Except for the provisions that are listed in rules
5101:1-23-20.1 and 5101:1-23-20.2 of the Administrative Code, all payments
received by assistance group members, and in some instances non-assistance
group members, are considered income for purposes of determining eligibility
for the Ohio works first (OWF) program. Income is categorized as earned or
unearned.
(A)What is gross
earned income?
(1)"Gross
earned income" means the total amount of gross wages before taxes or
deductions received in a month by all of the employed individuals in the
assistance group.
(2)Gross earned
income includes:
(a)All wages, back
pay, bonuses and awards paid by the employer, commissions, severance pay,
payments from job corps, work training programs, on-the-job training programs,
sick leave paid as wages, annual leave, holiday and vacation pay.
(b)Wages legally
obligated to members of the assistance group but are diverted to a third party,
as described in rule 5101:4-4-13 of the Administrative Code.
(c)Earnings of an
individual residing with the assistance group who is a required assistance
group member but who is ineligible to be included in the assistance group as
described in rule 5101:1-23-10 of the Administrative Code.
(d)Earnings of the
spouse of a married pregnant woman with no other OWF eligible children.
(i)The spouse's
income is added to the pregnant woman's income.
(ii)The assistance
group's total income, less appropriate disregards, is compared to the payment
standard for two.
(iii)When the
total income is less than the payment standard for two, the pregnant woman's
eligibility for cash assistance is determined in accordance with paragraph (I)
of this rule, using only her income.
(iv)Once the child
is born, the spouse shall be added to the assistance group in accordance with
the provisions described in rule 5101:1-23-10 of the Administrative Code and
his income shall be used in determining continued eligibility.
(e)State temporary
disability insurance and temporary workers' compensation payments are
considered gross earnings when such payments meet all of the following
conditions:
(i)The payment
is employer-funded; and,
(ii)The payment
is made to an individual who remains employed during recuperation from a
temporary illness or injury pending return to the job; and,
(iii)The payment
is specifically characterized under state law as a temporary wage replacement.
(B)What are gross
self-employment earnings?
(1)"Gross
self-employment earnings" means the total profit from a business
enterprise after the deduction of either fifty per cent of the gross receipts
or the actual verified expenses (i.e., the business expenses directly related
to producing the goods or services) from the gross receipts.
(2)Gross monthly
self-employment earnings are based on an estimate of the individual's annual
earnings.
(C)What is gross
unearned income?
(1)"Gross
unearned income" is income that is not gross earned income from employment
or self-employment.
(2)It is the total
amount of unearned income that is received in the month by all members of the
assistance group, and of a parent ineligible to be included in the assistance
group, as described in rule 5101:1-23-10 of the Administrative Code.
(3)Gross unearned
income includes but is not limited to payments from the following:
(a)Annuities;
(b)Pensions;
(c)Retirement
funds;
(d)Veterans
benefits;
(e)Workers'
compensation;
(f)Unemployment
compensation;
(g)Social security
retirement, survivor's and disability insurance (RSDI) benefits;
(h)Cash
contributions from persons, organizations or assistance agencies;
(i)Income
allocated to the assistance group from a required individual who is ineligible
to be included in the OWF assistance group as described in rule 5101:1-23-10 of
the Administrative Code.
(j)A
non-recurring lump-sum payment that is not anticipated or expected to be
received again. Receipt of a non-recurring lump-sum payment is only considered
income in the month received;
(k)Child support
and alimony payments received by the assistance group.
(i)Child support
is considered as countable income in all budget calculations until the
assignment of support is effective as described in rule 5101:1-3-10 of the
Administrative Code.
(ii)Direct
payments of support received by an assistance group from the month of
application through the month in which eligibility is determined and assistance
is approved shall be budgeted as unearned income.
(iii)Once the
assignment of support is effective, any child support received by the
assistance group is not counted as income in the actual grant calculation.
(iv)When the
county agency adds an individual to an existing assistance group, the child
support assignment is effective the first day of the month following the month
the individual is added to the assistance group. The child support assignment
may be deemed retroactive to the date the individual is required to be included
in the assistance group. However, the child support payments received by or for
the added individual prior to the effective date of assignment shall be treated
as unearned income.
(v)In some
circumstances, the child support payments received by the child support enforcement
agency (CSEA) cannot all be distributed for present, future and past months.
