A deduction is considered in the month the expense is billed or
otherwise becomes due. However, in the case of reimbursable medical expenses, a
deduction can only be considered within thirty days of receiving the
verification of the amount of reimbursement. The preceding applies regardless
of when the assistance group intends to pay the expense. Deductions from income
shall be verified in accordance with rule 5101:4-2-09 of the Administrative
Code.
Deductions for each assistance group are allowed only for the
following:
(A)Gross earned
income deduction: twenty per cent deduction of gross earned income. No
additional deductions (i.e., taxes, pensions, union dues, and the like) except
for costs of self-employment, are allowed from earned income. Excluded earned
income is not subject to this deduction. The earned income of a disqualified
member is subject to this deduction.
(B)Standard
deduction: each assistance group regardless of its income receives the
corresponding standard deduction for the assistance group size. In accordance
with 7 C.F.R 273.9 (in effect on 1/01/2014as in effect on the effective date of this rule), the
United States department of agriculture (USDA) food nutrition service (FNS)
determines the amount of the standard deduction based on the federal poverty
guidelines and indexing of the cost of living increase for each federal fiscal
year. The Ohio department of job and family services (ODJFS) provides this figure
to the county agencies on an annual basis via a food assistance change
transmittal, that can be found in the food assistance certification handbook at
the ODJFS website.
(C)Excess medical
deduction: that portion of medical expenses that is nonreimbursable, over
thirty-five dollars per month, excluding special diets, incurred by any
assistance group member who is elderly or disabled as defined in rule
5101:4-1-03 of the Administrative Code.
(1)Who is
eligible for this deduction?
(a)Spouses or other persons receiving benefits as a dependent of
the supplemental security income (SSI) or disability recipient are not eligible
to receive the deductionAn assistance group with
potential categorical eligibility that contains a supplemental security income
(SSI) applicant that is determined ineligible but later becomes categorically
eligible and entitled to restored benefits shall receive restored benefits
using the excess medical deduction from the beginning of the period for which
SSI benefits are paid, or the original supplemental nutrition assistance
program (SNAP) application date, whichever is later, when the assistance group
incurs such expenses.
(b)Persons
receiving emergency SSI benefits based on presumptive eligibility are eligible
for this deduction.
(c)An assistance group with potential categorical eligibility
that contains an SSI applicant that is determined ineligible but later becomes
categorically eligible and entitled to restored benefits shall receive restored
benefits using the excess medical deduction from the beginning of the period
for which SSI benefits are paid, or the original supplemental nutrition
assistance program (SNAP) application date, whichever is later, when the
assistance group incurs such expensesIndividuals
who are a dependent of a recipient of SSI or disability/blindness benefits are
not eligible for this deduction if they are receiving benefits as a spouse or
other person.
(2)Allowable
medical costs are limited to the following:
(a)Medical and
dental care, including psychotherapy and rehabilitation services, provided by a
licensed practitioner authorized by the state or another qualified health
professional.
(b)Hospitalization
or outpatient treatment, nursing care, and nursing home care. Also included are
payments by the assistance group for an individual who was an assistance group
member immediately prior to entering a hospital or nursing home provided by a
facility recognized by the state.
(c)Prescription
drugs when prescribed by a licensed practitioner and other over-the-counter
medication (including insulin) when approved by a licensed practitioner or
other qualified health professional. In addition, costs of medical supplies,
incontinence products, sick-room equipment (including rental) or other
prescribed equipment or supplies are deductible. The cost of any Schedule I
controlled substance under the Controlled Substances Act 21 U.S.C. 812 (197012/2018) including
medical marijuana and any expenses associated with its use, are not deductible.
(d)Health and
hospitalization insurance policy premiums. The costs of health and accident
policies such as those payable in lump-sum settlements for death or
dismemberment, or income maintenance policies such as those that continue
mortgage or loan payments while the beneficiary is disabled are not deductible.
(e)Medicare
premiums and any cost-sharing or spend-down expenses incurred by medicaid
recipients, as described in 7 C.F.R. 273.9.
