Minnesota Administrative Rules
Agency 192 - Veterans Affairs Department
Chapter 9055 - ADMINISTRATION AND OPERATION
Part 9055.0310 - CALCULATING HOUSEHOLD ASSETS
Universal Citation: MN Rules 9055.0310
Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 13, September 23, 2024
Subpart 1. Definitions.
A. The definitions
in this subpart apply to this part.
B. "Assets" means cash and cash equivalents
and financial instruments and investment vehicles that are convertible to cash
and are owned by or available to an applicant or a recipient or any member of
the applicant's or recipient's household.
C. "Cash and cash equivalents" means coins,
currency, checking accounts, savings accounts, and money market accounts, and
short-term investments that mature in 30 to 90 days.
D. "Financial instrument" means any real or
virtual document that represents a legal agreement involving any kind of
monetary value. Financial instruments are cash or derivative in type and are
either equity, debt, or foreign exchange based.
E. "Household assets" means the combined
value of the included assets of an applicant or a recipient and any member of
an applicant's or a recipient's household.
F. "Investment vehicle" means any financial
product used by investors for the purpose of achieving positive
returns.
Subp. 2. Household assets.
A. The
commissioner must calculate the household assets of an applicant or a recipient
according to this part.
B. Income
received by an applicant or a recipient or a member of an applicant's or a
recipient's household is not considered an asset in the month it is received.
Income carried over into the next month becomes an asset.
C. The commissioner must use household assets
to determine the household's eligibility for benefits from asset-based state
soldiers' assistance program activities.
Subp. 3. Asset inclusion and availability.
A. When calculating
household assets, the commissioner must include the assets of an applicant or a
recipient and any member of an applicant's or a recipient's household, unless
an asset is not available or a specific type of asset is excluded by this
chapter.
B. An asset is available
if the applicant or recipient or the household member can convert the asset to
cash.
C. The commissioner must
exclude an asset if there is a legally enforceable provision in the agreement
between the asset owner and the entity administering the asset that currently
prevents the asset owner from converting any portion of the asset to
cash.
D. The applicant or recipient
must submit documentation to the commissioner from the entity administering the
asset that confirms the asset cannot be converted to cash.
E. Taxes, penalties, and fees assessed when
converting an asset to cash are not barriers to converting an asset to cash but
must be excluded when calculating the value of the asset.
F. Credit available to an applicant or a
recipient or any member of the applicant's or recipient's household through a
secured or unsecured line of credit or a reverse mortgage is not an asset until
funds are distributed and placed in a financial account, financial instrument,
or investment vehicle that is convertible to cash.
Subp. 4. Asset ownership.
A. When calculating household assets, the
commissioner must equally divide the value of an asset that is jointly owned
by:
(1) an applicant or a recipient or any
member of the applicant's or recipient's household; and
(2) a person not eligible for benefits,
unless the asset is a personal checking or savings account or a different
division of asset ownership is confirmed by documentation submitted from the
entity administering the asset.
B. When calculating household assets, the
commissioner must include the full value of a personal checking or savings
account that is jointly owned by:
(1) an
applicant or a recipient or any member of the applicant's or recipient's
household; and
(2) a person not
eligible for benefits, unless documentation submitted from the entity
administering the asset confirms:
(a) the
applicant or recipient or the household member has limited access to the funds
in the account; or
(b) specific
shares of the funds are attributed to the applicant or recipient or the
household member and the person not eligible for benefits.
Subp. 5. Asset limits.
A. When an applicant's or a
recipient's household assets are a determinant of eligibility for a specific
state soldiers' assistance program activity, maximum household asset limits
based on an applicant's or a recipient's household size are provided in the
schedule of maximum monthly allowances for the program activity.
B. A household is not eligible for benefits
from a state soldiers' assistance program that is asset-based if the
household's assets are greater than or equal to its maximum household asset
limit for the program activity.
C.
Transferring household assets for the purpose of attaining program eligibility
is prohibited. The commissioner must include the value of improperly
transferred assets when calculating household assets.
D. A household may reduce its household
assets to attain program eligibility by paying for basic needs if the
household's assets are greater than or equal to its maximum household asset
limit for an asset-based program on the date of application.
Subp. 6. Asset documentation.
A. An applicant or a
recipient must verify household assets with any of the following documents:
(1) statements from the entity administering
an asset that verify the funds available in all financial accounts;
(2) statements from the entity administering
an asset that verify the cash value of all financial instruments or investment
vehicles; or
(3) other
documentation from entity administering an asset that accurately verifies the
value of an asset.
B. An
applicant or a recipient must submit the most current asset documentation to
the commissioner for the type of asset that is being calculated.
C. Documentation submitted by an applicant or
a recipient must verify and confirm:
(1) the
owner of the asset;
(2) the
financial institution, employer, agency, or organization administering the
asset;
(3) the period covered by
the documentation;
(4) the gross
value of the asset; and
(5) the
taxes, penalties, and fees and other withholdings or reductions incurred if the
asset were converted to cash.
Subp. 7. Allowed withholdings and reductions.
The commissioner must reduce the gross value of an asset by the following withholdings and reductions to calculate the value of the asset that is used to determine the household's eligibility for benefits:
A. projected federal income tax
withholdings;
B. projected state
income tax withholdings;
C.
surrender charges, penalties for early withdrawal, revocation of bonuses or
onetime payments, higher fees, or reduced interest guarantees calculated and
verified by documentation from the entity administering the asset;
and
D. other projected penalties
and fees associated with a loan, early distribution, or conversion of an asset
to cash calculated and verified by documentation from the entity administering
the asset.
Subp. 8. Excluded assets.
The commissioner must exclude the following types of assets when calculating household assets:
A.
irrevocable burial policies or irrevocable trusts;
B. the cash value and other proceeds
available from life insurance policies if converting these assets to cash
results in termination of coverage; and
C. all financial accounts of minor children
if the financial accounts are custodial accounts.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Minnesota may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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