(b)
Resources. All applicants and recipients of food stamps must not exceed the
resource limits set forth in this subdivision; however, households which are
categorically eligible for food stamps, as provided in section
387.14(a)
of this Part, are not subject to the resource limitations or any other
requirements of this subdivision.
(1) Liquid
and nonliquid resources of all members of the household cannot exceed $2,000
for the household, except that, for households including a member or members
age 60 or over, such resources cannot exceed $3,000.
(i) Liquid resources are those resources
which are readily available to the applicant or recipient including, but not
limited to the following: cash on hand, money in checking and savings accounts,
savings certificates, stocks or bonds, lump sum payments as detailed in this
Part, funds held (less the amount of penalty if any for early withdrawal), in
individual retirement accounts (IRA's) and funds held in Keogh plans which do
not involve the household member in a contractual relationship with individuals
who are not household members. In counting resources of a household with an IRA
or Keogh plan (unless excluded pursuant to the provisions of subparagraph
[3][ii] of this subdivision), the total cash value of the account or plan minus
the amount of the penalty (if any) that would be exacted for the early
withdrawal of the entire amount in the account or plan shall be
counted.
(ii) Nonliquid resources
include personal property, licensed and unlicensed vehicles, buildings, land,
recreational properties, and any other property not specifically excluded in
paragraph (3) of this subdivision. Nonexempt and nonliquid resources shall be
valued at the fair market value less encumbrances. Licensed vehicles shall be
treated in accordance with subparagraph (3)(iii) of this subdivision.
(iii) The resources of households containing
sponsored aliens shall include that portion of the alien's sponsor and
sponsor's spouse's resources that have been deemed available to the alien as
provided for in section
387.10(b)(4)
of this Part.
(iv) The resources of
ineligible aliens, individuals disqualified due to intentional program
violations, individuals disqualified for failure to comply with a food stamp
work registration or work requirement as provided in section
385.3
of this Title and individuals disqualified for failure to provide a social
security number, as referred to in the definition of household concept in
section
387.1 of
this Part, are counted in the determination of the household's food stamp
eligibility.
(2) Jointly
owned resources.
(i) Resources owned jointly
by separate households shall be considered available in their entirety to each
household, unless it can be demonstrated by the applicant household that such
resources are inaccessible to that household. If the household can demonstrate
that it has access to only a portion of the resource, the value of only that
portion of the resource shall be counted toward the household's resource level.
The resource shall be considered totally inaccessible to the household if:
(a) the resource cannot practically be
subdivided;
(b) the value of the
resource is dependent upon the agreement of a joint owner to the liquidation of
the resource; and
(c) the joint
owner refuses to participate in the liquidation of the resource.
(ii) Resources shall be considered
inaccessible to persons residing in shelters for battered women and children,
as defined in this Part, if:
(a) the
resources are jointly owned by such persons and by members of their former
household; and
(b) the shelter
resident's access to the value of the resources is dependent on the agreement
of a joint owner who still resides in the former household.
(3) Exclusion of
resources. In determining the resources of a household, only the following
shall be excluded:
(i) The home and
surrounding property which is not separated from the home by intervening
property owned by others. Public rights-of-way, such as roads which run through
the surrounding property and separate it from the home do not affect the
exemption of the property. The home and surrounding property shall remain
exempt when temporarily unoccupied for reasons of employment, training for
future employment, illness, or uninhabitability caused by casualty or natural
disaster provided further that the household intends to return. Households that
currently do not own a home, but own or are purchasing a lot on which they
intend to build or are building a permanent home shall receive an exclusion for
the value of the lot and, if it is partially completed, for the home.
(ii) Household goods, personal effects,
including one burial plot per household member, and the cash value of life
insurance policies. The cash value of pension plans or funds shall be excluded,
except that Keogh plans which involve no contractual relationship with
individuals who are not household members and individual retirement accounts
(IRA's) shall not be excluded under this paragraph.
(iii)
(a)
Licensed vehicles must have their entire value excluded when the vehicle meets
any of the requirements set forth in subclauses (1) through (9) of this clause.
However, when vehicles do not qualify for any of these exclusions, such
vehicles must be valued according to the market value test as described in
clauses (b), (c) and (d) of this subparagraph. The tests for exclusions are as
follows:
(1) used primarily (over 50 percent
of the time) for income-producing purposes;
(2) annually producing income consistent with
its fair market value, even if used only on a seasonal basis;
(3) necessary for long-distance travel, other
than daily commuting, if it is essential to the employment of a household
member or ineligible alien or disqualified person whose resources are being
considered available to the household;
(4) used as the household's home and is,
therefore, excluded as such;
(5)
necessary to transport a physically disabled household member or ineligible
alien or disqualified person whose resources are being considered available to
the household regardless of the purpose of such transportation;
(6) any vehicle operated on those Indian
reservations that do not require vehicles driven by tribal members to be
licensed;
(7) any vehicle leased by
a household member;
(8) any vehicle
title which is held by a non-household member so long as no member of the
household is permitted to access the cash value of the vehicle; or
(9) any vehicle upon which a household
depends to carry fuel for heating or water for home use when such transported
fuel or water is the primary source of fuel or water for the
household.
