Current through Register Vol. 46, No. 39, September 25, 2024
(a) A household's
eligibility is determined by considering the household's circumstances for the
entire month during which the application is made. For a resident of a public
institution who applies jointly for Supplemental Security Income (SSI) and food
stamps as part of the Federal Social Security Administration's (SSA's)
Pre-release Program for the Institutionalized, eligibility is determined by
considering the applicant's circumstances for the entire month in which the
applicant was released from the institution.
(1) A household's benefit level for the
initial month of certification is based on the day of the month the household
applies for benefits. A household must receive benefits which are prorated from
the day of application to the end of the initial month. A household which
applies for benefits at any time after the end of its certification period will
also have their first full month's benefits prorated from the date of
application for recertification to the end of the initial month. For a resident
of a public institution who applies jointly for SSI and food stamps as part of
the SSA's Pre-release Program for the Institutionalized, the benefit level for
the initial month of certification is based on the date of the month the
applicant is released from the institution. Such applicant must receive
benefits which are prorated from the day of the applicant's release from the
institution to the end of the month.
Initial month means:
(i) the first month for which the household
is certified for participation in the food stamp program following any period
during which the household was not certified for participation; and
(ii) in the case of a migrant or seasonal
farmworker household, the first month for which a household is certified for
participation in the food stamp program provided such household applies
following a period of more than 30 days in which the household was not
certified for participation.
(2) Collection of overissuances. A social
services district must collect any overissuance of food stamp benefits issued
to a household by:
(i) direct
payment;
(ii) reducing the
allotment of the household as provided in paragraph (5) of this
subdivision;
(iii) withholding
amounts from unemployment compensation from a member of the household, provided
State computer supports are in place;
(iv) recovering from Federal pay or a Federal
income tax refund, provided State computer supports are in place; or
(v) any other means as directed by the State.
Social services districts may use additional means to
collect overissuances provided such means are cost effective and do not violate
any other provisions of this Part.
(3)
(i)
Households applying for benefits after the 15th of the month, which have
completed the application, provided the verification required by section
387.8(c)
of this Part within 30 days of the date of application, and have been
determined to be eligible to receive benefits for the initial month of
application and the month following the initial month of application, must have
prorated benefits for the initial month of application and the first full month
of benefits made available to them at the same time and within the time periods
specified in this Part.
(ii)
Households applying for benefits after the 15th of the month which have been
determined to be eligible for expedited service, as set forth in section
387.8(a)
of this Part, must have benefits made available to them as follows:
(a) Households which have been determined to
be eligible for expedited service pursuant to section
387.8(a)
of this Part must have prorated benefits for the initial month of application
and benefits for the month following the initial month of application made
available to them within the time period for expedited service set forth in
section
387.8(a)(2)
of this Part and at the same time.
(b) Households which have completed the
application, provided the verification required by section
387.8(c)
of this Part prior to the issuance of the expedited benefit, and have been
determined to be eligible to receive benefits for the initial month of
application and the month following the initial month of application, must have
prorated benefits for the initial month of application and the first full
month's benefits made available within the time period for expedited service
set forth in section
387.8(a)(2)
of this Part and at the same time.
(c) Households which have been determined to
be eligible for expedited service pursuant to section
387.8(a)
of this Part but have not provided the verification required by section
387.8(c)
of this Part, must have the prorated benefits made available as set forth in
clause (a) of this subparagraph. When the household provides
the verification required by section
387.8(c)
of this Part and is determined to be eligible to receive benefits for the month
following the initial month of application, then the first full month of
benefits must be made available to the household within five working days
following the date the verification is completed or the first working day of
the following month, whichever is later.
(iii) The provisions of subparagraphs (i) and
(ii) of this paragraph do not apply to households which have been determined
not to be eligible to receive benefits for the initial month of application or
the month following the initial month of application. Households which have
been determined to be eligible for expedited service under section
387.8(a)(1)
of this Part must, however, receive benefits for the initial month of
application and the month following the initial month of application under the
verification standards set forth in section
387.8(a)(3)
of this Part. In accordance with section
387.15(f)
of this Part, benefits of less than $10 are not to be issued under the
provisions of subparagraphs (i) and (ii) of this paragraph.
(4) When a household's eligibility
and opportunity to participate cannot be determined within 30 days of the
filing date of the application, the following actions shall be taken:
(i) The cause of the delay shall be
determined.
(a) The cause of the delay shall
be considered the household's fault if the household has failed to complete the
application process and the local district has taken the following actions to
assist the household:
(1) offered to assist
or has assisted the applicant in completing the application if the application
form is incomplete;
(2) informed
the household of the need to register for work when any member who is required
to register has not done so and has given the household at least 10 days from
the date of notification within which to register;
(3) assisted the household in obtaining the
required verification and documentation and allowed the household at least 10
days from the date of the initial request to provide such documentation;
and
(4) attempted to reschedule the
interview as required in section
387.7 of
this Part if the household has failed to appear at the initial
interview.