This results in a refund of child support payable directly to the assistance
group. When child support money has been distributed by the CSEA and an amount
is refunded to the assistance group, the amount may be considered a
non-recurring lump sum as described in paragraph (C)(3)(j) of this rule.
(D)When is income
available to the assistance group?
(1)Income shall be
received or reasonably anticipated to be received by the assistance group
during the calendar month to be used in determining eligibility for OWF.
(a)Availability
depends upon the date of receipt and the number of months the income is
intended to cover.
(b)In certain
instances, income may need to be apportioned to future months.
(c)An employee
under an annual contract of employment shall have the income from such contract
averaged over the number of months covered under the contract regardless of
whether the employee chooses to receive the income in fewer months.
(2)Income received
by a member of the assistance group is considered available to all members of
the assistance group. This includes the receipt of social security Title II
benefits. When a Title II beneficiary is a minor, benefits are usually paid through
a representative payee. When the beneficiary is a member of the assistance
group, it is necessary to determine when the entire amount of the Title II
benefit is counted as income to the assistance group.
(a)When the
representative payee resides in the same household, the total amount of Title
II benefits received for the beneficiary is counted in determining the
assistance group's eligibility for OWF.
(b)When the
representative payee does not reside in the same household as the beneficiary,
only that portion made available to the beneficiary and/or caretaker is
countable. Title II benefits retained by a representative payee who does not
reside in the same household as the beneficiary are not considered potential
income to the OWF assistance group.
(3)When income is
received jointly by a member of the assistance group and one or more persons
not in the assistance group, the assistance group member's portion to be
considered is the amount made available to the assistance group member unless
evidence is produced to the contrary.
(4)The income of a
parent ineligible to be included in the assistance group, as described in rule
5101:1-23-10 of the Administrative Code, is considered in determining the
assistance group's eligibility and payment, except for excluded income
described in rule 5101:1-23-20.1 of the Administrative Code.
(5)The county
agency shall explore with each assistance group the potential development of
monthly income. The assistance group shall apply for any monthly benefits that
it is entitled. A county agency shall not require the assistance group to apply
for lump-sum withdrawals of retirement or pension funds that would negate the
drawing of monthly benefits in the near future.
(6)The assistance
group, including the person responsible for a child receiving OWF benefits, is
responsible for giving information necessary for income determinations, and for
taking all actions necessary to obtain unconditionally available income.
(a)Income shall be
unconditionally available when the assistance group has only to claim or accept
the income, or to establish eligibility for the income; e.g., relative's offer
of a contribution, or RSDI benefits.
(b)Ineligibility
to participate in OWF results when the assistance group refuses to accept
unconditionally available income.
(E)How is gross
earned and unearned income calculated?
(1)Each assistance
group member's monthly gross income amount shall be rounded down to the nearest
whole dollar by dropping all cents in gross weekly, biweekly, or semimonthly
income prior to applying the conversion factors listed in paragraph (E)(3) of
this rule.
(2)Income received
in a frequency other than monthly shall be converted into a monthly amount. All
cents shall be dropped after multiplying the individual's income by the
appropriate conversion factor, and prior to applying applicable earned income
disregards, as described in paragraph (H)(2) of this rule. Hourly rates that
contain cents are not rounded, but are multiplied in the exact amount.
(3)Conversion
shall be performed using the following factors:
(a)Income received
on a weekly basis is multiplied by 4.3.
(b)Income received
biweekly (every two weeks) is multiplied by 2.15.
(c)Income
received semimonthly (twice a month) is multiplied by 2.
(4)When the employed
individual works the same number of hours per pay period, the gross monthly
income shall be computed by either using the gross earnings listed on the
individual's pay stubs or by multiplying the number of hours per pay period by
the hourly rate of pay.
(5)When the
employed individual has fluctuating hours, the pays shall be averaged before
converting to a gross monthly amount.
(a)When there are
more than four weeks of pay stubs available and the individual states that an
average of a longer period of time is more representative because the income
received in the most recent four weeks was less or greater than average, the
county agency may use all available income-related information for the
immediately preceding three-month period. This includes situations when the
individual disagrees with the use of income from the past four-week period as
representative of future income. Some pay stubs reflect year-to-date earnings
and this is an acceptable method of determining average income for longer than
the four-week period.
