Current through Register Vol. 50, No. 9, September 20, 2024
A. Income is any
gain or benefit to a household that has monetary value and is not considered a
resource. Count all income in determining pretest eligibility except income
from:
1. adoption assistance;
2. earned income of a child who is in school
and working toward a high school diploma, GED, or special education
certificate;
3. disaster
payments;
4. Domestic Volunteer
Service Act;
5. Earned Income
Credits (EIC);
6. education
assistance;
7. energy
assistance;
8. foster care
payments;
9. monetary gifts up to
$30 per calendar quarter;
10. Agent
Orange Settlement payments;
11. HUD
payments or subsidies other than those paid as wages or stipends under the HUD
Family Investment Centers Program;
12. income in-kind;
13. Indian and Native Claims and
Lands;
14. irregular and
unpredictable sources;
15. lump sum
payments;
16. nutrition
programs;
17. job training income
that is not earned;
18. relocation
assistance;
19. loans;
20. Wartime Relocation of Civilians
Payments;
21. Developmental
Disability Payments;
22. Delta
Service Corps post-service benefits paid to participants upon completion of the
term of service if the benefits are used as intended for higher education,
repayment of a student loan, or for closing costs or down payment on a
home;
23. Americorps VISTA payments
to participants (unless the value of all such payments, adjusted to reflect the
number of hours such volunteers are serving, is equivalent to or greater than
the minimum wage);
24. Radiation
Exposure Compensation Payments;
25.
payment to victims of Nazi persecution;
26. restricted income received for a person
not in the income unit. Restricted income is income which is designated
specifically for a person's use by federal statute or court order and may
include RSDI, VA benefits and court ordered-support payments; or
27. Crime victim compensation program
payments to an applicant/recipient whose assistance is necessary, in full or in
part, because of the commission of a crime against the applicant, and to the
extent it is sufficient to fully compensate the applicant for losses suffered
as a result of the crime;
28.
effective October 1, 2004, additional pay received and made available to the
household by a member of the United States Armed Forces deployed to a
designated combat zone;
29.
effective May 1, 2006, Supplemental Security Income (SSI);
30. effective March 1, 2006, dividend income.
Exception: Dividends received from a resource-exempt trust fund will not be
excluded as income;
31. effective
May 1, 2006, Supplemental Security Income (SSI);
32. any payments other than wages received as
a result of the Mississippi Canyon Well Incident in the Gulf of Mexico on April
20, 2010; or
33. grant funded
research payments.
B.
Pretest
1. In order to meet this requirement,
the gross countable income of the caretaker relative's KCSP income unit must be
less than 150 percent of the federal poverty threshold for the family
size.
2. For purposes of this
pretest, the caretaker's KCSP income unit is defined to include:
a. the child; and
b. the caretaker relative; and
c. anyone residing in the home for whom the
caretaker relative claims financial responsibility.
3. For purposes of this pretest, income is
defined as countable income belonging to any member of the KCSP income unit.
Exception effective May 1, 2006: Income for children receiving foster care and
Supplemental Security Income is not included in the income test.
C. Income after Pretest. The child
is determined eligible for KCSP if the child's monthly countable income is,
effective January 1, 2022, less than $450. If the child's monthly countable
income is, effective January 1, 2022, $450 or more, the child is
ineligible.
D. Payment Amount
1. Effective January 1, 2022, the KCSP basic
assistance payment amount is $450 per month for each eligible child.
2. Within the limits of appropriations, a
KCSP household may also receive a nonrecurrent, short-term (NRST) benefit that
meets the regulatory definition (45 CFR
260.31(b)(1)) to mitigate
the impact of a specific crisis situation broadly affecting needy families or a
specific episode of need affecting a specific family, such as an economic
crisis, disaster, pandemic, etc. The department has flexibility to respond with
a sufficient and appropriate response regarding the duration of payments up to
four months, type of payment (lump-sum or monthly installments), number of NRST
benefits provided for different episodes of crisis or need, payment amount for
each NRST benefit, and any lifetime limits imposed for eligible
families.
AUTHORITY
NOTE: Promulgated in accordance with
42
U.S.C. 601 et seq. and 10602(c), R.S. 36:474,
R.S. 46:231.1.B, R.S. 46:237, and
P.L.
108-447, Act 16, 2005 Reg. Session,
7 CFR
273.2(j).