(f)Dentures,
hearing aids, and prosthetics.
(g)Costs
associated with any animal (not limited to any type of animal) specially
trained to serve the needs of an elderly or disabled assistance group member
when:
(i)The animal
is specially trained to assist the individual with the medical issue for which
the animal is prescribed, and the individual cannot readily perform on their
own (specific types of trainings, credentials or certifications are not
required); and
(ii)The costs
are associated with securing and maintaining the animal, including but not
limited to, veterinarian bills and food costs.
(h)Eyeglasses
prescribed by a physician skilled in eye disease or by an optometrist.
(i)Monthly
telephone fees for amplifiers and warning signals for handicapped persons, and
costs of telephone typewriter equipment for the deaf.
(j)Reasonable
costs of transportation and lodging to obtain medical treatment or services.
"Reasonable costs for transportation" shall be defined as the current
federal or state mileage reimbursement rate, whichever is higher, for private
automobiles, or actual costs when other forms of transportation are used.
Verification is required only when costs exceed the higher of the federal or
state mileage reimbursement rate or the rate charged is for public
transportation (e.g., local bus service).
(k)Maintaining
an attendant homemaker, home health aide, child care services, or housekeeper,
necessary due to age, infirmity, or illness. In addition, an amount equal to
the one-person allotment shall be deducted as a medical expense when the
assistance group furnishes the majority of the attendant's meals. The allotment
for this meal-related deduction shall be that in effect at the time of initial
certification. The county agency is only required to update the allotment
amount at the next scheduled reapplication; however, the county agency may do
so earlier. When an assistance group incurs attendant care costs that could
qualify under both the medical deduction and the dependent
care deduction, the county agency shall treat the cost
as a medical expensethe cost may be deducted as a
medical expense or a dependent care expense, but not both.
(D)Child/dependent
care deduction: payments for the actual verified expenses for the care of an
individual for whom the assistance group provides dependent care, including
care of a child under the age of eighteen or an incapacitated person of any age
in need of care. A child care expense that is reimbursed or paid for by the
Ohio works first program under Title IV-A of the Social Security Act, (42
U.S.C. 618 (2/2006)5/2017)
shall not be deductible.
(1)Dependent care
expenses are allowable deductions when determined necessary for a group member
to:
(a)Search for,
accept or continue employment;
(b)Comply with
the employment and training requirements described in rule 5101:4-3-30 of the
Administrative Code; or
(c)Attend
training or education in preparation for employment under rule 5101:4-3-30 of
the Administrative Code, unless covered by educational income which has been
excluded under rule 5101:4-4-13 of the Administrative Code.
(2)Dependent care
expenses must be separately identified, necessary to participate in the care
arrangement, and not already paid by another source on behalf of the household.
Allowable dependent care expenses are limited to:
(a)The costs of
care given by a care facility or an individual care provider, including a
relative, so long as the relative providing care is not part of the same SNAP
assistance group as the child or dependent adult receiving care;
(b)Transportation
costs to and from the care facility; and
(c)Activity or
other fees associated with the care provided to the dependent that are
necessary for the household to participate in the care.
(3)For purposes
of paragraph (D) of this rule, "incapacitated" is defined as any
permanent or temporary condition that prevents an individual from participating
fully in normal activities, including but not limited to work or school,
without supervision and that requires the care of another person to ensure the
health and safety of the individual, or a condition or situation that makes a
lack of supervision risky to the health and safety of that individual.
(4)An assistance
group incurring attendant care expenses that could qualify under both the
medical deduction and/or child/dependent care deduction may be deducted as
either a medical expense or child/dependent care expense, but not both.
(E)Shelter
costs: monthly shelter costs over fifty per cent of the assistance group's
income after all other deductions contained in this rule have been allowed.
