This rule describes the nonfinancial eligibility standards
used to determine citizenship and alien status of individuals applying for or
receiving supplemental nutrition assistance program (SNAP) benefits. Unless an
individual meets the criteria described in rule 5101:4-3-06 of the
Administrative Code for victims of severe forms of trafficking, the individual
must meet the requirements of this rule to receive SNAP.
(A)Who is eligible
for SNAP?
(1)A United States
(U.S.) citizen or non-citizen national,
The "United States" is defined as the fifty states,
the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, Northern Mariana islands, and the
Virgin islands. In addition, non-citizen nationals from American Samoa or
Swain's island are considered U.S. citizens for the purposes of the SNAP
program.
(2)An individual
who is:
(a)An American
Indian who:
(i)Was born in
Canada and possesses at least fifty per cent of blood of the American Indian
race to whom the provisions of section 289 of the Immigration and Nationality
Act of 1952 (INA), 8 U.S.C. 1359 (06/1952), apply; or
(ii)Is a member
of an Indian tribe as defined in section 4(e) of the Indian Self-Determination
and Education Assistance Act of 1951, 25 U.S.C. 450b(e) (12/2000), that is
recognized as eligible for the special programs and services provided by the
U.S. to Indians because of their status as Indians.
(b)A member of the
Hmong or Highland Laotian tribe who is:
(i)An individual
lawfully residing in the U.S. and who was a member of the Hmong or Highland
Laotian tribe at the time that the tribe rendered assistance to U.S. personnel
by taking part in a military or rescue operation during the Vietnam era
beginning August 5, 1964 and ending May 7, 1975;
(ii)The spouse,
or surviving spouse of such Hmong or Highland Laotian described in paragraph
(A)(2)(b)(i) of this rule; or
(iii)An unmarried
dependent child, or surviving dependent child of such Hmong or Highland Laotian
described in paragraph (A)(2)(b)(i) of this rule who is under the age of
eighteen or a full-time student under the age of twenty-two provided the child
was dependent upon him or her at the time of his or her death; or an unmarried
disabled child age eighteen or older if the child was disabled and dependent on
the person prior to the child's eighteenth birthday. Child means the legally
adopted or biological child of the person described in paragraph (A)(2)(b)(i)
of this rule.
(3)An alien
determined to be a qualified alien as described in paragraph (B) of this rule.
A qualified alien is a federal term referring to a pool of non-U.S. citizens
eligible to receive SNAP, provided all other eligibility requirements are met.
(B)Who is
considered a qualified alien?
An alien that meets the criteria described in paragraph (B)(1)
of this rule is considered to be a qualified alien for the SNAP program. An
alien that meets the criteria described in paragraph (B)(2) of this rule must
also meet at least one of the additional criteria listed in paragraph (B)(3) of
this rule to be considered a qualified alien for the SNAP program.
(1)An alien with
an alien status listed below is a qualified alien for the purposes of the SNAP
program:
(a)An alien who is
granted asylum under section 208 of the INA, 8 U.S.C 1158 (12/2008);
(b)A refugee who
is admitted to the U.S. under section 207 of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1157 (5/2005);
(c)An Afghan or
Iraqi alien admitted to the U.S. who was granted a special immigrant visa (SIV)
under section 101(a)(27) of the INA, 8 U.S.C 1101 (1/2014);
(d)An alien whose
deportation or removal is being withheld under section 243(h) of the INA as in
effect prior to April 1, 1997, or whose removal is withheld under section
241(b)(3) of the INA, 8 U.S.C 1231 (1/2006);
(e)An alien who is
a Cuban or Haitian entrant as defined in section 501(e) of the Refugee
Education Assistance Act of 1980, 8 U.S.C. 1522 note (9/1996);
(f)An Amerasian
admitted pursuant to section 584 of Public Law (Pub. L. No.) 100-202 (12/1987),
as amended by Pub. L. No. 100-461 (10/1988); or
(g)A lawful alien
with one of the following military connections:
(i)A veteran
honorably discharged for reasons other than alien status, who fulfills the
minimum active-duty service requirements of 38 U.S.C. 5303A(d), (12/2016)
including an individual who died in active military, naval or air service duty.
The definition of veteran includes an individual who served before July 1,
1946, in the organized military forces of the government of the commonwealth of
the Philippines while such forces were in the service of the armed forces of
the U.S. or in the Philippine scouts, as described in 38 U.S.C 107 (10/2010).
(ii)An individual
on active duty (other than training) in the armed forces of the U.S.
(iii)The spouse
and unmarried dependent children of a person described in paragraph
(B)(1)(g)(i) or (B)(1)(g)(ii) of this rule, including the spouse of a deceased
veteran, provided the marriage fulfilled the requirements of 38 U.S.C. 1304
(8/1991) and the spouse has not remarried. An unmarried dependent child is: a
child who is under the age of eighteen or, a full-time student, under the age
of twenty-two; an unmarried dependent child of a deceased veteran provided the
child was dependent upon the veteran at the time of the veteran's death, or an
unmarried disabled child age eighteen or older if the child was disabled and
dependent on the veteran prior to the child's eighteenth birthday. Child means
the legally adopted or biological child of the person described in paragraph
(B)(1)(g)(i) or (B)(1)(g)(ii) of this rule.
