(A)When shall a
county agency initiate collection on a claim?
(1)When a claim is
over one hundred twenty-five dollars.
(2)When a claim is
one hundred twenty-five dollars or less if:
(a)The assistance
group is participating in the program; or
(b)The claim has
already been established; or
(c)The claim was
discovered as an overpayment in a quality control review; or
(d)The county
agency has adopted the policy to pursue all claims regardless of the amount.
When the county agency chooses this option, assistance groups shall be informed
of this policy.
(B)When can a
county agency opt not to collect on a claim?
(1)For claims of
one hundred twenty-five dollars or less that cannot be recovered by reducing
the assistance group's allotment because they are not participating in the
program, the county agency shall record the amount of the claim in the case
file so that this amount may be used to offset any lost benefits that may be
owed the assistance group at a later date. The county agency does not have to
complete the JFS 07424, "Report of Claim Determination/Lost Benefits"
(8/2001).
(2)The county
agency shall have the option to initiate collection action for claims of one
hundred twenty-five dollars or less at such time multiple overpayments for an
assistance group total in excess of one hundred twenty-five dollars. When the
county agency chooses this option, assistance groups shall be informed of this
policy.
(C)What is the
process for notifying assistance groups of the intent to collect on a claim?
(1)The county
agency shall send a demand letter or written notification to the assistance
group of the intent to begin the collection action on a claim, in accordance with
Chapter 5101:6-2 of the Administrative Code.
(2)The claim is
considered established for tracking purposes as of the date of the initial
demand letter or written notification.
(3)When the claim
or the amount of the claim was not established at a hearing, the county agency
shall provide the assistance group with a one-time notice of adverse action.
(4)The due date or
time frame for repayment shall be no later than thirty days after the date of
the initial written notification or demand letter.
(5)When any
nonparticipating assistance group, against which collection action has been
initiated, does not respond to the first demand letter, additional demand
letters may be sent at reasonable intervals, such as thirty days, until the
assistance group has responded by paying or agreeing to pay the claim, the
criteria for terminating collection action has been met, or the county agency
initiates other collection actions. When an assistance group falls behind in
making payments or is unable to pay the claim, the assistance group's
eligibility shall not be affected.
(D)What shall
repayment agreements contain?
Any repayment agreement for any claim shall contain:
(1)Due dates or
time frames for the submission of payments; and
(2)Language
specifying that the assistance group is subject to involuntary collection
action if when payment
is not received by the due date and the claim becomes delinquent.
(E)What
determines when a claim is delinquent?
Notwithstanding paragraph (F) of this rule, a claim is
considered delinquent when:
(1)It has not
been paid by the due date and a satisfactory payment arrangement has not been
made. The date of delinquency is the due date on the initial written
notification/demand letter, issued in accordance with paragraph (C) of this rule.
The claim will remain delinquent until payment is received in full, a
satisfactory payment agreement is negotiated, or allotment reduction is
invoked; or
(2)A payment
arrangement is established and a scheduled payment has not been made by the due
date. The date of delinquency is the due date of the missed installment
payment. The claim will remain delinquent until payment is received in full,
allotment reduction is invoked, or when the county agency determines to either
resume or renegotiate the repayment schedule.
(F)When is a claim
not considered delinquent, even though payments on the claim have not been
received?
The claim is not considered delinquent when:
(1)Another claim
for the same assistance group is currently being paid either through an installment
agreement or allotment reduction and the county agency expects to begin
collection on the claim once the prior claim is settled;
(2)The county
agency is unable to determine delinquency status because collection is
coordinated through the court system; or
(3)The claim is
awaiting a fair hearing decision.
(G) How are claims
handled when a claim is subject to a fair hearing?
(1)When the
hearing officer determines a claim exists against the assistance group, the
assistance group shall be re-notified of the claim. Delinquency shall be based
on the due date of this subsequent notice and not on the initial pre-hearing
demand letter sent to the assistance group.
(2)When the
hearing officer determines a claim does not exist then the claim is terminated
or written off in accordance with paragraph (J) of this rule.
(H)What amount
should be collected when the claim is reduced by a court or local prosecutor?
Reduction by a court or local prosecutor of the amount an
assistance group owes on a claim does not automatically relieve the county
agency from administratively pursuing collection of the total claim amount. For
example, if when the
amount of the original claim was two hundred dollars but this amount was
arbitrarily reduced by a local county prosecutor to one hundred dollars, the
county agency has the obligation to administratively pursue the total of two
hundred dollars. The county agency may attempt to collect any overpayment it
has determined to have been received by an assistance group in excess of the
amount ordered to be repaid by a court. The assistance group cannot be forced,
however, to pay the excess amounts. The county agency shall not invoke allotment
reduction without the assistance group's permission to collect amounts in
excess of the court-ordered restitution. Should new evidence be produced that,
according to current regulations, alters the county's determination on the
original claim, the original claim amount shall be revoked and a new amount
initiated.
