Hawaii Administrative Rules
Title 17 - DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES
Department of Human Services
Chapter 676 - INCOME
Subchapter 7 - FOOD STAMP PROGRAM DEDUCTIONS AND EXPENSES
Section 17-676-72 - Income deductions
Current through August, 2024
Deductions shall be allowed for the following household expenses:
(1) The monthly standard deduction per household which is set by the USDA;
(2) An earned income deduction of twenty per cent of all gross earned income other than income excluded to compensate for taxes, other mandatory deductions from salary, and work expenses;
(3) The payments for the actual costs for the care of a child or other dependent when necessary for a household member to accept or continue employment, attend training or education which is preparatory to employment, or to seek employment in accordance with the job search criteria, or an equivalent effort by those not subject to job search requirements;
(4) That portion of medical expenses in excess of $35 per month, excluding special diets, incurred by any household member who is elderly or disabled as defined in section 17-663-1. Spouses or other persons receiving benefits as a dependent of the SSI or disability and blindness recipient shall not be eligible to receive this deduction. Persons who receive only state supplemental benefits and not federal SSI benefits shall not be eligible for medical or shelter deductions as SSI recipients unless the persons are elderly or disabled as defined in section 17-663-1.
(5) Monthly shelter costs in excess of fifty per cent of the household's income after all the deductions in paragraphs (1) to (4) have been allowed. The shelter deduction shall not exceed the shelter maximum which is established by the USDA unless the household contains a member who is elderly or disabled as defined in section 17-663-1. The households shall receive a limitless shelter deduction for the monthly shelter cost that exceeds fifty per cent of the household's monthly income after all other applicable deductions. Households in which all members are homeless and are not receiving free shelter throughout the calendar month shall be eligible for the homeless standard estimate as a shelter deduction. The standard estimate amount is computed annually effective October of each calendar year and provided by the U. S. Department of Agriculture. All homeless households that incur or reasonably expect to incur shelter costs during a month shall be eligible for the estimate unless higher shelter costs are verified, at which point, the household may use actual shelter costs rather than the estimate. If a homeless household has difficulty in obtaining the verification of its shelter costs, the department shall use prudent judgment in determining if verification obtained is adequate. For example, if a homeless individual claims to have incurred shelter costs for several nights and the costs are comparable to costs incurred by homeless people for shelter, the department shall accept this information as adequate verification and not require further verification. Homeless households that incur no shelter costs during the month shall not be eligible for the standard estimate. Shelter costs shall include only the following:
(6) Legally obligated child support payments, paid by a household member to or for a nonhousehold member, including payments made to a third party on behalf of the nonhousehold member. The department shall allow a deduction for amounts paid toward arrearages. The deduction shall be allowed in the month paid. Alimony payments made to or for a nonhousehold member shall not be included in the child support deduction.