(b)When there are
fewer than four weeks of pay stubs available, the county agency may use all
available income-related information to arrive at a representative figure. This
includes situations when the employed assistance group member disagrees with
the use of earnings from the past four-week period as indicative of future
earnings.
(6)When the
employment is new and there are no pay stubs available yet and the employer
does not provide a statement of pay rate and expected number of hours to be
worked, the county agency may project an estimated amount for a pay period
based on projected wages and hours as reported by the individual.
(F)How is
self-employment income calculated?
Self-employment income is calculated by deducting the verified business
expenses or a standard deduction of fifty per cent from the gross
self-employment receipts. Gross receipts is the total profit of a business
enterprise.
(1)Gross receipts
(a)In situations
in which an individual has self-employment income, the county agency shall
determine the gross receipts for the month based on an estimate of the
individual's gross annual earnings by reviewing copies of his or her tax return
from the previous year, as well as the current business records. The income
listed on the previous year's tax return shall be used to estimate the expected
earnings for the current and future months, unless the individual contests this
determination of expected income. The individual's gross monthly earnings
should be determined to be one-twelfth of the gross earnings as shown on the
tax return for the preceding year. This method of estimating the self-employed
individual's income should be applicable in situations in which the individual
has been self-employed for some time, the gross earnings from self-employment
have remained fairly constant (as evidenced by tax returns from previous years)
and there is no anticipated change in circumstances.
(i)When the
individual contests the estimate of the income from self-employment based
solely on information on the previous year's tax return, the individual shall
provide a projected estimate of the gross earnings for the current taxable
year, based upon the current business records to support the contention. When
the individual can estimate the gross earnings for the current taxable year,
the county agency shall accept the individual's best estimate and allocate
one-twelfth of the gross annual income equally into each month of the taxable
year.
(ii)When the
individual contests the county agency estimate of income from self-employment
based solely on the previous year's tax return but does not provide a projected
estimate of gross earnings for the taxable year based on current business
records to support the contention, the county agency shall project his earnings
based on the gross earnings listed on the previous year's tax return.
(b)When the
individual does not have a tax return from the previous year, the county agency
shall project an estimate of the individual's annual gross earning from
self-employment based on the individual's current business records. The county
agency shall determine that one-twelfth of the projected gross earnings from
self-employment shall be allocated monthly.
(i)When the
individual contests the determination, provides a reasonable explanation as to
why the county agency projection is not satisfactory and a written estimate of
his projected annual gross earnings from self-employment, the county agency
shall use the individual's written estimate to base the eligibility determination.
(ii)When the
individual does not provide a written estimate of projected annual gross
earnings, the county agency shall project the estimate based on current
records.
(c)In some
situations the previous year's tax return is not representative of the expected
earnings for the current year. There are some situations in which it will be
difficult to project future earnings from the individual's self-employment and
the previous year's tax return or current business records may not be
considered to be accurate indicators of the individual's expected earnings for
a variety of reasons.
(d)In the absence
of both the previous year's tax return and current business records, the county
agency shall require the individual to provide a written best estimate of his
projected annual income. The county agency shall then determine that
one-twelfth of the projected annual gross earnings shall be distributed into
all months of the taxable year.
(e)The computed
converted monthly figure shall remain unchanged until a change in income occurs
as described in paragraph (H) of rule 5101:1-2-20 of the Administrative Code,
or until the next reapplication. A reported change in income requires a
recomputation of the budget.
(2)Expenses
The assistance group may choose one of the following two
methods:
(a)Fifty per cent
standard deduction from the gross self-employment receipts; or
(b)Actual
deductions from the self-employment receipts as described in paragraph (C) of rule 5101:4-6-11 of the Administrative
Code.
(G)How is microenterprise
development income counted?
(1)For purposes of
this rule, a "microenterprise development participant" is an
individual participating in a training and education activity designed to
prepare the individual for self-employment opportunities.
(2)Gross
self-employment receipts are described in paragraph (F)(1) of this rule.
(3)The following
are allowable operating expenses for up to one year following the month that
the participant's business starts or expands:
(a)The provisions
regarding non-allowable deductions from self-employment income, described in
rule 5101:4-6-11 of the Administrative Code, are waived. Allowable business
expenses shall not exceed seven thousand-five hundred dollars.
(b)The purchase of
capital equipment or durable goods up to five thousand dollars.