(I)When can a
county agency compromise on a claim amount?
A county agency may compromise a claim or any portion of a claim
when it can be reasonably determined an assistance group's economic
circumstances dictate that the claim will not be paid in three years.
Compromising a claim is an agreement to adjust the total owed at the end of
three years when the assistance group has made payments corresponding with its
financial circumstances throughout that period of time.
(1)The county
agency may use the full amount of the claim (including any amount compromised)
when determining the amount of benefits that shall be offset in accordance with
rule 5101:4-8-03 of the Administrative Code.
(2)The county
agency may reinstate any compromised portion of a claim when the claim becomes
delinquent.
(J)When can a
county agency terminate and write off a claim?
A terminated claim is a claim in which all collection action has
ceased. A claim written off is no longer considered an account receivable
subject to continued federal, state and county agency collection and reporting
requirements.
The following describes the claim termination policy:
(1)Invalid claim:
when the county agency finds the claim is invalid it shall discharge the claim
and reflect the event as a balance adjustment rather than a termination, unless
it is appropriate to pursue the overpayment as a different type of claim (i.e.,
as an inadvertent household error rather than an intentional program violation
claim.)
(2)Death of all
adult assistance group members: when all adult assistance group members die
then the county agency shall terminate and write off the claim, unless the
county agency plans to pursue the claim against the estate.
(3)Claim balance
less than twenty-five dollars: when the claim balance is less than twenty-five
dollars and the claim has been delinquent for ninety days or more the county
agency shall terminate and write off the claim, unless other claims exist
against this assistance group resulting in an aggregate claim total of
twenty-five dollars or more.
(4)Not cost
effective: when the county agency determines it is not cost effective to pursue
the claim any further (i.e., the cost of further collection action exceeds the
amount that can be recovered) the county agency shall terminate and write off
the claim.
(5)Delinquent
claim: when the claim is delinquent for three years or more the county agency
shall terminate and write off the claim unless it plans to continue to pursue
the claim through the treasury offset program.
(6)Cannot locate
the assistance group: when the assistance group cannot be found the county
agency may terminate and write off the claim.
(K)When can a
terminated or written off claim be reinstated?
(1)Previously
terminated or compromised claims may be reactivated when the assistance group
provides a voluntary payment. County agencies shall only reactivate an amount
equal to the offset or voluntary payment amount, rather than reactivating the
full value of the outstanding claim amount. Reactivating only the amount equal
to the offset or the voluntary payment does not change the status of the
original claim. The balance remains in terminated or compromised status. To
reactivate a previously compromised claim, the balance of the claim shall be
recompromised by renegotiating with the assistance group.
(2)When a
specific event (e.g. winning the lottery) occurs that increases the likelihood
of further collections, the county agency may reinstate the claim.
(L)What are
acceptable forms of payment?
(1)Reducing
benefits before issuance: this includes allotment reductions and offsets to
restored benefits; however, the county agency shall follow the instructions and
limits found in paragraphs (M)(1) and (M)(3) of this rule.
(2)Reducing
benefits after issuance: benefits may be recouped from an assistance group's
electronic benefit transfer (EBT) account; however, the county agency shall
follow the instruction and limits found in paragraph (M)(2) of this rule.
(3)Cash: cash,
check, money order and credit or debit cards are acceptable forms of repayment;
however, when a county agency does not have the capability to accept credit or
debit cards it does not have to accept this form of repayment.
(4)Public service:
an assistance group member may be required to perform public service to repay a
claim; however, this form of payment shall be ordered by a court specifically
for the repayment of a claim. When the court does not order a rate of pay, the
federal minimum wage shall be used.
(5)Treasury offset
program: to offset the claim with federal payments the county agency shall
follow the procedures described in rule 5101:4-8-30 of the Administrative Code.
(M) What collection
methods are available to the county agency?
(1)Allotment
reduction: a county agency shall automatically collect payments for any claim
by reducing the amount of monthly benefits an assistance group receives in
accordance with rule 5101:4-8-17 of the Administrative Code unless the
assistance group agrees to make higher regular payments to repay the claim.