(b) All
licensed vehicles not excluded under clause (a) of this subparagraph must be
evaluated individually for their fair market value. That portion of the value
which exceeds $4,600 through September 30, 1996, and $4,650 beginning October
1, 1996 must be attributed in full toward the household's resource level,
regardless of any encumbrances on the vehicle.
(c) Licensed vehicles shall also be evaluated
for their equity value except for the following types of vehicles:
(1) vehicles excluded under clause (a) of
this subparagraph;
(2) one general
purpose licensed vehicle per household;
(3) additional licensed vehicles which are
used by household members (or an ineligible alien or excluded individual whose
resources are being considered available to the household) to attend training
or education preparatory to employment, to travel to and from employment, or to
seek employment in compliance with the job search requirements of the food
stamp program.
(d) In
the event a licensed vehicle is assigned both a fair market value in excess of
the amounts provided for in clause (b) of this subparagraph and an equity
value, only the greater of the two amounts is to be counted as a
resource.
(iv) Property
which annually produces income consistent with its fair market value, even if
only used on a seasonal basis. Such property shall include rental houses and
vacation homes.
(v) Property, such
as farm land and rental homes, or work-related equipment, such as the tools of
a tradesman or the machinery of a farmer, which is essential to the employment
or self-employment of a household member, except that rental homes which are
used by households for vacation purposes at some time during the year must be
counted as resources unless excluded by subparagraph (iv) of this paragraph.
Property, such as land, equipment and supplies, which is essential to the
self-employment of a household member engaged in farming must continue to be
excluded for one year from the date the household member terminates
self-employment from farming.
(vi)
Installment contracts for the sale of land or buildings if the contract or
agreement is producing income consistent with its fair market value. The
exclusion shall also apply to the value of the property sold under the
installment contract, or held as security in exchange for a purchase price
consistent with the fair market value of that property.
(vii) Any governmental payments which are
designated for the restoration of a home damaged in a disaster, provided that
the household is subject to a legal sanction if the funds are not used as
intended; for example, payments made by the Department of Housing and Urban
Development through the individual and family grant program or disaster loans
or grants made by the Small Business Administration.
(viii) Resources having a cash value which is
not accessible to the household, such as but not limited to irrevocable trust
funds, security deposits on rental property or utilities, property in probate,
and real property which the household is making a good-faith effort to sell at
a reasonable price. Any funds in a trust or transferred to a trust, and the
income produced by that trust to the extent it is not available to the
household, shall be considered inaccessible to the household if:
(a) the trust arrangement is not likely to
cease during the certification period and no household member has the power to
revoke the trust arrangement or change the name of the beneficiary during the
certification period;
(b) the
trustee administering the funds is either:
(1)
a court, or an institution, corporation, or organization which is not under the
direction or ownership of any household member; or
(2) an individual appointed by the court who
has court-imposed limitations placed on his/her use of the funds;
(c) the trust investments made on
behalf of the trust do not directly involve or assist any business or
corporation under the control, direction or influence of a household member;
and
(d) the funds held in
irrevocable trust are either:
(1) established
from the household's own funds, if the trustee uses the funds solely to make
investments on behalf of the trust or to pay the educational or medical
expenses of any person named by the household creating the trust; or
(2) established from nonhousehold funds by a
nonhousehold member.
(ix) Resources which have been counted as
income such as those of students or self- employed persons, which have been
prorated as income.
(x) Indian
lands held jointly with the tribe, or land that can be sold only with the
approval of the Department of the Interior's Bureau of Indian
Affairs.
(xi) Resources which are
excluded for food stamp purposes by express provision of Federal
statute.
(xii) Where an exclusion
applies because of use of a resource by or for a household member, the
exclusion shall also apply when the resource is being used by or for an
ineligible alien or disqualified person whose resources are being counted as
part of the household's resources.
(xiii) Energy assistance payments or
allowances which are excluded from income.
(xiv) Resources of non-household members as
referred to in the definition of household concept in section
387.1 of
this Part.
(xv) Nonliquid asset(s)
against which a lien has been placed as a result of taking out a business loan
and the household is prohibited by the security or lien agreement with the
lienholder (creditor) from selling the asset(s).
(xvi) Property, real or personal, to the
extent that it is directly related to the maintenance or use of a vehicle
excluded under subclause (iii)(a)(1), (2) or (5) of this paragraph or this
subparagraph. Only that portion of the real property determined necessary for
the maintenance or use of the vehicle is excludable under this
provision.
(xvii) Any income tax
refund made to a household member or the member's spouse by reason of an earned
income tax credit, as authorized by the Internal Revenue Code, for the month of
its receipt and the month following the month of its receipt. Any income tax
refund made to a household member by reason of an earned income tax credit must
be excluded for a period of 12 months from receipt if such member was
participating in the food stamp program at the time the credits were received
and participated in such program continuously during the 12-month period. For
purposes of this subparagraph, participation in the food stamp program is
considered continuous when a household does not leave the program or
temporarily leaves the program for a period of one month or less. However, such
households must continue to otherwise meet the income and resource criteria of
the food stamp program.
(xviii)
Resources of ineligible students and non-household members as referred to in
the definition of household concept in section
387.1 of
this Part.
(xix) Resources of any
household member who receives or is authorized to receive Supplemental Security
Income (SSI) benefits under title XVI of the Social Security Act or benefits
under part A of title IV of the Social Security Act (Aid to Families with
Dependent Children).