Current through Vol. 42, No. 1, September 16, 2024
(a)
ABAWD
work requirements. Per Section 273.24(a) of Title 7 of the Code of
Federal Regulations (7 C.F.R.
§
273.24(a)), an ABAWD
meets work requirements when he or she:
(1)
works continuously 20 hours or more per week, averaged monthly. Averaged
monthly means 80 hours per month. The employment may be paid, in-kind, unpaid,
or volunteer work with religious or community organizations;
(2) participates in and complies with the
requirements of a work program 20 hours or more per week, averaged monthly.
Work programs include:
(A) a program
assignment under Title 1 of the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act
(WIOA), Public Law (P.L.) 113-128;
(B) a program under Section 236 of the Trade
Act of 1974, Section 2296 of Title 19 of the United States Code (19 U.S.C. §
2296);
(C) an Oklahoma Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program Works (OK SNAP Works) assignment, not including job search,
supervised job search, or job search training activities. However, job search,
supervised job search, or job search training activities, when offered as part
of other program components, are acceptable if those activities comprise less
than half the total required time spent in the components; or
(D) any employment and training program that
serves veterans operated by the Department of Labor or the Department of
Veterans Affairs; or
(3)
works and participates in a work program for a total of 20 or more hours per
week, averaged monthly; or
(4)
meets an exemption from the work requirements per (d) of this
Section.
(b)
General rule. An ABAWD who is a member of an eligible household
receiving Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) food benefits must
comply with work requirements per (a) of this Section or be exempt from work
requirements per (d) of this Section to be eligible to participate as a member
of any food benefit household for more than three countable months, consecutive
or otherwise, during any 36-month or three-year period. When the ABAWD meets
work requirements per (a) or an exemption per (d) of this Section, he or she is
eligible to participate with no time limits. An ABAWD subject to the
three-month time limit may also regain eligibility per (e) of this Section.
(1)
Countable months. Countable
months are months when an ABAWD receives SNAP benefits for the full benefit
month while not:
(A) exempt from ABAWD work
requirements per (d) of this Section;
(B) fulfilling the work requirement per (a)
of this Section; or
(C) receiving
benefits that are prorated.
(2)
Countable months in another
state. When there is an indication an ABAWD subject to the time limits
received SNAP food benefits in another state in the last 12 months, the worker
must verify the number of countable months the person used in the other state
per 7 C.F.R. §
273.2(f)(1)(xiv)(B).
(3)
Measuring the three-year or
36-month time period. Per
7 C.F.R. §
273.24(b)(3), Oklahoma Human
Services (OKDHS) uses a 'fixed-individual clock' for each ABAWD subject to time
limits. This means the ABAWD clock starts at the initial application for SNAP
benefits when the person is not meeting ABAWD work requirements per (a) of this
Section. When the person meets ABAWD work requirements at initial application,
the clock starts the month the person uses the first countable month per (b)(1)
of this Section.
(4)
Worker
responsibilities. It is the worker's responsibility to:
(A) determine the ABAWD status of each
household member:
(i) at application,
mid-certification renewal, and certification renewal;
(ii) when a new person joins the household
during the certification period; and
(iii) when reported information indicates a
household member lost an exemption or no longer meets the work
requirement;
(B) orally
explain the ABAWD rights and responsibilities of each household member during
the SNAP application and certification renewal interview, when a new person
joins the household during the certification period, and when a household
member loses an exemption. The system also generates a written notice to the
household. The explanation includes:
(i) ABAWD
work requirements, the household members subject to these requirements, and the
ways to fulfill these requirements;
(ii) exemption and good cause criteria and
how to claim an exemption or good cause;
(iii) the ABAWD's limited benefit eligibility
when he or she does not fulfill work requirements;
(iv) how to maintain eligibility under the
ABAWD work requirements, including what the household needs to provide at
certification and renewal and what happens when an household member loses an
exemption or a person joins the household; and
(v) how to regain eligibility, per (e) of
this Section; and
(C)
update the ABAWD status of an adult household member any time he or she loses
an exemption or no longer meets the work requirements. The worker must
'look-back' to determine when the ABAWD lost the exemption or stopped meeting
the work requirement. The worker closes food benefits for the person when he or
she already used his or her countable months for the 36-month period or
corrects the ABAWD status to start the ABAWD's clock per (3) of this
subsection.
(5)
ABAWD responsibilities. It is the ABAWD's responsibility to:
(A) verify his or her work or participation
hours, a combination of work and participation hours, or exemption status at
application, mid-certification renewal, and certification renewal per
7 C.F.R. §
273.2(f)(1) and (f)(8);
and
(B) report when his or her work
or participation hours or a combination of work and participation hours drop
below 20 hours per week or 80 hours per month within 10-calendar days of the
month the hours dropped.
(i) When the ABAWD
reports his or her work or participation hours or a combination of work and
participation hours dropped below 20 hours per week, the worker determines if
the ABAWD is eligible for three countable months. When the ABAWD is:
(I) eligible for three countable months, the
worker tracks the months to determine when to close benefits for the ABAWD if
he or she does not regain eligibility per (e) of this Section; or
(II) not eligible because he or she received
three countable months within the three-year period, the worker closes food
benefits for the ABAWD.
