In determining eligibility, the Department shall consider
income received by a family. In order to initially qualify for child care
subsidy benefits, the family's income must not exceed the income limits
established by Neb. Rev. Stat. §
68-1206.
010.01
INCOME
VERIFICATION. Individuals must provide verification of earned
income, with a copy of check stubs, a statement from his or her employer, or
some other documentation. When possible, the Department utilizes electronic
data sources to verify income. A self-employed individual must submit a copy of
his or her latest income tax return or his or her self-employment records. The
individual can contact the Department to request assistance with verification.
010.01(A) An individual's declaration of
unearned income is sufficient unless there is inconsistent information or the
individual has a previous history of overpayments or abuse of the program. In
these instances, the individual must provide verification of income before
services will be approved. If the individual fails to provide required proof
within 10 days of request, the application is rejected or services are
terminated.
010.02
SELF-EMPLOYMENT DISREGARD. Individuals receiving self-employment income are
allowed disregards to gross income.
010.02(A)
STANDARD DISREGARD FOR SELF-EMPLOYMENT. For
individuals who incur expenses related to producing goods or services but
provide no tax return to document such expenses, the Department applies a
standard disregard of 49% to the gross income and does not calculate actual
expenses.
010.02(B)
ITEMIZED DISREGARDS FOR SELF-EMPLOYMENT. For individuals who incur
operating expenses related to producing the goods or services which are
itemized on the individual's tax return, the actual allowable operating
expenses are deducted from gross income.
010.02(C)
OPERATING EXPENSES-FARM
INCOME. For individuals who incur operating expenses related to
farming, the operating expenses will be deducted from income.
010.02(D)
OFFSET OF
EARNINGS. If a household has a combination of farm,
self-employment, or regular earned income, a loss from one source of income may
be used to offset a gain from another source.
010.02(E)
EXPENSES NOT
DISREGARDED. The following expenses are not allowed as
self-employment expenses:
(i) Net losses from
previous tax years;
(ii) Federal,
state, and local income taxes, money set aside for retirement purposes, and
other work related personal expenses, such as transportation to and from work;
(iii) Depreciation; and
(iv) Depletion.
010.03
EARNED INCOME
DISREGARD. Ten percent of a household's gross earned income shall
be disregarded after 12 months of continuous eligibility where there has been
an open case, and at each subsequent redetermination.
010.04
INCOME
EXCLUSIONS. In determining a family's eligibility, the following
income is excluded when determining eligibility
(1) Aid to Dependent Children
grant;
(2) Money received from
participation in the Foster Grandparent Program authorized by the ACTION
Program;
(3) Money awarded by the
Indian Claims Commission or the Court of Claims;
(4) Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act
payments (to the extent that these payments are exempt from taxation under
section 21(a) of the Act);
(5)
Money received from the sale of property such as stocks, bonds, a house, or a
car (unless the person was engaged in the business of selling the property in
which case the net proceeds would be counted as income from
self-employment);
(6) Work study
for an undergraduate student;
(7)
Withdrawals of bank deposits;
(8)
Tax refunds;
(9) Earned Income
Credits and Advanced Earned Income Credits;
(10) Gifts;
(11) Lump sum inheritances or insurance
payments;
(12) Capital
gains;
(13) The value of the coupon
allotment under the Food Stamp Act of 1964, as amended;
(14) The value of U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) donated foods;
(15) The value of supplemental food
assistance under the Child Nutrition Act of 1966 and the special food service
program for children under the National School Lunch Act, as amended;
(16) Any payment received under the Uniform
Relocation Assistance and Real Property Acquisition Policies Act of
1970;
(17) Earnings of a child age
18 or younger and in school; Note: Summer earnings of a child age 18 or younger
are excluded if the worker verifies that the child plans to return to school in
the fall.
(18) Loans;
(19) Any grant to a student for educational
purposes;
(20) Adoption or
guardianship subsidy payments;
(21)
Home produce used for household consumption;
(22) Income received for work experience paid
by a Title I Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act program;
(23) Title I Workforce Innovation and
Opportunity Act program allowance paid for supportive services such as
transportation, meals, special tools, and clothing. This includes temporary
Welfare-to-Work payments made through Workforce Development;
(24) Payments to AmeriCorps
volunteers;
(25) Reimbursement from
the Senior Companion Program;
(26)
Low Income Energy Assistance funds;
(27) Housing assistance provided by Housing
and Urban Development or by a local housing program;
(28) Assistance received under the Disaster
Relief Act of 1974 or under a federal law because of a presidentially declared
major disaster;
(29) Payments to a
client participating in training or school attendance subsidized by the
Division of Vocational Rehabilitation;
(30) Payments made by Veterans Administration
under the Veterans Education and Employment Assistance Act for education
expenses of a veteran;
(31) Payment
made by an absent parent to a child care provider, landlord, or mortgage holder
on behalf of the client;
(32)
Benefits under
Public
Law 104-204 for children of Vietnam veterans who
were born with spina bifida;
(33)
Monetary allowance paid by the Veterans Administration under
Public
Law 106-419 to the child of a woman Vietnam
veteran because of a birth defect associated with the veteran's service in
Vietnam;
(34) Reimbursement for
employment-related expenses such as mileage, lodging, or meals; and
(35) Military combat pay.