Current through Vol. 42, No. 1, September 16, 2024
(a)
Sources
of income considered. The worker considers all household income, unless
specifically excluded, per Section 273.9(c) of Title 7 of the Code of Federal
Regulations (7 C.F.R. §
273.9(c)) and Oklahoma
Administrative Code (OAC)
340:50-7-22, in determining
monthly gross income. Income is classified as earned or unearned. When one or
more household members are absent from the home, before deciding whether to
consider the absent household member's income, the worker determines if the
person returns to the home for part of the month.
(1) The worker does not include the absent
member in the benefit amount and only counts the portion of his or her income
that he or she makes available to the rest of the household when the household
member does not return for part of the month, per OAC
340:50-5-2.
(2) When the household member returns for
part of each month, the worker includes him or her in the benefit amount and
counts all of his or her income unless excluded, per OAC
340:50-7-22.
(b)
Earned income. Per
7 C.F.R. §
273.9(b)(1), earned income
is income a household receives in the form of wages, commission,
self-employment, or training allowances, and for which a person puts forth
physical labor.
(1)
Wages. Wages
and salaries include sick pay the employer pays to an employee who plans to
return to work when recovered, excess benefit allowance payments, and wages
garnished or diverted to pay a third party for a household's expenses.
Countable wages for military personnel include any allowance included on the
earnings statement, such as the Basic Allowance for Housing (BAH) and the Basic
Allowance for Subsistence (BAS).
(2)
S corporations. When a
household member is a shareholder in an S corporation, he or she may receive
profits from the business in two ways; as a salary or as a profit share of the
business. Both types of income are reported on the household member's personal
income tax return. Salary income is considered as earned income and profit
share income is considered as unearned income per (c)(8) of this
Section.
(3)
Self-employment. Refer to OAC
340:50-7-30 for self-employment
income procedures.
(4)
Title
I payments of the Domestic Volunteer Services Act (DVSA). Volunteer
payments made to a household member under Title I of the DVSA of 1973, as
amended, per Section 404 of Public Law (P.L.) 93-113, Section 5044(f)(1) of
Title 42 of the United States Code and
7 C.F.R. §
273.9(c)(10)(iii), are
counted as earned income when the household member started receiving the
payments prior to applying for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP)
or public assistance. When the person receives SNAP or public assistance
benefits at the time of joining the Title I program, the volunteer payments are
not counted. Title I programs include AmeriCorps Volunteers in Service to
America (VISTA) and Special Volunteer Programs.
(5)
On-the-job training (OJT).
The worker counts income from OJT positions as earned income. This includes OJT
provided, per Section 3(44) of the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act
(WIOA) of 2014, P.L.
113-128 for persons 19 years of age or older and
monies paid by an employer.
(6)
Training allowances. Training allowances from vocational or
rehabilitative programs federal, state, or local governments recognize, such as
the work incentive program, to the extent they are not a reimbursement.
Training allowances received under WIOA are excluded.
(7)
Sale of whole blood or
plasma. The sale of whole blood or blood plasma is considered as earned
income.
(8)
Developmental
Disabilities Services (DDS)payment. When the household receives a DDS
payment as an extended family care provider for services provided in addition
to the child's room and board payment, it is considered as earned
income.
(c)
Unearned income. In general, unearned income is income a household
receives and is not in the form of wages, selfemployment, or training
allowances, and for which a person does not put forth physical labor. The
income listed in (1) through (11) of this subsection, while not all inclusive,
are considered unearned, per 7 C.F.R. §
273.9(b)(2).
(1)
Assistance payments. The
worker counts payments from a federally aided public assistance program, such
as Supplemental Security Income (SSI), Temporary Assistance for Needy Families
(TANF), or assistance programs based on need, such as State Supplemental
Payments, as unearned income. When such payments are received by a third party,
they are counted as income for the person to whom it is legally owed.
(A) A household's food benefit amount does
not increase when the public assistance benefit the household receives under a
federal, state, or local means-tested public assistance program is reduced,
suspended, or closed because the public assistance program imposed a penalty
due to an intentional program violation determined as fraud or a household
member's failure to comply with a requirement of that program.
(i) To impose a food benefit sanction, the
person must be certified for SNAP benefits at the time of the failure to comply
and receiving regular benefits from the other program at the time fraud
occurred or the household failed to comply with a substantive program
requirement.
(ii) Examples of
means-tested public assistance programs include SSI and TANF.
