(2) Minimum
exclusions of Non-liquid Resources - The following types of assets may be
excluded from countable resources under certain conditions:
(a) Motor vehicles. An automobile may be
excluded to the extent that its value does not exceed the amount specified in
20 CFR §
416.1218.
(b) Life Insurance. Life insurance owned by
an individual (and spouse, if any) may be excluded to the extent provided in
20 CFR §
416.1230.
(c) Household Goods and Personal Effects.
Household goods and personal effects are totally excluded from countable
resources.
(d) Burial Funds and
Burial Spaces.
1. Burial Funds. In
determining the resources of an individual (and spouse, if any) there shall be
excluded an amount not in excess of $1500 each of funds designated for burial
arrangements of the individual or individual's spouse and which are to be used
for no other purpose. The applicant/recipient must submit documented evidence
of the specific designation of burial funds. Each person's $1500 exclusion must
be reduced by:
(i) the face value of
insurance policies on the life of an individual owned by the individual or
spouse if the face value is $1500 or less and the cash surrender value of those
policies has been excluded from the countable resource limit and
(ii) amounts in an irrevocable trust (or
other irrevocable arrangement) available to meet the burial expense.
2. Burial spaces. In determining
the resources of an individual, the value of burial spaces for the individual,
the individual's spouse, or any member of the individual's immediate family
will be excluded from resources. The opening and closing of the grave and
headstones are considered as burial space items.
(e) Real Property.
1. Home. If the home is the individual's
principal place of residence, and if the individual's or his representative's
signed statement identifies the reason for being away from home and the intent
to return to the home, it will be excluded as a resource. If an eligible or
ineligible spouse resides in what was the individual's principal place of
residence prior to institutionalization, it will be excluded as long as the
spouse continues to live there. Individuals whose equity interest in the home
exceed the Home Equity Limit published annually by U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services (HHS) are ineligible for Medicaid long-term care services
unless the individual's spouse, child under 21, or child who is blind or
permanently and totally disabled resides in the home.
2. The home may be excluded if a
dependent relative is living in the home. (For this
purpose a relative is defined as: son, daughter, stepson, stepdaughter,
in-laws, mother, father, stepmother, stepfather, grandmother, grandfather,
grandson, granddaughter, aunt, uncle, sister, brother, stepsister, stepbrother,
half-sister, half-brother, niece, nephew, cousin.) Dependency may be of any
kind; e.g., financial medical, etc. If a relative, other than a spouse, is
living in the home and is not dependent upon the claimant, he or she is
not a dependent relative, then the home cannot be
excluded on this basis. The dependency must have been immediately prior to the
applicant's admission to the nursing home, and the dependent's situation must
be checked periodically to determine if the dependency continues to
exist.
3. Jointly-Owned Home
Property. Jointly-owned home property will be excluded from resources if the
sale would cause the other owner undue hardship due to the loss of housing.
Undue hardship is defined as when; the property serves as the principal place
of residence for one of the owners; the sale of the property would result in
the loss of that residence; and no other housing would be readily available for
the other owner.
4.
Income-Producing Property. Income-producing property is excluded from resources
when the equity in the property does not exceed $6000 and the property produces
net annual return of at least 6 percent of equity.
(i) Where the value of the property is in
excess of $6000, the amount in excess can be counted toward the resource
limitation as long as the individual remains eligible and the property nets at
least 6 percent of its equity value per annum.
(ii) Where the property is not excluded
because the net annual return is less than 6 percent of the equity value, the
total value is an includable resource.
(iii) Where the home is associated with
self-support activities, the value of the home, contiguous land, and buildings
on the land will be excluded. Total equity in other assets used for producing
income must be $6,000 or less and the activity must produce at least 6 percent
on the equity. Where the equity value of assets for producing income is in
excess of $6,000, the amount in excess will be applied to the resource
limitation. Resources used to produce items only for home consumption or tools
required by employer are assumed to be netting reasonable rate of return.
Property does not have to be utilized if it, in combination with other
resources, does not exceed the liquid resource limit.
5. Bona Fide Effort to Sell Interest in Real
property. Real property may be excluded as long as a bona fide effort is being
made to sell the property. A bona fide effort to sell is defined as an attempt
to sell through listing with a real estate agent or by attempt to sell by the
owner. A period in excess of 7 days during which no attempt is made to sell
voids this exclusion. To qualify for this exclusion, the property must have
been listed for sale as of the first moment of the month that eligibility is
being sought. Applicant must agree to reimburse the Agency for expenses
incurred during the effort to sell and make prompt repayment after sale. Bona
fide effort to sell will be reviewed periodically to verify a continuing
effort.
6. Property that is
specifically designated for a Plan of Self-Support for the Blind or Disabled,
as provided in 20 C.F.R. (Part 416), may be excluded.