Illinois Administrative Code
Title 89 - SOCIAL SERVICES
Part 120 - MEDICAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS
Subpart H - MEDICAL ASSISTANCE - NO GRANT (MANG) ELIGIBILITY FACTORS
Section 120.385 - Factors Affecting Eligibility for Long Term Care Services
Universal Citation: 89 IL Admin Code ยง 120.385
Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024
a) For purposes of this Section, the terms "institutionalized persons" and "long term care services" shall have the meanings described in Section 120.388 of this Part. The terms "institutionalized spouse" and "community spouse" shall have the meanings described in Section 120.379(a) of this Part.
b) Disclosure of Annuity and Naming the State as Remainder Beneficiary.
1) Effective January 1, 2012, an application
(or redetermination related to an application) for long term care services
shall include a disclosure by an institutionalized person or his or her
community spouse of any interest either or both may have in any annuity or
similar financial instrument purchased, regardless of whether the annuity is
irrevocable or is treated as an asset. The application or recertification form
shall also include a statement that the State of Illinois becomes a remainder
beneficiary under such an annuity or similar financial instrument to the extent
that the State has provided medical assistance to the institutionalized
person.
2) Failure of an
institutionalized person, his or her community spouse, or his or her
representative to disclose information or to name the State as a remainder
beneficiary as provided for in subsection (b)(1) of this Section, or to
disclose sufficient information regarding an annuity in order to establish
eligibility for long term care services, shall result in denial or termination
of the eligibility. Failure of an institutionalized person, his or her
community spouse or his or her representative to disclose the information
provided for in subsection (b)(1) of this Section, or to disclose sufficient
information regarding an annuity in order to establish eligibility for medical
assistance, may also result in denial or termination of eligibility for failure
to cooperate under Section
120.308.
c) Home Equity Interest.
1) Effective July 1, 2012, a person shall not
be eligible for long term care services if the person's equity interest in his
or her homestead exceeds the minimum home equity allowed and increased annually
under federal law (
42 USC
1396 p(f)(1)(C)), which, for calendar year
2012, was $525,000. This amount shall be increased, beginning with 2013, from
year to year based on the percentage increase in the Consumer Price Index for
all urban consumers (all items: United States city average), rounded to the
nearest $1000. A person's equity interest in his or her homestead shall be
determined as follows:
A) The current market
value (CMV) of the property is the going price for which it can reasonably be
expected to sell on the open market in the particular geographic area involved.
The CMV of the property may be established by:
i) an appraisal report, no more than six
months old at the time of the application for long term care services,
completed by an appraiser who is licensed or otherwise meets the requirements
under the Real Estate Appraiser Licensing Act [225 ILCS 458 ]; or
ii) a county real estate assessor's current
estimate of the market value or fair cash value of the property used in
determining the assessed value of a property; or
iii) any other reliable and verifiable
indicia of the price that a property would bring in a sale between a willing
buyer and seller under arms-length conditions unaffected by undue
pressures;
B) Equity
value (EV) is the CMV of the property minus any encumbrance on it;
C) An encumbrance is a legally binding debt
against a specific property. Such a debt reduces the value of the encumbered
property but does not necessarily prevent the property owner from transferring
ownership (selling) to a third party. However, if the owner of encumbered
property does sell, the creditor will nearly always require debt satisfaction
from the proceeds of sale. Examples of encumbrances include mortgages, reverse
mortgages, home equity loans or other debt that is secured by the
property;
D) If property is held in
any form of shared ownership (e.g., joint tenancy, tenancy in common or other
similar arrangement) only the fractional interest in the property shall be
considered in determining the person's equity in that property.
2) The eligibility of a person for
long term care services shall not be affected under this subsection (c) if any
of the following are lawfully residing in the person's home:
A) the person's spouse;
B) the person's child who is under age 21;
or
C) the person's adult child who
is blind (as described in Section
120.313 of this Part) or
disabled (as described in Section
120.314 of this
Part).
3) A person whose
eligibility for long term care services is affected under this subsection (c)
may request a hardship waiver. The process and basis for requesting such a
waiver shall be the same as described in Section
120.388(r)
of this Part. In determining whether a waiver should be granted, the Department
shall also take into account:
A) the amount
of time the person has resided in and owned the home;
B) whether a substantial increase in property
values in the home's geographic area occurred after the person purchased the
home;
C) whether the home comprises
a substantial portion of the person's assets (as defined in Section
120.388(d)
); and
D) whether the person
intends to return to the home after a period of institutionalization or, if the
person does not intend to return, whether the home can be sold after being
listed for sale or, if it cannot be sold, can produce income commensurate with
similar income producing properties in the geographic area.
4) For purposes of this Section
the words, "homestead" and "home" have the same meaning as the term "homestead"
in Section
120.381(a)(1)(A)
of this Part.
d) Disclosure of Purchase of Promissory Notes, Loans and Mortgages and Assigning Interest to the State.
1) Effective January 1, 2012, an application
(or redetermination related to an application) for long term care services
shall include a disclosure by an institutionalized person or his or her
community spouse of any purchase of a promissory note, loan or mortgage either
or both may have made. The application or recertification form shall also
include a statement that the instrument shall provide for the assignment to the
State of Illinois, as of the date of death, of up to the total amount of
medical assistance paid on behalf of the institutionalized person.
2) Failure of an institutionalized person,
his or her community spouse, or his or her representative to disclose
information or to assign interest to the State as provided for in subsection
(d)(1) of this Section, or to disclose sufficient information regarding a
promissory note, loan or mortgage in order to establish eligibility for long
term care services, shall result in denial or termination of the eligibility.
Failure of an institutionalized person, his or her community spouse, or his or
her representative to disclose the information provided for in subsection
(d)(1) of this Section, or to disclose sufficient information regarding a
promissory note, loan or mortgage in order to establish eligibility for medical
assistance, may also result in denial or termination of eligibility for failure
to cooperate under Section 120.308.
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