(c)The interest
and principal portion of a secured business loan not to exceed five thousand
dollars.
(d)Payments made
into an "unencumbered cash reserve account" in any month the total
amount in the fund does not exceed three thousand dollars.
(4)The gross
self-employment earnings, after deduction of expenses, up to one hundred
thirty-three per cent of the federal poverty guideline for the participant's
OWF assistance group size is excluded as countable income. Gross self-
employment earnings received in excess of this standard shall be included as
gross earned income.
(H)How is initial
eligibility determined?
(1)When an
assistance group applies for OWF and it has been more than four months since
they last received OWF, the county agency shall determine whether the
assistance group's gross income exceeds fifty per cent of the federal poverty
guidelines as described in division (D)(1)(a) of section 5107.10 of the Revised
Code. The county agency shall complete the following steps:
(a)Total the
monthly gross earned income from each employed family member.
(b)Deduct the
actual verified dependent care costs of the assistance group for nonpublicly
funded dependent care for a child or an incapacitated adult who is residing in
the home. The amount that is deducted is the actual verified cost that is paid
for each child or incapacitated adult.
(c)Add unearned
income of assistance group members to the amount in paragraph (H)(1)(b) of this
rule.
(d)The assistance
group is ineligible to receive OWF when the gross income in paragraph (H)(1)(c)
of this rule exceeds fifty per cent of the federal poverty guidelines.
(2)When the
assistance group's gross income does not exceed fifty per cent of the federal
poverty guidelines, the county agency shall determine whether the assistance
group's countable income is less than the payment standard described in
paragraph (J) of this rule. For purposes of this paragraph, "countable
income" shall be defined as:
(a)The assistance
group's gross earned income; minus,
(b)The two
hundred-fifty dollar and one-half of the remainder disregards described in
division (D)(3) of section 5107.10 of the Revised Code, when applicable; minus,
(c)The actual
verified dependent care costs of the assistance group for nonpublicly funded
dependent care; plus,
(d)The assistance
group's gross unearned income.
(e)The amount in
paragraph (H)(2)(d) of this rule is compared to the OWF payment standard for
the assistance group size.
(f)The assistance
group is ineligible to participate in OWF when the assistance group's countable
income equals or exceeds the payment standard.
(3)When an
assistance group applies for OWF and it has not been more than four months
since they last received OWF, the county agency shall apply the benefit
determination in paragraphs (H)(2)(a) to (H)(2)(f) of this rule.
(I)How are
ongoing benefits determined?
(1)To determine
whether an assistance group receiving OWF continues to be eligible, the county
agency shall determine whether the assistance group's countable income
continues to be less than the payment standard. The determination of the
assistance group's countable income is determined by applying the method
described in paragraph (H)(2) of this rule.
(2)The assistance
group is ineligible to receive OWF when the assistance group's countable income
equals or exceeds the payment standard.
(3)The disregard
described in division (D)(3) of section 5107.10 of the Revised Code shall not
be applied to the assistance group's gross earned income for any month in which
the assistance group failed without good cause to make a timely report of
earnings as described in rule 5101:1-2-20 of the Administrative Code.
(J)What are the
income standards used for OWF?
The following standards are used in determining eligibility for
OWF:
(1)The initial
eligibility standard for OWF is fifty per cent of the federal poverty
guidelines pursuant to section 5107.10 of the Revised Code. The gross income is
compared to the initial eligibility standard pursuant to paragraph (H) of this
rule to determine initial eligibility. In accordance with division (D)(2) of
section 5107.10 of the Revised Code, the initial eligibility standard will be
revised on the first day of July of the year in which the United States
department of health and human services issues annual revisions to the federal
poverty guidelines.
(2)As described in
rule 5101:1-23-20.2 of the Administrative Code, the allocation allowance
standard is the amount used when a portion of the income of the individual, who
is not a member of the assistance group, shall be considered in the calculation
of income to be applied to the assistance group. This standard is one hundred
per cent of the federal poverty guidelines in effect on July 1, 1997.
(3)The OWF payment
standard is the maximum amount of cash assistance an assistance group may
receive. Income that is determined to be available to the assistance group as
described in this rule is deducted from the OWF payment standard to determine
the amount of the OWF cash payment.
(a)In accordance
with section 5107.04 of the Revised Code, the OWF payment standard shall
increase on the first day of each January by the cost-of-living adjustment
(COLA) that is made in the preceding year.