(b) Delays
that are the fault of the local department, including but not limited to those
cases where the local district failed to take the actions to assist the
household described in clause (a) of this subparagraph.
(ii) If by the 30th day,
no further action can be taken on an application due to the fault of the
household, a notice of denial must be sent to the household. However, if the
household takes the required action within 60 days from the date the
application was originally filed, the case must be processed without requiring
a new application. If the household wishes to have the application processed
during the second 30-day period, the notice of denial may include a request
that the household report all changes in circumstances since the application
was filed. After the notice of denial is sent, no further action by the local
district is required if the household fails to take the required action within
60 days of the application filing date. If the household was at fault for the
delay in the first 30-day period, but is found to be eligible during the second
30-day period, prorated benefits must be provided to the household from the
date the necessary verification was provided.
(iii) If a delay in the initial 30-day period
is the fault of the local district, the household shall be notified by the 30th
day after the application filing date that the application is being held and
the household shall be notified of any further action it must take to complete
the application. If the household is found to be eligible during the second
30-day period, prorated benefits must be provided from the date of application.
However, if the household is found to be ineligible during the second 30-day
period, the application shall be denied.
(iv) For delays continuing 60 days, the
following applies:
(a) When the social
services district is at fault for not completing the application process by the
end of the second 30-day period, it must continue to process the application
until an eligibility decision is reached. If the household is determined to be
eligible and the social services district was at fault for the delay in the
initial 30 days, the household must receive benefits retroactive to the day of
application. However, if the initial 30-day delay was the household's fault,
the household must receive benefits retroactively to the date final
verification of all required eligibility factors was received by the social
services district. The original application may be used to process the
application in the months following the 60-day period, or the household may be
required to file a new application.
(b) When a household is at fault for not
completing the application process by the end of the second 30-day period, the
application must be denied. The household is not entitled to any lost benefits,
even if the delay in the initial 30 days was the fault of the social services
district.
(5)
Categorical eligibility.
(i) Categorically
eligible households are exempted from the gross and net income limits as
defined in section
387.10 of this
Part. Categorically eligible households are presumed, without further
investigation or verification, to meet the resource limits as set forth in
section
387.9
of this Part as a result of all members of the household being eligible for
family assistance, nonemergency safety net assistance and/or SSI. Social
security numbers, sponsored alien information and residency information as
provided to establish and maintain eligibility for family assistance,
non-emergency safety net assistance and/or SSI are presumed to be correct,
without further investigation or verification. All other requirements of SNAP
eligibility and benefit levels apply to categorically eligible households as
specified in this Part. The following households shall be considered
categorically eligible for SNAP:
(a)
households in which all members are recipients of family assistance,
nonemergency safety net assistance and/or SSI benefits must be considered
categorically eligible for SNAP. Categorically eligible recipients include:
(1) households in which all members are
authorized to receive family assistance, nonemergency safety net assistance
and/or SSI benefits but who have not yet received payment;
(2) individuals whose family assistance,
nonemergency safety net assistance and/or SSI benefits are suspended or being
recouped; and
(3) individuals
determined eligible for family assistance or nonemergency safety net assistance
benefits but who are not paid such benefits because the grant is less than
$10.
(b) households that
have either an elderly or disabled member (or members) as defined in section
387.1 of
this Part and a gross income at or below 200 percent of the Federal poverty
limit;
(c) households that have
out-of-pocket dependent care expenses and a gross income at or below 200
percent of the Federal poverty limit;
(d) households that have earned income
budgeted for the purpose of determining SNAP eligibility and benefit amount and
a total gross income at or below 150 percent of the Federal poverty limit;
and
(e) households not meeting one
or more of the definitions set forth in clauses (a) through
(d) above with gross household income at or below 130 percent
of the Federal poverty limit.
(ii) Under no circumstances can any household
be considered categorically eligible for SNAP if any member of that household
is disqualified from participating in SNAP for:
(a) an intentional program violation, as
defined by section
387.1 of
this Part;
(b) failure to comply
with the periodic reporting requirements in accordance with section
387.17(d)
of this Part; or
(c) failure to
comply with the work requirements in accordance with section
385.3
of this Title.
