined that the rule will
not have sufficient federalism implications to warrant the preparation
of a federalism assessment. As also stated in the NPRM and this final
rule, we also determined that the rule will not preempt any State law
or State regulation or affect States' abilities to discharge
traditional State governmental functions. We maintain that those
determinations are accurate, and the commenter did not give any reason
to believe they are not.
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\71\ See https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-1999-08-10/html/99-20729.htm.
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As a matter of protocol, the estimates prepared by SSA's Office of
the Chief Actuary (OCACT) focus on the impact on SSA. The commenter is
incorrect in stating regarding the NPRM that ``no alternatives [were]
considered[.]'' For example, the reasons that we provided in support of
the proposal, particularly in the ``Rationale for the Proposed Policy''
section of the NPRM, demonstrate that we considered the proposal
against the alternative of making no change.\72\ Also, as we stated in
the ``Proposed Policy'' section of the NPRM, ``[d]uring the development
of [the NPRM], we considered other means-tested programs, including
Medicaid, the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP), the
Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children
(WIC), the Housing Choice Voucher Program, Project Based Rental
Assistance, and Public Housing, which we discuss[ed] in the `Rationale
for the Proposed Policy' section'' of the NPRM.\73\
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\72\ See 88 FR 67148, 67151-52 (Sept. 29, 2023).
\73\ Id. at 67150-51 (footnotes omitted).
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With regard to the commenter's assertion that SIPP data was better
for this rulemaking than CPS data, in our development of the estimated
Federal SSI program cost effects, we did not use the income fields from
the CPS to estimate the effects of this proposal. The CPS was only used
for the purpose of determining how many SSI households were also
receiving SNAP and would thus be impacted by implementation of the
proposal. Regarding the research cited in the NPRM that used the CPS,
the CPS Annual Social and Economic Supplement (CPS ASEC) is the source
of official poverty measures, and we consider it sufficiently reliable
for other government estimates. A chief advantage of the CPS ASEC over
the SIPP (used by the FEM) is larger sample size. Because PA households
represent a small fraction of the SSI caseload, we rely on the larger
data source to make more precise estimates. Even the CPS ASEC does not
include enough cases to support the additional detailed analyses that
the commenter would like to see.
Comment: Two commenters stated that the NPRM should comply with the
Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023, known as the Administrative Pay-As-
You-Go Act of 2023.\74\
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\74\ Public Law 118-5, div. B, title III.
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Response: This rule complies with the Administrative Pay-As-You-Go
Act of 2023. That Act does not impose requirements at the NPRM stage.
Additionally, this final rule is not subject to the Act's requirements
because it is not estimated to increase direct spending by at least
$100 million for FY 2024 (the first fiscal year during the 10-year
period). See section 266 of the Act.
Comment: One commenter opposed the proposed rule based on the
administrative implementation cost of $105 million because, in the
commenter's view, it conflicts with our anticipated administrative
burden reduction from simplified calculations. The commenter also
stated that there will be more redeterminations and more applications
because of the new policy.
Response: To clarify, administrative costs to implement a new
regulation (stemming from a variety of sources, such as new systems)
are distinct from non-financial administrative burden sources such as
time, ease, and efficiency. Administrative costs and non-financial
burdens, then, will not necessarily move in the same direction. As
explained in the NPRM, we anticipate this policy change will result in
administrative costs that will be only partially offset by
administrative savings. At the same time, we expect processing time
savings because employees will spend less time developing household
expenses and making inside ISM determinations. Nonetheless, as the
comment suggests, we estimated that there will be costs to process
additional claims, reconsiderations, and appeals. As we stated in the
NPRM, we anticipate that this expansion of our PA household policy will
increase the amount of monthly SSI benefits for those to whom the
policy applies and make more individuals eligible for SSI benefits.
Consequently, we anticipate that there will be additional costs to
process redeterminations and post-eligibility actions associated with
this rule change.
In summary, we acknowledge what the commenter is expressing, and we
provided revised estimate text in the preamble to clarify that the
administrative burden would be reduced in a subset of cases, which
would only partially offset the greater amount of costs from newly
eligible recipients. However, as further discussed in the preamble and
in the Regulatory Impact Analysis, we have determined that the benefits
of the rule justify the costs, and that the rule can have
administrative benefits even while it imposes administrative costs.