(a)For an
intentional program violation claim, limit the amount reduced for each category
of the claim to the greater of twenty dollars per month or twenty per cent of
the assistance group's monthly entitlement, before disqualification of the
assistance group member found to have committed the intentional program
violation, in accordance with rule 5101:4-8-17 of the Administrative Code,
unless the assistance group agrees to a higher amount.
(b)For an
inadvertent household error or agency error claim, limit the amount reduced for
each category of the claim to the greater of ten dollars per month or ten per
cent of the assistance groups monthly allotment, unless the assistance group
agrees to a higher amount.
(c)The county
agency shall not reduce the initial allotment when the assistance group is
first certified unless the assistance group agrees to this reduction.
(d)When an
assistance group has multiple claims against it, the county agency shall invoke
allotment reduction on one claim at a time. The county agency shall recoup
claims in sequence, obtaining full payment on the oldest claim before
proceeding to the next claim.
(2)EBT reduction:
the county agency shall allow an assistance group to pay its claim using
benefits from its EBT account.
The county agency shall comply with the following EBT claims
collection and adjustment requirements:
(a)Collecting from
active (or reactivated) EBT benefits:
(i)The county
agency shall obtain written permission from the assistance group pursuant to
paragraph (M)(2)(d) of this rule. This permission may be obtained in advance.
(ii)Oral
permission is allowed for one time reductions as long as the county agency
sends the assistance group a receipt of the transaction within ten days after
the reduction.
(iii)The county
agency may retain a percentage of the collection as an incentive pursuant to
rule 5101:4-8-23 of the Administrative Code.
(b)For making an
adjustment with expunged EBT benefits:
(i)The county
agency shall adjust the amount of any claim by subtracting any expunged amount
from the EBT benefit account for which the county agency becomes aware. The
county agency shall document the use of the expunged benefits as a claim offset
in the statewide automated eligibility system to ensure no duplicate use.
(ii)The county
agency shall not retain a percentage of the collection as an incentive pursuant
to rule 5101:4-8-23 of the Administrative Code when using expunged benefits to
collect on an overpayment claim.
(c)A collection
from an EBT account shall be non-settling against the benefit drawdown account.
(d)At a minimum,
any agreement with the assistance group to collect a claim using active EBT
benefits shall include:
(i)A statement
that this collection activity is strictly voluntary;
(ii)The amount of
the payment;
(iii)The frequency
of the payment (i.e., whether monthly or one time only);
(iv)The length (if
any) of the agreement; and
(v)A statement
that the assistance group may revoke this agreement at any time.
(3)Offsets to
restored benefits: the county agency shall reduce any restored benefits owed to
an assistance group by the amount of any outstanding claim, except for an
"initial" benefit month in accordance with paragraph (G) of rule 5101:4-8-03
of the Administrative Code. Offsetting may be done at any time during the claim
establishment and collection process.
(4)Lump sum
payments: the county agency shall accept any payment for a claim whether it
represents full or partial payment. The payment may be in any of the acceptable
formats.
(5)Installment
payments: the county agency may accept installment payments made for a claim as
part of a negotiated repayment agreement.
When the assistance group fails to submit a payment in
accordance with the terms of its negotiated repayment schedule, the assistance
group's claim becomes delinquent and will be subject to additional collection
actions.
(6)Public service:
when authorized by a court, the value of a claim may be paid by the assistance
group performing public service. When the court does not order a rate of pay,
the federal minimum wage shall be used.
(7)Other
collection actions: the county agency may employ any other collection actions
to collect claims. These actions include, but are not limited to, referrals to
collection and/or other similar private and public sector agencies, and small
claims court.
(8)Unspecified
joint collections: when an unspecified joint collection is received for a
combined public assistance and food assistance supplemental nutrition assistance program (SNAP )recipient
claim, each program shall receive its pro rata share of the amount collected.
An unspecified joint collection is when funds are received in response to
correspondence or a referral containing both the food
assistance SNAP and other program claim
and the debtor does not specify which claim to apply the collection.
The county agency shall not use additional collection methods
against individuals in an assistance group that is already having its benefit reduced
unless the additional payment is voluntary.
The county agency may continue to use any other collection
method against any individual who is not a current member of the assistance
group even when the assistance group is undergoing allotment reduction.
For agency error claims established prior to September 22, 1996
the county agency may not use involuntary allotment reduction for the
collection. When an individual volunteers for allotment reduction the county
agency shall accept the allotment reduction for collection.
(N)What happens
when an assistance group overpays on a claim?