(iii)
Individuals ineligible to participate in SNAP cannot be included in any
household which is otherwise categorically eligible for SNAP. Ineligible
individuals include, but are not limited to, the following:
(a) aliens who do not meet the citizenship or
eligible alien status requirements contained in section
387.9
of this Part or the eligible sponsored alien requirements contained in section
387.10(b)(6)
of this Part;
(b) individuals who
do not meet the definition of a student as contained in section
387.1 of
this Part;
(c) residents of
commercial boarding homes;
(d)
individuals living with others and paying compensation to others for meals and
lodging but not meeting the requirements for such group living/shelter
arrangements;
(e) boarders, as
defined in section
387.1 of
this Part, unless the boarder participates as a member of the household
providing services, including lodging and meals, at such household's request;
or
(f) individuals or groups of
individuals who are residents of institutions except the following:
(1) residents of federally subsidized housing
for the elderly, built under section 202 of the Housing Act of 1959 or section
236 of the National Housing Act;
(2) persons with alcohol and/or substance use
disorders residing in public or approved nonprofit private drug or alcoholic
treatment centers or facilities, and children who live with their parent or
parents in such drug or alcoholic treatment centers or facilities, which meet
the requirements of a drug addiction or alcoholic treatment and rehabilitation
facility as set forth in section
387.1 of
this Part;
(3) visually impaired or
otherwise disabled individuals who reside in approved group living facilities
and who because of their disabilities are in receipt of social security
benefits under title II or title XVI of the Social Security Act;
(4) women or women with their children who
are residing in temporary shelters for battered women and children;
and
(5) homeless individuals or
families who are categorically eligible as defined in this paragraph and who
are residents of public or private nonprofit shelters for homeless persons.
(b)
Application for
recertification.
In recertifying eligibility for food stamps, eligibility
and the level of benefits shall be determined based on circumstances which are
anticipated to exist for the certification period beginning with the month
following the expiration of the current certification period.
(c)
Anticipated changes in household
circumstances.
Anticipated changes in the household's circumstances, as
reviewed in the eligibility determination process, may indicate the eligibility
of the household for food stamp benefits for the month of application even if
those benefits are not issued until the subsequent month; or a household may be
ineligible for the month of application but eligible in the subsequent month
due to a change in household circumstances. The same application shall be used
for the denial for the month of application and the determination of
eligibility for subsequent months pursuant to the standards set forth in this
Part.
(d)
Determining
resources.
Resources, as described in section
387.9
of this Part, which are available at the time the household is interviewed
shall be used to determine the household's eligibility.
(e)
Determining income.
(1) Income already received by the household
during the certification period and any income that can reasonably be
anticipated during the remainder of the certification period shall be used in
determining the household's eligibility and level of food stamp benefits. If
the amount of income that will be received, or when it will be received is
uncertain, that portion of the household's income that is uncertain shall not
be counted as income. In situations where the receipt of the income is
reasonably certain but the monthly amount may fluctuate, the household can
elect to income-average in accordance with paragraph (5) of this
subdivision.
(2) Income received
during the past 30 days shall be used as an indicator of the income that is and
will be available to the household during the certification period. In no event
shall past income, seasonal or otherwise, automatically be attributed to the
household as an indicator of anticipated income when changes in income have
occurred or can be anticipated during the certification period.
(3) Wages retained by an employer at the
request of the employee shall be considered income to the household in the
month the wages would otherwise have been paid by the employer. Wages retained
by the employer as a general practice, even if in violation of law, shall not
be counted as income to the household unless the household anticipates that it
will ask for and receive an advance, or that it will receive income from wages
that were previously held by the employer and which were not previously counted
as income. Advances of wages shall count as income in the month received only
if their receipt is reasonably anticipated, as noted in this section.
(4) Households receiving public assistance
(ADC and HR), SSI or social security payments or similar Federal and State
benefits on a recurring basis shall not have their monthly income from these
sources varied for the purpose of calculating income in determining food stamp
benefits merely because mailing cycles may cause two payments to be received in
one month and none in the next month.
(5) Income-averaging.
(i) Households, except destitute migrant
households, and households subject to a monthly reporting requirement for
public assistance, may elect to have their income averaged. Income shall not be
averaged for a destitute migrant household since averaging would result in
assigning income to the month of application from future periods which is not
available for current food needs. The household's expectations regarding income
fluctuations over the certification period shall be used in averaging income.
The number of months used to arrive at the average income need not be the same
as the number of months in the certification period.
(ii) Households which, by contract or
self-employment, derive their annual income in a period of time which is less
than one year shall have that income averaged over a 12-month period, provided
the income from the contract is not received on an hourly or piecework basis.
Such individuals may include members who are school employees, sharecroppers,
farmers, and other self-employed persons. However, these provisions do not
apply to migrant or seasonal farm workers.
(iii) Households receiving scholarships,
deferred educational loans, or other educational grants shall have such income,
after exclusions, averaged over the period for which it was provided.
(f)
Treatment of
income and resources of disqualified members of the household.