(iii) Substantive requirements are behavioral
requirements of that program designed to improve the well-being of the
household. For TANF, this includes:
(I)
complying with TANF Work requirements, per OAC 340:10-2. OAC
340:10-2-2 explains the TANF
penalty considered for SNAP when the household fails to comply with TANF Work
activities;
(II) cooperating to
obtain child support, per OAC
340:10-10-5;
(III) providing a Social Security number, per
OAC 340:10-12-1;
(IV) ensuring school-age children regularly
attend school, per OAC
340:10-13-1;
(V) verifying children meet immunization
requirements, per OAC
340:10-14-1; and
(VI) not using the TANF benefit in a
prohibited business, per OAC
340:10-1-3.
(iv) Procedural requirements that do not
trigger a penalty include failing to:
(I)
provide verification;
(II) complete
an interview; or
(III) complete a
benefit renewal.
(v) When
a worker is not able to obtain the necessary information and cooperation from
another federal, state, or local means-tested welfare, or public assistance
program to comply with the provision in (A) of this paragraph, Oklahoma Human
Services (OKDHS) is not held responsible. The worker must make a good faith
effort to get the needed information and record the details and results of this
effort in the case file.
(vi) The
worker does not reduce, suspend, or close the household's current food benefit
amount when the benefits under another assistance program are
decreased.
(vii) When the worker
adds eligible members to the food benefit, the benefit must be adjusted
regardless of whether the household is prohibited from receiving benefits for
the additional member under another federal, state, local welfare, or public
assistance means-tested program.
(viii) Changes in household circumstances not
related to the penalty imposed by another federal, state, local welfare, or
public means-tested assistance program are not affected by the provision in (A)
of this paragraph.
(ix) The
application of the provision in (A) of this paragraph applies for the duration
of the imposed penalty or until OKDHS cannot determine the amount of the
penalty.
(x) SNAP sanctions
extending beyond one year are reviewed at least annually to determine if the
sanction continues to apply.
(B) The provision in (A) of this paragraph
does not apply to persons or households subject to disqualification from SNAP
for noncompliance with a comparable work requirement, per Title IV of the
Social Security Act or an unemployment compensation work
requirement.
(2)
Annuity, pension, retirement, and Social Security payments.
Annuities, pensions, retirement, and Social Security benefits are considered as
unearned income. When a third party receives Social Security benefits it is
counted as income for the person to whom it is legally owed.
(3)
Veterans', disability, worker's or
unemployment compensation payments, and striker's benefits. Veterans',
disability, worker's or unemployment compensation payments, and striker's
benefits are considered as unearned income.
(4)
Support and alimony. Support
and alimony payments paid directly to the household from non-household members
are considered as unearned income. Money deducted or diverted to a third party
to pay a household expense is unearned income when the court order directs the
payment be made to the household. When the court order states the payment must
be paid to a third party, it is not income.
(5)
Grants, dividends, royalty, and
interest payments. Payments from government sponsored programs, such as
Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service Programs, grants,
dividends, royalties, interest, and all other direct money payments from any
source construed to be a gain or profit are considered as unearned income. The
household must provide proof of income from these sources, so the worker may
average income to determine monthly countable income.
(6)
Monies withdrawn or dividends that
are or could be received by a household from trust funds. Monies
withdrawn or dividends from a trust the household has the option of receiving
as income or reinvesting in trust funds considered to be excludable resources
are considered income in the month they become available to the household
unless otherwise exempt, per OAC
340:50-7-22.
(7)
Department of Veteran's Affairs
(VA) Aid and Attendance. When a person receives VA Aid and Attendance
income and does not pay someone outside of the food benefit household to care
for him or her, this is considered as countable income. Any portion of the VA
Aid and Attendance paid to someone outside of the food benefit household for
care is excluded.
(8)
Profit
sharing. When a household member is a shareholder in an S corporation or
a partner who is not self-employed, per OAC
340:50-7-30(a)(4),
the household member may receive a distribution or profit share from the
business. This is considered as unearned income.
(9)
Foster care and DDS room and board
payments. The household has the option of including a child receiving a
foster care payment that includes a kinship care payment or a DDS room and
board payment in the food benefit household. When the household chooses not to
include the child, his or her income is not considered, per OAC
340:50-5-5. Foster care payments
for children or adults included as household members are considered an unearned
income.
(10)
Adoption subsidy
and guardianship payments. When a member of the household receives an
adoption subsidy or guardianship payment from OKDHS, it is counted as unearned
income. The child for whom the payment is received must be included in the SNAP
food benefit.