When the assistance group does not contain an elderly or disabled member, as
defined in rule 5101:4-1-03 of the Administrative Code, the shelter deduction
cannot exceed the maximum shelter deduction provided. These assistance groups
shall receive an excess shelter deduction for the entire monthly cost that
exceeds fifty per cent of the assistance group income after all other
deductions contained in this rule have been allowed. An assistance group with
potential categorical eligibility that contains an SSI applicant that is
determined ineligible but later becomes categorically eligible and entitled to
restored benefits shall receive restored benefits using the excess shelter
deduction from the beginning of the period for that SSI benefits are paid or
the original SNAP application date, whichever is later, when the assistance
group incurs such expenses. The maximum shelter cost deduction shall be
adjusted each fiscal year and the county agencies will be informed of the
amount through the issuance of a food assistance change transmittal, that can be
found in the food assistance certification handbook at the ODJFS website.
Shelter costs shall include only the following:
(1)An assistance
group that receives the homeless shelter deduction under paragraph (H) of this
rule shall not have its shelter expense considered under paragraphs (E) and (F)
of this rule.
(2)Continuing
charges for the shelter occupied by the assistance group, including rent, first
and second mortgages, condo and association fees, or other continuing charges
leading to the ownership of shelter, such as loan repayments for the purchase
of a mobile home, including interest on such payments. Examples of shelter
costs homeless assistance groups may incur are fees for staying at shelters for
the homeless, fees for renting a motel room for a number of days or hours each
month, etc. When a homeless assistance group is living in its car, the car
payment can qualify as a shelter cost.
(3)Property
taxes, state and local assessments, and insurance on the structure itself, but
not separate costs for insuring furniture or personal belongings. When an
assistance group is living in a car, only that portion of the car insurance
premium that covers the car itself may be allowed. License plate fees on a
motor home or car that represents an assistance group's residence are not
assessments and they are not allowable.
(4)One of the
utility allowances listed under paragraph (F) of this rule when applicable. To
receive a utility allowance there shall be an incurred utility expense. Only
separate identifiable utility costs are allowable.
(5)Charges for
the repair of the home itself that was substantially damaged or destroyed due
to a natural disaster such as a fire or flood. Costs for replacement or repair
of normal home furnishings (e.g., bed, refrigerator, stove) or personal
belongings (e.g., clothes, jewelry, linen) are not covered by this rule.
Shelter costs shall not include charges for repair of the home that have been
or will be reimbursed by private or public relief agencies, insurance
companies, or from any other source.
(6)The shelter
costs for the home when temporarily unoccupied by the assistance group because
of employment or training away from home, illness, or abandonment of the home
due to natural disaster or casualty loss. For the costs of a vacated home to be
included in shelter costs, the assistance group shall intend to return to the
home; the current occupants of the home, when any, shall not be claiming the
shelter costs for SNAP purposes; and the home shall not be leased or rented in the
assistance group's absence. The county agency is not required to assist
assistance groups in obtaining verification of this expense when verification
would have to be obtained from a source outside of the project area. assistanceAssistance
groups shall provide verification of actual utility costs for unoccupied homes
when the costs would result in a deduction. An assistance group that has both
an occupied home and an unoccupied home is only entitled to one standard
utility allowance.
(F)Utility
allowance: utility allowances are established by ODJFS and are reviewed and
updated annually. The amounts are updated in the statewide automated
eligibility system and the county agencies are notified of the amounts by
issuance of a food assistance change transmittal, that can be found in the food
assistance certification handbook at the ODJFS website. The utility allowances
include the costs of heating fuel, electricity, water, sewer, trash collection,
and telephone service. A "cooling cost" is a verifiable utility
expense relating to the operation of air conditioning systems or room air
conditioners. This does not include costs relating to the operation of fans.
Types of utility allowances and who is entitled to them:
Each assistance group charged for a utility expense is entitled
a utility allowance. assistanceAssistance groups that are not directly billed by a
utility company but are billed separately when costs are shared or are owed to
a landlord are entitled to a utility allowance. County agencies shall not prorate
utility allowances.
