Current through Register Vol. 46, No. 39, September 25, 2024
(a)
Households which contain an elderly or disabled member as defined in section
387.1 of
this Part, are required to meet only the net income eligibility standards for
the food stamp program as set forth in paragraph (2) of this subdivision.
Households which do not contain an elderly or disabled member must meet both
the net income eligibility standards and the gross income eligibility standards
for the food stamp program. However, households which are categorically
eligible for food stamps, as provided in section
387.14(a)(4)
of this Part, do not have to meet the net income eligibility standards or the
gross income eligibility for the food stamp program.
(1) The gross income eligibility standard for
the food stamp program shall be 130 percent of the Federal income poverty level
for the 48 contiguous states and the District of Columbia.
(2) The net income eligibility standard for
the food stamp program shall be the Federal income poverty level for the 48
contiguous states and the District of Columbia.
(3) The net and gross income eligibility
standards, as described above, are revised each October 1st by the United
States Department of Agriculture as defined by the Food Stamp Act of 1977, as
amended, to reflect the annual adjustment to the Federal income poverty
guidelines for the contiguous 48 states, the District of Columbia, Alaska, and
Hawaii. (Food Stamp Act of 1977, Compilation of Food Stamp Act of 1977 and
other selected Federal nutrition statutes prepared by the Committee on
Agriculture, U.S. House of Representatives, U.S. Government Printing Office,
Washington, DC, 1984, pages 11-22.) The monthly net and gross eligibility
standards will be prescribed in general notices published in the Federal
Register.
(b) In
calculating a household's income for the purpose of determining eligibility for
food stamps, income shall mean all income, earned and unearned, from whatever
source, except for items specifically excluded in this subdivision.
(1) Earned income shall include:
(i) all wages and salaries of an
employee;
(ii) the gross income
from a self-employment enterprise, including the total gain from the sale of
any capital goods or equipment related to the business, excluding the costs of
doing business as described in this Part. Ownership of rental property shall be
considered a self-employment enterprise; however, income derived from the
rental property shall be considered earned income only if a member of the
household is actively engaged in the management of the property at least an
average of 20 hours a week. Payments from a roomer or boarder shall also be
considered self-employment income;
(iii) training allowances from vocational and
rehabilitative programs recognized by Federal, State or local governments, to
the extent they are not a reimbursement;
(iv) payments under Volunteers in Service to
America (VISTA) are considered earned income and subject to the earned income
deduction. However, such calculation must exclude payments made to those
households which are specified in section
387.11 of this
Part; and
(v) earnings to
individuals who are participating in on-the-job training programs under section
204(5), title II, of the Job Training Partnership Act. This provision does not
apply to earnings received by household members under 19 years of age who are
under the parental control of another adult household member, regardless of
school attendance and/or enrollment as set forth in section
387.11(j)
of this Part.
(2) Earned
income does not include:
(i) income excluded
by section
387.11 of this
Part; or
(ii) any portion of income
earned under a work supplementation or support program that is attributable to
public assistance.
(3)
Unearned income shall include, but not be limited to:
(i) assistance payments from Federal or
federally aided public assistance programs, such as Supplemental Security
Income (SSI), Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC), or other
assistance programs based on need except as provided for in this Part. Also
included are payments made pursuant to the Home Relief (HR) program. Assistance
payments derived from programs which require, as a condition of eligibility,
the actual performance of work without compensation other than the assistance
payments, will be considered unearned income;
(ii) annuities, pensions, retirement,
veterans' or disability benefits, workers' or unemployment compensation,
old-age, survivor's or social security benefits, strike benefits, foster care
payments for children or adults, adoption subsidies, and gross income minus the
cost of doing business derived from rental property in which a household member
is not actively engaged in the management of the property for at least 20 hours
a week;
(iii) support or alimony
payments made directly to the household from nonhousehold members;
(iv) scholarships, educational grants,
fellowships, deferred payment loans for education, veterans' educational
benefits less allowable exclusions which are used for or made available by the
educational institution for certain expenses as specified in section
387.11 of this
Part;
(v) payments from
government-sponsored programs unless otherwise excluded;
(vi) dividends, interest, royalties, and all
other direct money payments from any source which can be construed to be a gain
or benefit; and
(vii) monies which
are withdrawn or dividends which are or could be received by a household from
trust funds considered to be excludable resources as specified in section
387.9
of this Part. Such trust withdrawals shall be considered income in the month
received, unless otherwise exempt under the provisions of this section.
Dividends which the household has the option of either receiving as income or
reinvesting in the trust are to be considered as income in the month they
become available to the household unless otherwise exempt under the provisions
of this Part.
(4) The
earned and unearned income of an individual disqualified for an intentional
program violation or for failing to comply with a food stamp work registration
requirement or a food stamp work requirement as provided in section
385.3
of this Title, must be counted in its entirety as available to the remaining
household members. The income of individuals excluded for failing to apply for
or provide a social security number or for being an ineligible alien will
continue to be counted as income less a pro rata share for the excluded
individual. The procedures for calculating this pro rata share are set forth in
section
387.16(c)
of this Part.
(5) If the benefits
of a household are reduced under a Federal, State or local law relating to a
means-tested public assistance program for the failure of a member of the
household to perform an action required under the law or program, the household
may not receive an increased food stamp allotment as a result of a decrease in
the income of the household for the duration of the reduction to the extent
that the decrease is the result of the reduction.
(6) Unless otherwise exempt, for households
containing an alien sponsored after February 1, 1983 for whom a sponsor signed
an affidavit of support or a similar statement as a condition of the alien's
entry into the United States as a lawful permanent resident, portions of the
gross income and the resources of a sponsor and the sponsor's spouse shall be
deemed unearned income and resources of a sponsored alien for three years
following the alien's admission for permanent residence to the United States.
Money paid to the alien by the sponsor or sponsor's spouse would not be
considered income to the alien unless the amount paid exceeds the amount deemed
available. The amount paid that exceeds the amount attributed would be
considered income to the alien in addition to the amount attributed to the
alien. Aliens exempt from the provisions of this paragraph are:
(i) an alien participating in the food stamp
program as a member of his or her sponsor's household;
(ii) aliens who are sponsored by an
organization or group;
(iii) aliens
who were not required by the United States Department of Immigration to have a
sponsor as a condition of the alien's entry or admission into the United States
as a permanent resident under the Immigration and Nationality Act. Such an
alien(s) includes but is not limited to, a refugee, a parolee, an individual
granted asylum, and a Cuban or Haitian entrant; and
(iv) aliens whose sponsor is participating in
the food stamp program in a household that does not include the
alien.