(ii) When an ABAWD subject to time limits
received SNAP food benefits in error within the most recent three-year period,
the benefits are considered as countable months unless the ABAWD pays the
benefits back in full per 7
C.F.R. §
273.24(b)(5).
(c)
Good cause for
failure to meet the ABAWD work requirement. When an ABAWD would have
fulfilled the work requirement, per (a) of this Section, but missed some hours
for good cause, the ABAWD meets the work requirement if the absence is
temporary. Per 7 C.F.R.
§
273.24(b)(2), good
cause includes circumstances beyond the person's control, such as, but not
limited to:
(1) illness;
(2) illness of another household member
requiring the presence of the ABAWD;
(3) unavailability of transportation;
or
(4) a household
emergency.
(d)
Exemptions from the ABAWD work requirement. Per
7 C.F.R. §
273.24(c), a person is
exempt from ABAWD work requirement and eligible to participate without time
limits, when the person is:
(1) younger than
18 years of age or:
(A) 50 years of age and
older before September 1, 2023;
(B)
51 years of age and older from September 1, 2023, through September 30,
2023;
(C) 53 years of age or older
on or after October 1, 2023; or
(D)
55 years of age or older on or after October 1, 2024.
(2) medically-certified as physically or
mentally unfit for employment. A person is medically-certified as physically or
mentally unfit for employment when he or she:
(A) receives permanent or temporary
disability benefits issued by governmental or private sources;
(B) is obviously mentally or physically unfit
for employment. When it is not obvious that he or she is unfit, the person must
provide documented evidence from medically-qualified sources to substantiate
the medical exemption.
(i) Medically-qualified
sources may include, but are not limited to, a:
(I) licensed or certified psychologist,
therapist, counselor, or social worker;
(II) physician or physician's
assistant;
(III) nurse or nurse
practitioner; or
(IV) designated
representatives of a physician's office.
(ii) The documented evidence must indicate
the person has a physical or mental condition that limits the person's ability
to work.
(iii) When the medical
exemption is temporary, the person is required to comply with work requirements
when released by a medically qualified source to return to work;
(3) homeless, per
7 C.F.R. §
271.2 and Oklahoma Administrative Code (OAC)
340:50-5-29(b);
(4) pregnant;
(5) a veteran, per Section 5126(f)(13)(F) of
the James M. Inhofe National Authorization Act of 2023, P.L. 117263. This
definition includes a person who:
(A) served
in the United States Armed Forces, such as Army, Air Force, Coast Guard, Marine
Corps, National Guard, and Navy;
(B) served in an active duty or reserve
component; and
(C) was discharged
or released regardless of the conditions of the discharge or release. The
discharge may be honorable, general, other than honorable, bad conduct,
dishonorable, office, medical, or entry level separation;
and
(6) a parent,
natural, adoptive, or step, of a household member younger than 18 years of age,
even when the minor child is not eligible for food benefits;
(7) an adult residing in a household with a
household member younger than 18 years of age and included in the food benefit
household, even when the minor child is not eligible for food
benefits;
(8) a person 24 years of
age or younger who was in foster care program run by a state, district,
territory, or Indian tribal organization when the person turned 18, or a higher
age the state has chosen, per
42 U.S.C. §
675(8)(B) (iii);
or
(9) otherwise exempt from work
requirements per 7 C.F.R.
§
273.7(b) and OAC
340:50-5-86.
(e)
Persons who regain
eligibility. Persons whose food benefits were denied or closed because
they received three countable months of food benefits may regain eligibility by
meeting work requirements per (a) of this Section for 30-consecutive days.
(1)
Regained eligibility by meeting
work requirements. When a person regains eligibility, he or she
maintains food benefit eligibility without time limits provided he or she
continues to meet work requirements per (a) of this Section. Per
7 C.F.R. §
273.24(d)(3), there is no
limit to how many times a person may regain eligibility by meeting work
requirements. The person's food benefits are prorated from the application
date. When the person applies before meeting work requirements for
30-consecutive days, the application is denied.
(2)
Regained eligibility and then
stopped meeting work requirements. When a person regains eligibility and
then stops meeting work requirements, he or she is eligible for SNAP food
benefits for three-consecutive countable months only. The person may only
receive the additional three-countable months once during the 36-month period.
After receiving these three-consecutive months, the person is not eligible for
SNAP food benefits in his or her 36-month time period unless he or she regains
eligibility by meeting the work rule or becomes exempt per (d) of this
Section.
(f)
ABAWD
work requirement waiver prohibition. Per
7 C.F.R. §
273.24(f), states are
allowed to request an ABAWD work requirement waiver in certain instances.
Effective October 1, 2013, Section
241.3 of Title 56 of the Oklahoma
Statutes prohibits OKDHS from requesting an ABAWD work requirement waiver from
the United States Department of Agriculture.