(1)Standard
utility allowance: deduction for the assistance groups that incur heating and
or cooling costs. The standard utility allowance includes the costs of heating
fuel, electricity, cooling costs, water, sewer, trash collection and telephone
service.
Assistance groups
entitled to the use of the standard utility allowance include:
(a)Assistance
groups that are not considered homeless that incur heating and/or cooling
expenses separately from their rent or mortgage are entitled to the standard
utility allowance.
(b)Assistance
groups that incur verified heating costs during the heating season continue to
qualify for the standard utility allowance throughout the year, regardless of
whether they also incur cooling costs, and vice versa.
(c)Assistance
groups in private rental housing that are billed by their landlords on the
basis of individual usage or that are charged a flat rate based on their
individual usage for heating or cooling expenses separately from their rent are
entitled to the standard utility allowance.
(d)Assistance
groups that received more than twenty dollars of direct or indirect assistance
in the past twelve months under the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Act of
1981 (LIHEAA), 42 U.S.C. 94 (01/2012) such as the home energy assistance
program (HEAP) (which is excluded as income), are entitled to the standard utility
allowance whether or not the assistance group incurs any out-of-pocket
expenses.
(e)Assistance
groups that receive direct or indirect energy assistance that is counted as
income and that incur a heating or cooling expense are entitled to use the
standard utility allowance.
(f)Assistance
groups that receive direct or indirect assistance that is excluded from income
consideration (other than that provided under the LIHEAAHEAP) such as utility reimbursements made by the
department of housing and urban development (HUD) and/or the farmers home
administration (FMHA) are entitled to use the standard utility allowance, only
when the amount of their utility heating and/or cooling expenses exceeds the
amount of the energy assistance or utility reimbursement provided.
(g)An assistance
group that has both an occupied and an unoccupied home is only entitled to one
standard utility allowance.
(h)Assistance
groups living in public housing units that have central utility meters and are
charged only for excess heating or cooling costs are entitled to the standard
utility allowance, regardless when they are charged by the utility company or
the landlord.
(i)All
assistance groups that live with another individual, another assistance group
or both, and share heating and/or cooling costs, are entitled to the full
standard utility allowance.
(2)Limited
utility allowance: deduction for the assistance groups that incur two or more
utility expenses, none of which is a heating or cooling expense, but may
include a telephone expense.
(3)Single
standard utility allowance: deduction for assistance groups that incur one
utility expense that is not a heating, cooling or telephone expense.
(4)Standard
telephone allowance: deduction for assistance groups that only incur a telephone
expense.
(G)Child
support: a deduction is provided for legally obligated child support payments
paid by an assistance group member to or for a nonhousehold member, including
payments made to a third party on behalf of the nonhousehold member (vendor payments).
The county agency shall allow a deduction for amounts paid toward arrearages.
Alimony payments made to or for a nonhousehold member shall not be included in
the child support deduction. County agencies shall budget child support
payments prospectively regardless of the budgeting system used for the
assistance group's other circumstances.
(H)Homeless
shelter deduction: an assistance group that is considered to be homeless is
eligible to have this deduction taken in the determination of its net income.
To be eligible for this deduction, the homeless assistance group shall incur
shelter costs during the month. Homeless assistance groups shall be given the
choice of the homeless shelter deduction or actual shelter costs. A homeless
assistance group receiving the homeless shelter deduction cannot have its
shelter expenses considered under paragraphs (E) and (F) of this rule. The
homeless shelter deduction is established by FNS and the amount, when changed,
will be issued through a food assistance change transmittal. Food assistance
change transmittals can be found in the food assistance certification handbook
on the Ohio department of job and family services website.
(I)Verification
of deductions
Nonreimbursable medical expenses of elderly or disabled members
shall be verified at initial certification, reapplication, and whenever a
change of more than twenty-five dollars is reported. Shelter and utility
expenses, shelter and utility expenses for an unoccupied home, other shelter
expenses, dependent care expenses, and legal obligation and actual child
support payments shall be verified. Also, when other deductible expenses
claimed will result in a deduction, the expenses shall be verified. Information
on the application is questionable when it is inconsistent with information
elsewhere on the application or previous application, statements made by the
applicant, information received by the county agency, or in the case of utility
expenses, inconsistent with normal costs for the season and shall be verified.