(b)Changes to the
OWF payment standards due to the cost-of-living adjustment are issued through
an action change transmittal, that can be found in the cash assistance manual
at the Ohio department of job and family services website at http://jfs.ohio.gov/.
(4)The ninety per
cent payment standard is the amount that an assistance group on grant reduction
due to an erroneous payment retains from its combined income (without
disregards), liquid assets, and assistance payment.
(a)The work
activity expense allowance and the learning, earning and parenting (LEAP) bonus
are added after the payment standard is reduced for grant reduction.
(b)When an
erroneous payment is recovered by grant reduction, and the individual who
caused the erroneous payment was disqualified due to an intentional program violation
as described in Chapter 5101:6-20 of the Administrative Code, and who is still
residing with the otherwise eligible assistance group, the remaining assistance
group members shall retain (from combined income, liquid assets, and assistance
payment) an amount equal to ninety per cent of the payment standard for the
assistance group excluding the disqualified individual's needs.
Effective: 7/7/2022
Five Year Review (FYR) Dates: 4/21/2022 and 07/07/2027
Certification: CERTIFIED ELECTRONICALLY
Date: 06/27/2022
Promulgated Under: 119.03
Statutory Authority: 5101.18, 5107.05
Rule Amplifies: 5101.17, 5101.18, 5107.02, 5107.05, 5107.10,
5107.16, 5117.10
Prior Effective Dates: 08/01/1975, 11/01/1975, 07/01/1976,
09/01/1976, 05/14/1977, 12/31/1977, 03/10/1978, 07/01/1978, 08/04/1978,
10/26/1978, 01/01/1979, 04/05/1979, 05/01/1979, 08/01/1979, 09/21/1979,
12/01/1979, 01/25/1980, 02/03/1980, 05/29/1980, 06/01/1981, 09/07/1981,
10/01/1981, 05/01/1982, 07/01/1982, 12/01/1982, 12/10/1982, 12/29/1982,
01/01/1983, 01/13/1983, 07/01/1983, 01/01/1984, 03/01/1984, 06/01/1984,
07/01/1984 (Temp.), 09/01/1984, 09/10/1984, 10/01/1984 (Emer.), 10/02/1984
(Emer.), 12/27/1984, 01/01/1985 (Emer.), 04/01/1985, 07/01/1985 (Emer.),
08/01/1985 (Emer.), 10/17/1985, 01/01/1986 (Emer.), 01/02/1986, 02/23/1986,
04/01/1986, 07/01/1986, 08/01/1986 (Emer.), 10/03/1986, 02/01/1987 (Emer.),
04/01/1987, 07/01/1987 (Emer.), 08/03/1987, 10/01/1987, 07/01/1988 (Emer.),
09/01/1988 (Emer.), 10/01/1988 (Emer.), 12/20/1988, 01/01/1989 (Emer.), 04/01/1989,
07/01/1989 (Emer.), 08/21/1989, 09/23/1989, 10/01/1989 (Emer.), 11/01/1989
(Emer.), 12/16/1989, 01/01/1990 (Emer.), 01/29/1990, 02/19/1990, 03/22/1990,
06/01/1990, 07/01/1990, 09/01/1990 (Emer.), 10/01/1990, 11/10/1990, 05/01/1991
(Emer.), 07/01/1991, 07/11/1991, 07/12/1991 (Emer.), 09/22/1991, 10/10/1991
(Emer.), 12/20/1991, 04/01/1992, 07/01/1992, 10/01/1992, 10/01/1992 (Emer.),
12/21/1992 (Emer.), 01/01/1993, 07/01/1993, 10/01/1993 (Emer.), 12/25/1993,
05/18/1994, 07/01/1994, 08/14/1994, 09/01/1994, 11/01/1994, 03/01/1995,
05/01/1995, 07/15/1995, 08/01/1995 (Emer.), 10/30/1995, 03/01/1996 (Emer.),
05/30/1996, 07/01/1996 (Emer.), 10/08/1996, 07/01/1997, 10/01/1997 (Emer.),
12/30/1997, 07/01/1998, 07/01/1999, 10/01/1999, 01/01/2000, 07/01/2001, 07/01/2002,
10/01/2005, 07/01/2006, 01/01/2009, 08/01/2010, 03/01/2012, 05/01/2017