(2)The following
aliens must also meet at least one of the additional criteria listed in
paragraph (B)(3) of this rule in order to be considered a qualified alien for
the SNAP program:
(a)An alien
lawfully admitted for permanent residence under the INA;
(b)An alien
paroled into the U.S. under section 212(d)(5) of the INA, 8 U.S.C 1182 (3/2013)
for a period of at least one year;
(c)An alien
granted conditional entry pursuant to section 203(a)(7) of the INA as in effect
prior to April 1, 1980;
(d)An alien battered
or subjected to extreme cruelty in the U.S by a spouse or a parent or by a
member of the spouse's or parent's family residing in the same residence as the
alien at the time of the abuse, an alien whose child has been battered or
subjected to battery or cruelty, or an alien child whose parent has been
battered. Verification and documentation procedures for this status are defined
in exhibit B of attachment 5 of the department of justice (DOJ) interim
guidance dated November 17, 1997 (62 FR 61344).
(3)The additional
criteria for aliens listed in paragraph (B)(2) of this rule are:
(a)Has resided in
the U.S. for a period of five years or more beginning on the date of the
alien's entry into the U.S. The status as a qualified alien, as defined in
paragraph (B)(2) of this rule, must be maintained during the five year period;
(b)Is under
eighteen years of age, regardless of the date of entry;
(c)Is in receipt
of federal government benefits or assistance for disability or blindness
regardless of the date of entry, or;
(d)Is an alien
lawfully admitted for permanent residence under the INA who has forty
qualifying quarters as determined under Title II of the Social Security Act
(8/1996).
(C)How does a
county agency determine when a qualified alien has forty qualifying quarters?
The county agency shall:
(1)Include
qualifying quarters from the work of a parent (natural, adoptive and step) of
the alien before the alien became eighteen years of age (including quarters
worked before the alien was born or adopted);
(2)Include
qualifying quarters credited from the work of a spouse of the alien during
their marriage when they are still married or the spouse is deceased;
(3)Exclude
quarters of a spouse when the couple divorces prior to a determination of SNAP
eligibility. However, when the county agency determines eligibility of an alien
based on the quarters of coverage of the spouse, and then the couple divorces,
the alien's eligibility continues until the next recertification. At that time,
the county agency must determine the alien's eligibility without crediting the
alien with the former spouse's quarters of coverage;
(4)Exclude
quarters that the alien actually received any federal means-tested public
benefit, such as Ohio works first, supplemental security income or medicaid, or
actually received SNAP benefits. Likewise, a parent's or spouse's quarter is
not creditable when the parent or spouse actually received any federal
means-tested public benefit or actually received SNAP benefits in that quarter;
The county agency must evaluate quarters of coverage and receipt
of federal means-tested public benefits on a calendar year basis. The county
agency must first determine the number of quarters creditable in a calendar
year, then identify those quarters that the alien (or parent or spouse of the
alien) received federal means-tested public benefits and then remove those
quarters from the number of quarters of coverage earned or credited to the
alien in that calendar year. However, when the alien earns the fortieth quarter
of coverage prior to applying for SNAP benefits or any other federal
means-tested public benefit in that same quarter, the county agency must allow
that quarter toward the forty qualifying quarters total.
(5)Verify whether
a lawful permanent resident has earned or can receive credit for a total of
forty qualifying quarters. However, the quarters of coverage history system
(QCHS) of the social security administration (SSA) may not show all qualifying
quarters. For instance, SSA records do not show current year earnings and in
some cases, the last year's earnings, depending on the time of the request.
Also, in some cases, an applicant may have work from uncovered employment that
is not documented by SSA, but is countable toward the forty quarters test. In
both these cases, the individual, rather than SSA, would need to verify the
quarters
(D)What are the
citizenship and alien status verification requirements?
(1)When an
assistance group indicates that one or more of its members are U.S. citizens,
but the county agency questions this declaration, the county agency must verify
the member's citizenship in accordance with "attachment 4" of the
U.S. DOJ interim guidance dated November 17, 1997 (62 Fed. Reg. 61344) that
outlines documents that verify an individual's status as a U.S. citizen or
non-citizen national:
(a)When the forms
of verification suggested in "attachment 4" of the U.S. DOJ interim
guidance cannot be obtained and the assistance group can provide a reasonable
explanation as to why verification is not available, the county agency shall
accept a signed statement from a third party indicating a reasonable basis for
personal knowledge that declares under penalty of perjury that the member in
question is a U.S. citizen. The signed statement shall contain a warning of the
penalties for helping someone commit fraud.
(b)Absent
verification or third party attestation of U.S. citizenship, the member whose
citizenship is in question is ineligible to participate until the issue is
resolved. The member whose citizenship is in question will have his or her
income and resources considered available to any remaining assistance group
members as described in rule 5101:4-6-13 of the Administrative Code.