(J)When a
deductible expense shall be verified and obtaining the verification may delay
the assistance group's certification, the county agency shall advise the
assistance group that the assistance group's eligibility and benefit level
shall be determined without deducting the unverified expense. When the expense
cannot be verified within thirty days of the date of application, the county
agency shall determine the assistance group's eligibility and benefit level
without deducting the unverified expense. When the assistance group
subsequently provides the missing verification, the county agency redetermines
the assistance group's benefits, and provides increased benefits, when any, in
accordance with the timeliness standards for reported changes. The assistance
group is entitled to the restoration of any benefits as a result of the
disallowance of the expense only when the expense could not be verified within
the thirty-day processing standard because the county agency failed to allow
the assistance group sufficient time to verify the expense. When the assistance
group would be ineligible unless the expense is allowed, the assistance group's
application shall be handled as provided in rule 5101:4-5-07 of the
Administrative Code.
Effective: 12/1/2019
Five Year Review (FYR) Dates: 8/27/2019 and 12/01/2024
Certification: CERTIFIED ELECTRONICALLY
Date: 11/05/2019
Promulgated Under: 111.15
Statutory Authority: 5101.54
Rule Amplifies: 5101.54
Prior Effective Dates: 06/02/1980, 04/01/1981, 06/01/1981,
10/01/1981, 01/22/1982, 02/01/1982, 05/01/1982, 01/01/1983, 05/20/1983,
09/24/1983 (Temp.), 11/11/1983, 02/01/1984 (Temp.), 04/01/1984, 10/01/1984
(Emer.), 11/17/1984, 08/16/1985 (Emer.), 11/01/1985 (Emer.), 01/01/1986,
05/01/1986 (Emer.), 06/15/1986 (Emer.), 08/01/1986 (Emer.), 10/30/1986,
04/10/1987 (Emer.), 06/22/1987, 08/01/1987 (Emer.), 10/25/1987, 10/29/1987
(Emer.), 01/22/1988, 09/01/1988 (Emer.), 11/28/1988, 10/01/1989 (Emer.),
12/21/1989, 01/05/1990 (Emer.), 03/22/1990, 10/01/1990 (Emer.), 11/08/1990,
07/01/1991, 10/01/1991 (Emer.), 12/20/1991, 08/01/1992 (Emer.), 10/01/1992
(Emer.), 10/30/1992, 10/01/1993, 11/15/1993, 07/01/1994, 09/01/1994 (Emer.),
10/01/1994, 12/01/1994 (Emer.), 01/01/1995, 05/01/1995, 10/01/1995 (Emer.),
10/31/1995, 12/15/1995, 02/01/1996 (Emer.), 03/14/1996, 09/22/1996 (Emer.),
10/01/1996 (Emer.), 12/21/1996, 01/01/1997 (Emer.), 03/23/1997, 04/01/1997
(Emer.), 06/06/1997, 10/01/1997 (Emer.), 11/20/1997, 03/01/1998 (Emer.),
06/01/1998, 10/01/1998 (Emer.), 12/31/1998, 10/01/1999 (Emer.), 12/16/1999,
10/01/2000 (Emer.), 12/10/2000, 03/01/2001 (Emer.), 06/01/2001 (Emer.),
10/01/2001 (Emer.), 12/13/2001, 10/01/2002 (Emer.), 11/11/2002, 10/01/2003
(Emer.), 12/11/2003, 10/01/2004 (Emer.), 12/06/2004, 10/01/2005 (Emer.),
12/22/2005, 10/01/2006 (Emer.), 11/23/2006, 10/01/2007 (Emer.), 10/29/2007,
10/01/2008 (Emer.), 12/18/2008, 05/01/2009, 07/01/2013, 09/01/2014, 03/01/2017,
01/01/2018, 07/01/2019