Comment: One commenter asserted that using SNAP to confirm SSI
eligibility will result in overpayments in multiple programs, thereby
increasing financial burdens on beneficiaries to repay the funds. The
commenter stated that ``SNAP income and asset testing has changed
dramatically with the creation and expansion of Broad-Based Categorical
Eligibility (BBCE). This has contributed to a massive increase in SNAP
participation rolls and a greater reliance on recipient self-
attestation--the number one contributor to program overpayments.'' The
commenter also asserted that our proposed rule ``will increase the
participation in SSI, not decrease as imagined in [the] NPRM.''
Response: Under this final rule, receipt of SNAP is not dispositive
of the applicant's or recipient's SSI eligibility. It is true that
under this final rule, receipt of SNAP by one or more household members
(other than the SSI applicant or recipient) may factor into our
determination of whether the SSI applicant or recipient lives in a PA
household, but this is advantageous to the individual applying for or
receiving SSI. If the SSI applicant or recipient lives in a PA
household, that means
[[Page 28616]]
only that we consider the SSI applicant or recipient not to be
receiving ISM from members of the household--not necessarily that the
SSI applicant or recipient is eligible for SSI.
We carefully considered the commenter's reservations about SNAP.
However, we continue to maintain that adding SNAP is consistent with
the rationales and purposes of our PA household policy, as discussed in
the NPRM and in this final rule. We would add, first, that we find it
reasonable and supportable to consider a needs-based eligibility
determination by a government entity, on a matter within its
competence, as reliable. Second, an overpayment determination for a
given type of benefit does not necessarily mean that the applicant or
recipient was not entitled or eligible to receive any such benefits for
the period at issue; and our PA household policy looks at receipt of a
PIM payment generally, not the amount of the PIM payment. Third, if we
determined, in light of another government entity's overpayment
determination, that a household member did not receive a PIM payment,
we could and would make a correction, as appropriate and subject to all
our usual rules, including administrative finality.\75\ Fourth, BBCE
``is a policy in which households may become categorically eligible for
SNAP because they qualify for a non-cash Temporary Assistance for Needy
Families (TANF) or state maintenance of effort (MOE) funded benefit.''
\76\ BBCE is consistent with our longstanding list of PIM programs,
which includes both TANF and State or local government assistance
programs based on need.\77\
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\75\ See 20 CFR 416.1488.
\76\ https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/broad-based-categorical-eligibility.
\77\ See 20 CFR 416.1142(a)(1), (6).
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Lastly, contrary to the commenter's statement, our proposed rule
did not indicate that we anticipated a decrease in SSI participation.
In the NPRM, we stated that there would be a ``decrease [in] the number
of SSI applicants and recipients charged with in-kind support and
maintenance (ISM)'' and a ``decrease [in] the amount of income we would
deem to SSI applicants or recipients because we would no longer deem
income from ineligible spouses and parents who receive SNAP benefits
and live in the same household.'' \78\
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\78\ 88 FR 67148, 67148.
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Comment: One commenter suggested reducing administrative burden
when we determine eligibility by conducting mandatory verifications of
all income and assets in SSI applications, because self-attestation
creates ``an environment favorable to first and third-party fraud[.]''
The commenter stated that ``the `pay and chase' implications in
overpayment recoveries infers an administrative burden upon state and
local welfare agencies.''
Response: Verification of ``all income and assets in SSI
applications'' is outside the scope of this rulemaking. However, we
note that in administering the SSI program, we carefully ensure that
our policies and procedures are consistent with the requirement in the
Social Security Act: ``that eligibility for [SSI] benefits . . . will
not be determined solely on the basis of declarations by the applicant
concerning eligibility factors or other relevant facts, and 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 provided only to eligible individuals (or
eligible spouses) and that the amounts of such benefits are correct.''
\79\
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\79\ 42 U.S.C. 1383(e)(1)(B)(i).
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Regarding our PA household policy, we do not rely on self-
attestation alone. For initial claims, we ``substantiate receipt of PA
payments'' (or PIM payments) with ``evidence . . . [in] the form of an
award letter, report of contact with the paying agency, etc.''; and, in
post-eligibility situations, we appropriately document or substantiate
PIM payments depending on indications of a changed living
arrangement.\80\ Lastly, after over 40 years of applying our PA
household policy, we are aware of no evidence that the policy as such
leads to overpayments or that overpayments occur with respect to PA
household determinations more than other comparable determinations.
