Nebraska Administrative Code
Topic - HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES SYSTEM
Title 472 - THE DISABLED PERSONS AND FAMILY SUPPORT PROGRAM
Chapter 2 - APPLICATION AND ELIGIBILITY
Section 472-2-004 - Financial Eligibility
Universal Citation: 472 NE Admin Rules and Regs ch 2 ยง 004
Current through September 17, 2024
The Department shall not provide support under this program to individuals or families whose total gross monthly income exceeds Nebraska's 1989 median family income, adjusted for size as follows:
Family Size | Gross Monthly Income |
1 | $1,364 |
2 | 1,784 |
3 | 2,203 |
4 | 2,623 |
5 | 3,043 |
6 | 3,463 |
7 | 3,541 |
8 | 3,620 |
9 or more | 3,699 |
004.01 Sources of Income
Department staff shall consider the following sources of income in determining gross monthly income:
1. Aid to Dependent Children (ADC);
2. Supplemental Security Income
(SSI);
3. State Supplemental
Payment;
4. Gross wages/salary -
total money earnings received for work as an employee, including wages, salary,
armed forces pay, earnings through a work incentive program, work study, VISTA,
commissions, tips, piece rate payments, and cash bonuses earned
before deductions are made for taxes, bonds, pensions,
union dues, and similar purposes;
5. In-kind income received in lieu of
wages;
6. Job Training Partnership
Act funds considered as employment;
7. Social Security or Railroad Retirement -
pensions, survivor's benefits, and permanent disability insurance payments made
by the Social Security Administration or Railroad Retirement Board (consider
amount before deductions for medical insurance);
8. Dividends - includes dividends from stock
holdings or membership in associations;
9. Interest - on savings or bonds, averaged
over the period earned;
10. Earned
income credit (EIC) and advanced earned income credit (AEIC);
11. Estates;
12. Trust funds;
13. Rentals- net income from rental of a
house, store or other property;
14.
Land lease income;
15. Boarders -
net payments from boarders or lodgers (if self-employed, see item
29);
16. Royalties - net
royalties;
17. Retirement pensions
- retirement or pension benefits paid to a retired person or his/her survivors
by a former employer or by a union, either directly or through an insurance
company;
18. Veteran's pensions -
money paid by the Veteran's Administration to disabled members of the armed
forces or to survivors of deceased veterans, subsistence allowances paid to
veterans for education and on-the-job training, and "refunds" paid to
ex-servicemen as G.I. insurance premiums;
19. Military allotments;
20. Picket or strike pay;
21. Green Thumb income;
22. Contributions;
23. Lump sum payments, e.g., child support or
Social Security;
24. Annuities -
annuities or insurance;
25.
Unemployment compensation - compensation received from government insurance
agencies or private companies during periods of unemployment;
26. Workers' compensation - compensation
received from private or public insurance companies for injuries incurred at
work;
27. Court-order alimony and
child support (i.e., cash or direct or indirect payments made on behalf of the
family);
28. Net income from farm
self-employment - gross income minus operating expenses from the operation of a
farm received by a client as an owner, renter, or sharecropper. Gross income
includes the value of all products sold, government crop loans, money received
from the rental of farm equipment to others, and incidental receipts from the
sale of wood, sand, gravel, and similar items. Operating expenses include cost
of feed, fertilizer, seed, and other farming supplies, cash wages paid to
farmhands, depreciation charges, cash rent, interest on farm mortgages, farm
building repairs, farm taxes (not state and federal income taxes), and similar
expenses. The value of fuel, food, or other farm products used for family
living is not included as part of net income; and
29. Net income from nonfarm self-employment -
gross income minus expenses from one's own business, professional enterprise,
or partnership. Gross income includes the value of all goods sold and services
rendered. Expenses include costs of goods purchased, rent, heat, light, power,
depreciation charges, wages and salaries paid, business taxes (not personal
income taxes), and similar costs. The value of salable merchandise consumed by
the proprietors of retail stores is not included as part of net income.
The applicant shall submit all required income verification.
004.02 Income Exclusions
Department staff shall not consider the following income sources in determining gross monthly income:
1. Money received from participation in the
Foster Grandparent Program authorized by the ACTION Program;
2. Money awarded by the Indian Claims
Commission or the Court of Claims;
3. Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act
payments (to the extent that these payments are exempt from taxation under
section 21(a) of the Act);
4. Money
received from sale of property such as stocks, bonds, a house, or a car (unless
the person was engaged in the business of selling such property in which case
the net proceeds would be counted as income from self-employment);
5. Withdrawals of bank deposits;
6. Money borrowed;
7. Tax refunds;
8. Gifts;
9. Lump sum inheritances or insurance
payments;
10. Capital
gains;
11. The value of the coupon
allotment under the Food Stamp Act of 1964, as amended;
12. The value of USDA donated
foods;
13. 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;
14. Any payment
received under the Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property Acquisition
Policies Act of 1970;
15. Earnings
of a child age 13 or younger;
16.
Loans and grants (such as scholarships) obtained and used under conditions that
prohibit their use for current living costs;
17. Any grant or loan to any undergraduate
student for educational purposes made or insured under any program administered
by the Commissioner of Education under the Higher Education Act;
18. Home produce used for household
consumption;
19. Payments received
through the Job Training Partnership Act (JTPA) for -
a. Title IIB, Summer Youth Employment;
and
b. Classroom training, e.g.,
tuition and books (Payments to meet living expenses while attending school are
considered income.); and
20. Reimbursement from the Senior Companion
Program.
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