(11)
Sponsor's
income. When a household contains a sponsored alien, refer to OAC
340:50-5-49 to determine if the
income of the sponsor and the sponsor's spouse must be deemed to the sponsored
alien.
(d)
Income
of excluded household members. Per OAC
340:50-5-10.1, excluded household
members are termed as disqualified or ineligible. The worker does not consider
the needs of a disqualified or ineligible household member when determining the
household's size for purposes of assigning a benefit level to the household or
comparing the household's monthly income with the income eligibility standard,
per 7 C.F.R. §
273.11(c)(2)(iv).
(1)
Disqualified household
members. The worker counts the disqualified household member's income in
its entirety as available to the remaining household members, per
7 C.F.R. §
273.11(c)(1)(i). The worker
does not prorate utility, medical, dependent care, child support expenses, or
excess shelter deductions. Per OAC 340:505-10.1, disqualified household members
are those excluded for:
(A) committing an
intentional program violation;
(B)
failing to meet work registration requirements;
(C) meeting fleeing felon criteria;
or
(D) being a probation or parole
violator.
(2)
Ineligible household members. The worker prorates the income of
ineligible household members among all household members, per
7 C.F.R. §
273.11(c)(2)(ii) and (3).
(A) Per OAC
340:50-5-10.1, ineligible
household members are those excluded because they do not meet a program
requirement, such as:
(i) failure to obtain or
refusal to provide a Social Security number;
(ii) being an ineligible alien;
(iii) being an able-bodied adult without
dependents and not meeting work requirements; or
(iv) failure to cooperate with providing
requested verification regarding unclear information.
(B) The worker counts a pro rata share of the
ineligible household member's income as income available to the remaining
members by first subtracting the allowable income exclusions, per OAC
340:50-7-22, from the ineligible
member's income and dividing the income evenly among the eligible household
members and the ineligible member.
(C) The worker counts all but the ineligible
member's share as income available to the remaining household members. The
earned income deduction, per OAC
340:50-7-31(a)(2),
and OKDHS Appendix C-3, Maximum Food Benefit Allotments and Standards for
Income and Deductions, applies to the prorated income attributed to the
household when it was earned by the ineligible member.
(D) The portion of the household's allowable
shelter, child support, and dependent care expenses paid by or billed to the
ineligible member is divided evenly among the household members, including the
ineligible member. All but the ineligible member's share is considered a
deductible shelter expense for the remaining household members, with the
exception of utility expenses, per 7 § C.F.R. § 273.9(d)(6)(iii)(F),
or the standard homeless shelter deduction, per
7 C.F.R. §
273.9(d)(6)(i). When the:
(i) household is responsible for utility
expenses, the household is allowed the full utility standard for which it
qualifies, per OAC
340:50-7-31; or
(ii) homeless household is responsible for
shelter costs, the household is allowed the full standard homeless shelter
deduction, per OKDHS Appendix C-3, Maximum Food Benefit Allotments and
Standards for Income and Deductions, or the prorated excess shelter deduction
the household incurs, whichever results in the most benefits for the household,
per OAC 340:50-7-31(a)(6)(A)(v).
Amended at 8 Ok Reg
3463, eff 7-31-91 (emergency); Amended at 9 Ok Reg 2473, eff 6-25-92; Amended
at 9 Ok Reg 3843, eff 8-24-92 (emergency); Amended at 10 Ok Reg 1821, eff
5-13-93; Amended at 14 Ok Reg 59, eff 10-10-96 (emergency); Amended at 14 Ok
Reg 587, eff 12-12-96 (emergency); Amended at 14 Ok Reg 1351, eff 5-12-97;
Amended at 15 Ok Reg 165, eff 11-1-97 (emergency); Amended at 15 Ok Reg 382,
eff 1-1-98 (emergency); Amended at 15 Ok Reg 1623, eff 5-11-98; Amended at 17
Ok Reg 473, eff 10-12-99 (preemptive); Amended at 19 Ok Reg 1767, eff 6-14-02;
Amended at 20 Ok Reg 872, eff 6-1-03; Amended at 20 Ok Reg 2924, eff 10-1-03
(emergency); Amended at 21 Ok Reg 841, eff 4-26-04; Amended at 26 Ok Reg 840,
eff 6-1-09; Amended at 27 Ok Reg 1241, eff 6-1-10; Amended at 28 Ok Reg 850,
eff 6-1-11; Amended at 29 Ok Reg 794, eff
7-1-12