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\80\ POMS SI 00835.130E.
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Miscellaneous Comments
Comment: One commenter asserted the proposed rule would not benefit
the quality of life of all U.S. citizens and that ``[t]here is no
defined option to revert changes if [the rulemaking] proves to be
incorrect.''
Response: Under the Social Security Act, we have broad authority to
make and revise rules and regulations, consistent with the Act, that
are necessary or appropriate for the administration of our programs,
including the SSI program.\81\ Adding SNAP to the list of PIM programs
in our definition of a PA household and adopting the any other
definition are proper exercises of the Commissioner's rulemaking
authority under the Act, and these changes are appropriate and
justified. For the reasons articulated in the NPRM and this final rule,
we believe these changes will help us administer the SSI program and
provide better support to individuals with limited income and
resources. Administering the SSI program as we have been charged to do
benefits the public more broadly and the common good.
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\81\ See 42 U.S.C. 405(a), 902(a)(5), 1383(d)(1), 1383b(a).
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Comment: One commenter opposed the proposed rule in light of
inflation, which ``is presenting challenges for low/no income
individuals with their SSI payment and SNAP benefits taken together.
Any cuts to their SSI payment at this time will place such individuals
at a disadvantage in paying their bills and living with dignity in
their households.'' The commenter also suggested that we tax ``the
super-rich'' and ``[s]top illegal immigrants at the border and stop
them from exploiting the benefits budgeted for legal residents with
genuine needs.''
Response: This rulemaking will not result in cuts to SSI payments.
We anticipate that the expansion of our PA household policy will
increase SSI payments for those to whom the policy applies. Taxation
and border control are outside our administrative authority and outside
the scope of this rulemaking. Immigration status may be relevant for
SSI purposes, but changes to national immigration policy are outside
the scope of this rulemaking.
Regulatory Procedures
E.O. 12866, as Amended by E.O. 14094
We consulted with the OMB, and OMB determined that this final rule
meets the criteria for a significant regulatory action under section
(3)(f)(1) of E.O. 12866, as amended by E.O. 14094, and is subject to
OMB review.
Anticipated Transfers to Our Program
The primary anticipated impact of this rule is an increase in
monetary transfers from the government to SSI recipients. Our Office of
the Chief Actuary (OCACT) estimates that implementation of this rule
would result in a total increase in Federal SSI payments of $15 billion
over fiscal years 2024 through 2033, assuming implementation of this
rule beginning on September 30, 2024. When the effects of implementing
this rule are fully realized, the annual increase in Federal SSI
payments is estimated to be about two percent relative to what would
have occurred under previous rules. To estimate the impact, OCACT used
the Annual and Social Economic Supplement (ASEC) to the Current
[[Page 28617]]
Population Survey (CPS) and our administrative data. We expect that
adding SNAP to the list of PIM programs and changing to the any other
definition of a PA household will increase the number of PA households
for which we do not charge inside ISM, which will increase Federal SSI
payments for these recipients. In addition, we expect that no longer
deeming income from ineligible spouses and parents whose income is used
to determine eligibility for or amount of SNAP payments will also
increase Federal SSI payments. We expect that implementation of this
final rule will also cause some individuals to receive Federal SSI
payments who would not have been eligible under the previous rules.
According to our Office of the Chief Information Officer, Office of
Benefit Information Systems, as of January 2023, there were 303,609 SSI
recipients living in a PA household according to the previous
definition, approximately four percent of our total 7.5 million SSI
recipients.\82\ We expect the share of SSI recipients living in a PA
household, as defined under this rule, to increase substantially when
this final rule is implemented. Specifically, OCACT estimates that once
this rule is implemented and the effects have stabilized, in fiscal
year 2033 roughly 277,000 Federal SSI recipients (4 percent of all SSI
recipients) will have an increase in monthly payments compared to
current rules, and an additional 109,000 individuals (1 percent
increase) will receive Federal SSI payments who would not have been
eligible under current rules.