(c)The county
agency shall accept participation in another program as acceptable when
verification of citizenship was obtained for that program.
(2)An alien is
ineligible for SNAP until acceptable documentation is provided unless:
(a)The county
agency has submitted a copy of a document provided by the assistance group to
the U.S. citizenship and immigration service (USCIS) under the U.S. department
of homeland security (DHS) for verification. Pending such verification, the
county agency shall not delay, deny, reduce or terminate the individual's
eligibility for benefits on the basis of the individual's immigration status.
(b)The applicant
or county agency has submitted a request to SSA for information regarding the
number of quarters of work that can be credited to the individual. SSA has
responded that the individual has fewer than forty quarters, and the individual
provides documentation from SSA that SSA is conducting an investigation to
determine if more quarters can be credited. When SSA indicates that the number
of qualifying quarters that can be credited is under investigation, the county
agency must certify the individual for up to six months from the date of the
original determination of insufficient quarters pending the results of the
investigation.
(c)The applicant
or the county agency has submitted a request to a federal agency for
verification of information affecting the individual's eligible alien status.
The county agency must certify the individual for up to six months from the
date of the original request for verification pending the results of the
investigation.
(E)Is there a
timeframe for verifying citizenship?
(1)The county
agency must provide alien applicants with a reasonable opportunity to submit
acceptable documentation of their eligible alien status. A reasonable
opportunity must be at least ten days from the date of the county agency's
request for an acceptable document.
(2)When the county
agency fails to provide an alien applicant with a reasonable opportunity to
submit documentation, the county agency must provide the assistance group with
benefits no later than thirty days following the date of application, provided
the assistance group is otherwise eligible.
(F)How does the
county agency determine the validity of documents?
(1)The county
agency shall verify the authenticity of the documentation of eligible alien
status of applicant aliens. When an alien does not wish for the county agency
to contact the USCIS to verify his or her immigration status, the county agency
must give the assistance group the option of withdrawing its application or
participating without that assistance group member in accordance with paragraph
(H) of this rule. The U.S. DOJ interim guidance dated November 17, 1997 (62 FR
61344) contains information on acceptable documents and USCIS codes.
(2)The county
agency shall verify the validity of the documents presented by applicant aliens
through the systematic alien verification for entitlements (SAVE) program. In
some instances validity of documents shall be verified by submitting the USCIS, "Document Verification Request" form
G-845 (5/29/2018) to the appropriate office, along with the properadditional documentation. SAVE procedures are described
in rule 5101:4-7-14 of the Administrative Code.
(G) What happens
when an individual's status as an alien changes?
(1)Each category
of eligible alien status stands alone for purposes of determining eligibility.
(2)Subsequent
adjustment to a more limited status does not override eligibility based on an
earlier less rigorous status. Likewise, when eligibility expires under one
eligibility status, the county agency must determine if eligibility exists
under another status.
(H)What happens
when an assistance group indicates an inability or unwillingness to provide
documentation of alien status?
When an assistance group indicates inability or unwillingness to
provide documentation of alien status for any assistance group member, that
member shall be classified as an ineligible alien. In such cases, the county
agency must not continue efforts to obtain that documentation, unless the
individual requests assistance from the county agency.
(I)Should the
county agency report illegal aliens?
County agencies shall report to the Ohio department of job and
family services when an applicant or recipient is known to be an illegal alien.
To be a known illegal alien, there must be a finding of fact or a conclusion of
law made as part of a formal determination that is conducted by the USCIS. Only
documentation provided by the USCIS or the executive office of administrative
review (e.g. a final order of deportation) shall be considered evidence.
Effective: 12/1/2023
Five Year Review (FYR) Dates: 2/1/2026
Certification: CERTIFIED ELECTRONICALLY
Date: 10/30/2023
Promulgated Under: 111.15
Statutory Authority: 5101.54
Rule Amplifies: 329.04, 329.042, 5101.54
Prior Effective Dates: 06/02/1980, 04/01/1981, 06/18/1981,
09/27/1982, 05/20/1983 (Emer.), 11/15/1986, 08/01/1987 (Emer.), 10/25/1987,
07/20/1988 (Emer.), 10/16/1988, 08/01/1992 (Emer.), 10/30/1992, 06/01/1993, 09/01/1994,
09/22/1996 (Emer.), 12/13/1996 (Emer.), 12/23/1996, 01/01/1997 (Emer.),
03/23/1997, 04/01/1997 (Emer.), 06/06/1997, 02/01/1998 (Emer.), 02/23/1998,
06/07/1998, 11/01/1998 (Emer.), 12/01/1998, 05/11/1999, 06/01/2001 (Emer.), 08/27/2001,
12/05/2002, 04/01/2004, 12/01/2004, 09/01/2006, 10/02/2008, 11/01/2009,
03/01/2010, 07/01/2010, 06/01/2015, 02/01/2021