When an assistance group has overpaid a claim, the county agency
shall determine if there are other food assistance SNAP claims the overage can be applied to. When there
are no other claims the overage shall be refunded. The assistance group shall
be paid by whatever method the county agency deems appropriate considering the
circumstances. The county agency shall issue the amount to the assistance group
that includes the incentive retained by the county agency.
(O) How is the claim
handled when a food assistance SNAP recipient moves to or from another state?
(1)Unless a
transfer occurs as outlined in paragraph (O)(2) of this rule, the county agency
is responsible for initiating and continuing collection action on any food assistance SNAP recipient
claim regardless of whether the assistance group remains in the state.
(2)The county
agency may accept a claim from another state agency when the assistance group
with the claim moves into the county. The state agency that overpaid benefits
to the assistance group shall have the first opportunity to collect any
overpayment. However, when the state agency that overpaid benefits to the
assistance group does not take prompt action to collect, then the county agency
administering the area into which the assistance group moves should initiate
action to collect the overpayment. Prior to initiating action to collect such
overpayments the county agency shall contact the state agency that overpaid
benefits to ascertain that it does not intend to pursue prompt collection. The
incentive for any collected claims shall be retained by the county agency
collecting the overpayment. Once a county agency accepts the responsibility for
an overpayment claim, the claim is the county agency's responsibility for
future collection and reporting.
(P)How is a claim
handled when a food assistance SNAP recipient moves to a different county?
(1)When an
assistance group moves and applies for or receives food
assistance SNAP benefits from a new county
of residence, the assistance group case file material shall be transferred to
the new county of residence.
(2)Any associated
claim case shall not transfer from the original county of residence to the new
county of residence. However, the transferred assistance group case file shall
contain copies of documentation that a claim exists. When there is an
associated claim case, the county shall follow the procedures outlined in the
case file transfer procedures for food assistanceSNAP.
(3)The county
establishing the claim remains responsible for any applicable court action or
collection action concerning an outstanding claim balance.
(4)The new county
of residence shall implement allotment reduction for claim collection upon the
request of the original county.
(5)When the new
county of residence makes a collection on a claim, it shall be entered into the
statewide automated eligibility system.
(6)The county
agency that initially completes the claim and, in the case of an intentional
program violation the prosecution or administrative disqualification hearing,
is entitled to the applicable incentive. These incentives will be restored on a
quarterly basis.
(Q) What happens
when a claim is included in a bankruptcy proceeding?
A county or state agency shall act on behalf of the United
States department of agriculture food and nutrition service (FNS) in any
bankruptcy proceeding against bankrupt assistance groups with outstanding
recipient claims. Bankruptcy information shall be documented in the statewide
automated eligibility system. Bankruptcy of one assistance group member does
not terminate a claim when there are other adult assistance group members
liable for the claim.
Effective: 12/1/2020
Five Year Review (FYR) Dates: 7/24/2020 and 12/01/2025
Certification: CERTIFIED ELECTRONICALLY
Date: 10/22/2020
Promulgated Under: 111.15
Statutory Authority: 5101.54
Rule Amplifies: 329.04, 329.042, 5101.54
Prior Effective Dates: 06/02/1980, 06/20/1980, 10/01/1981,
06/02/1982, 08/15/1982, 09/27/1982, 01/01/1983, 06/10/1983, 08/01/1983,
09/24/1983 (Temp.), 11/11/1983, 04/01/1984 (Temp.), 06/01/1984, 08/01/1984
(Emer.), 10/20/1984, 12/31/1984 (Emer.), 04/01/1985, 05/03/1985 (Emer.),
08/01/1985, 08/20/1986 (Emer.), 11/15/1986, 03/24/1988 (Emer.), 06/18/1988,
10/01/1988 (Emer.), 11/18/1988, 04/01/1989, 05/01/1989 (Emer.), 07/11/1989
(Emer.), 07/17/1989, 09/17/1989, 01/05/1990 (Emer.), 05/22/1990, 10/01/1990,
10/01/1991, 02/03/1992, 08/01/1992 (Emer.), 10/30/1992, 06/01/1994, 07/01/1994,
09/01/1994, 07/01/1995, 08/01/1995, 12/01/1995, 05/01/1996, 09/22/1996 (Emer.),
10/01/1996 (Emer.), 11/22/1996, 11/22/1996 (Emer.), 01/01/1997 (Emer.),
02/07/1997, 03/01/1997, 03/23/1997, 10/01/1997, 02/01/1998 (Emer.), 02/23/1998,
08/01/1998, 05/01/1999, 08/01/2001 (Emer.), 08/11/2001, 09/01/2004, 03/23/2006,
12/01/2009, 02/01/2012, 08/01/2015