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\82\ Annual Statistical Supplement, 2023--Summary of SSI.
Available at: https://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/statcomps/supplement/2023/7a.html.
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Additionally, the expansions of our PA household definition could
result in a reduction of SNAP benefits due to potential interaction
between SSI and SNAP. For example, if an ineligible spouse or parent
were receiving SNAP, we would no longer deem their income to an SSI
applicant or recipient. Not deeming income for SSI purposes could lead
to an increase in the SSI payment, which could in turn cause the
household to receive a SNAP reduction that is 30 percent of the SSI
increase, up to the point of ineligibility.\83\ The household's
ineligibility for SNAP could mean, in turn, that the SSI recipient is
no longer part of a PA household for SSI purposes. Our understanding is
that: an individual or household generally would prefer cash to SNAP
benefits; an increase in SSI could not result in a decrease in SNAP
benefits greater than the increase in SSI; and, in the main, the
increase in SSI that may result from the expansions of our definition
of a PA household will be favorable on net to individuals and
households. However, we recognize that the interplay among various
benefit types, as well as the relationships and financial interests of
the SSI individual and other household members, can be complicated. We
cannot necessarily predict how the change could affect individuals
participating in other programs within these households.
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\83\ Because SNAP households are expected to spend about 30
percent of their own resources on food, the maximum monthly
allotment is calculated by multiplying a household's net monthly
income by 0.3 and subtracting the result from the maximum monthly
allotment for the household size. See ``How much could I receive in
SNAP benefits?'' at https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/recipient/eligibility.
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Anticipated Net Administrative Cost to the Social Security
Administration
The Office of Budget, Finance, and Management estimates that this
proposal will result in a total net administrative cost of $83 million
for the 10-year period from FY 2024 to FY 2033. This estimate includes
costs to update our systems, to send notices to inform current
recipients of the policy changes, to address inquiries from the
notices, to verify receipt of SNAP benefits, and to perform additional
post-eligibility actions to account for changes in living arrangements.
Under this final rule, more individuals will be newly eligible for SSI
benefits than under the current rule, resulting in additional costs to
process additional claims, reconsiderations, appeals, redeterminations,
and post-eligibility actions. In addition to the costs, our estimate
also includes processing time savings as field office employees will
not have to spend time developing for household expenses/contributions
or the full income of deemors (ineligible parents and spouses) or go
through the inside ISM determination process during initial claims,
pre-effectuation reviews, redeterminations, and post-eligibility
actions. While our estimate includes savings due to the reduction in
processing times for affected cases, we expect that the costs to
process new claims, reconsiderations, and appeals for additional newly
eligible individuals will outweigh the savings.
Anticipated Qualitative Costs & Benefits
We anticipate qualitative benefits from the revision of adding SNAP
to the PA household definition, thereby ensuring that ISM and income
deeming do not undermine the economic security of households who
receive nutrition assistance.
Additionally, the revision will reduce administrative burdens for
SSI applicants or recipients. Under our finalized policy, the list of
PIM programs includes SNAP, and the definition of PA household has
changed to refer to a household which has both the SSI applicant or
recipient, and at least one other household member who receives a PIM
payment. Once we identify that an SSI applicant or recipient lives in a
PA household, the applicant or recipient would not have to provide
household expenses information.
Our change from every member to any other member receiving a PIM
payment to meet the definition of a PA household further simplifies the
development of living arrangements and ISM, reduces SSA's
administrative costs and compliance costs during initial determinations
and redeterminations for applicants and recipients living in PA
households, and reduces ISM complexities that lead to payment errors.
Removing the requirement that every member be in receipt of a PIM
payment will help ensure that we reach more SSI applicants and
recipients based on their need, especially in cases where one
individual in a household was categorically ineligible for a PIM
payment for reasons unrelated to their potential need. For example, the
change to any other will save time for individuals, household members,
and us, since we will no longer have to develop for the entire
household once we identify one other person in the household receiving
a PIM payment. We acknowledge that if the individual receiving the PIM
payment leaves the household we would subsequently inquire if there is
another household member also receiving a PIM payment, and this would
impose a small administrative burden. However, this burden is not
meaningfully different from those caused by other changes in
circumstances that would lead us to verify whether the SSI recipient
remains eligible for SSI benefits. We anticipate this final rule will
still reduce administrative burden overall.