Individual household members may be disqualified from
participating in the food stamp program because of failure to meet or comply
with program requirements as detailed in this Part. During the period of time
that such household members are disqualified, the eligibility and benefit
levels of any remaining household members must be determined in accordance with
section
387.16(c)
of this Part.
(g)
Determining deductions.
(1) Only
the specific deductions set forth in section
387.12 of this
Part are applicable.
(i) Expenses shall only
be deducted if the service is provided by someone outside of the household and
the household pays for the service.
(ii) A deduction shall be allowed only in the
month the expense is billed or otherwise becomes due, regardless of when the
household intends to pay the expense. One-time-only expenses may be averaged
over the entire certification period in which they are billed. Households
reporting one-time-only medical expenses may elect to either a one-time
deduction or to have the expenses averaged over the remaining months of the
certification period. In addition, households with certification periods of
greater than 12 months may, at their option, choose to have the one-time only
medical expenses averaged over the remainder of the first 12 months of the
certification period. If the change is reported after the 12th month, it may be
allowed either in one month or averaged over the remainder of the certification
period.
(iii) Fluctuating expenses
may be averaged prospectively when used as a deduction. In addition, households
with certification periods of greater than 12 months may, at their option,
choose to have the one-time only medical expenses averaged over the remainder
of the first 12 months of the certification period. If the change is reported
after the 12th month, it may be allowed either in one month or averaged over
the remainder of the certification period.
(iv) A household's expenses shall be
calculated based on the expenses the household expects to be billed for during
the certification period. Anticipation of the expense shall be based on the
most recent month's bills unless the household is reasonably certain a change
will occur.
(h)
Retrospective budgeting.
Households subject to monthly reporting must be
retrospectively budgeted. Retrospective budgeting is defined
as a method by which income reported in a designated "budget month" is used to
determine benefits in the month two months following the budget month, which
will be the household's corresponding "issuance month."
(1) Initial eligibility. Eligibility and the
determination of a household's benefits shall be determined prospectively for
the first or "beginning" two months of participation in the food stamp program.
However, a beginning month may not be any month which immediately follows a
month in which a household is certified. Therefore, a food stamp household
reapplying within one month of being terminated will continue to have their
benefits determined retrospectively and eligibility determined prospectively.
If a public assistance food stamp case is determined to be eligible for food
stamps for the month prior to the determination of the household's public
assistance eligibility, the household's first three months shall be considered
beginning months.
(2) Ongoing
eligibility. Following a household's beginning months, the household shall
continue to have its eligibility determined prospectively, but will have its
ongoing benefit level determined on a retrospective basis.
(3) Treatment of income and deductions under
retrospective budgeting.
(i) Income. Local
departments shall calculate a household's benefits using actual income from the
budget month, except the local department shall:
(a) annualize and average self-employment
income as prescribed in this Part;
(b) prorate income received by contract in
less than one year over the period the income is to cover; and
(c) prorate nonexcluded scholarships,
deferred educational loans, and other educational income over the period they
are intended to cover.
(ii) Shelter expenses. A household's reported
shelter expenses shall be budgeted on a prospective basis.
(iii) Dependent care/medical deductions. A
household's medical and dependent care costs shall be budgeted retrospectively
using the household's medical and dependent care as of the budget
month.
(iv) Terminated source of
income. Income from any source of income which a household will no longer be
receiving following its beginning months shall be disregarded when determining
the household's ongoing benefit level which is being determined retrospective
budgeting; usually in determining a household's benefits for their third month
of participation. In addition, any income from a source which has been
terminated shall be disregarded when determining a household's budget level
under retrospective budgeting for the issuance month following the month in
which the household informs the local department that the source has been
terminated.
(v) Gaining a household
member. When a household indicates in its processing month that it anticipates
gaining a household member, that individual and his income shall be counted for
both eligibility and benefit calculation purpose for the issuance
month.
(vi) Losing a household
member. When a household indicates in its processing month that it anticipates
a household member is leaving prior to the issuance month, the local department
shall not count either the person or his/her income for the issuance
month.
(vii) Budgeting public
assistance grants. When determining the food stamp benefit level for a given
issuance month, the amount of the public assistance grant to be considered as
income for that month shall be the amount of the public assistance grant that
is to be issued; i.e., public assistance grants are budgeted
prospectively for food stamps in the issuance month. Other income continues to
be budgeted retrospectively.
(i)
Child support pass-through
payments.
Child support pass-through payments to recipients of Aid
to Dependent Children or Home Relief are budgeted, for purposes of determining
food stamp eligibility and benefit levels, on a one-month retrospective basis.
Such payments are budgeted retrospectively for all households, including those
households for which other income is budgeted
prospectively.