We also anticipate some qualitative costs. Specifically, because of
our new definition of a ``public assistance household,'' the SSI
applicant or recipient will now need to answer new questions and
provide documentation about the public assistance they and others in
their household receive, so we can accurately determine if they live in
a ``public assistance household.'' As well, since SNAP is being added
to the list of programs considered for PA household determinations,
processing times may temporarily increase as we
[[Page 28618]]
verify receipt of SNAP benefits. This additional information is a
qualitative cost of the regulation, although ultimately, providing the
information may be beneficial to the SSI applicant or recipient.
Additionally, the rule change may impose quantitative costs on us
due to our increased need for additional development in certain
circumstances. For instance, it is possible our regulatory change may
incentivize current SSI recipients to change living arrangements to co-
locate with family or friends who are receiving SNAP. This is similar
to our current policy that requires SSI applicants and recipients to
notify us of changes in their living arrangements. SSI applicants and
recipients will need to ask ineligible spouses or parents whether their
income was used to determine eligibility for, or the amount of, the
SNAP benefits. If it was, and if this information is verified by SSA
during the initial claim, we would exclude the income for deeming
purposes in the SSI program.\84\
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\84\ See POMS SI 01320.141.
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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 rule in accordance with the principles and
criteria established by E.O. 13132 and determined that the rule will
not have sufficient federalism implications to warrant the preparation
of a federalism assessment. We also determined that this 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 rule will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities because it affects
individuals only. Therefore, a regulatory flexibility analysis is not
required under the Regulatory Flexibility Act, as amended.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The final rule requires minor revisions to our existing information
collections to expand our definition of PA Household and include SNAP
as an example of a PIM program. In addition, the application of the
revisions to these rules causes a burden change to our currently
approved information collections under the following information
collection requests: 0960 0174, the SSA-8006, Statement of Living
Arrangements, In Kind Support and Maintenance; 0960-0456, the SSA-8011,
Statement of Household Expense and Contributions; and 0960-0529, the
SSA-5062, Claimant Statement about Loan of Food or Shelter, and the SSA
L5063-F3, Statement about Food or Shelter Provided to Another. We also
anticipate a small burden reduction per response for the SSA 8006
(0960-0174) as respondents will not need to develop the responses about
their household. In addition, we anticipate a 50% reduction in the
number of respondents based on those who indicate they are part of a
Public Assistance Household and who may not need to complete the
follow-up forms SSA-5062, SSA L5063, SSA-8006, and SSA 8011. We
anticipate this will result in a reduction in the overall burden for
these information collections.
We published a notice of proposed rulemaking on September 29, 2023,
at 88 FR 67148. In that notice, we solicited comments under the PRA on
the burden estimate; 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. The
comments section above includes our responses to the PRA-related public
comments we received under the NPRM.
The following chart shows the reduction in time burden information
associated with the final rule:
BILLING CODE 4191-02-P
[[Page 28619]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TN19AP24.106
[[Page 28620]]
The following chart shows the reduction in theoretical cost burdens
associated with the final rule:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TN19AP24.107
[[Page 28621]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TN19AP24.108
[[Page 28622]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TN19AP24.109
As we have revised the associated burdens for the above-mentioned
forms since we made revisions to the final rule which were not included
at the NPRM stage, we are currently soliciting comment on the burden
for the forms as shown in the charts above. If you would like to submit
comments, please send them to the following locations:
BILLING CODE 4191-02-C
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 May 20, 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 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 stated in the preamble, we amend 20 CFR chapter
III, part 416, as follows:
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: 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. Amend Sec. 416.1142 by revising paragraphs (a) introductory text,
(a)(6) and (7) and adding paragraph (a)(8) to read as follows:
Sec. 416.1142 If you live in a public assistance household.
(a) Definition. For purposes of our programs, a public assistance
household is one that has both an SSI applicant or recipient, and at
least one other household member who receives one or more of the listed
public income maintenance payments. These are payments made under--
* * * * *
(6) State or local government assistance programs based on need
(tax credits or refunds are not assistance based on need);
(7) U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs programs (those payments
based on need); and
(8) The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP).
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2024-08364 Filed 4-18-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4191-02-P