(A)What is the
general standard for anticipating income?
For the purpose of determining the supplemental nutrition
assistance program (SNAP) assistance group's eligibility and monthly benefit,
the county agency shall take into account the income already received by the
assistance group during the certification period and any anticipated income the
assistance group and the county agency are reasonably certain will be received
during the remainder of the certification period. When the amount of income
that will be received or when it will be received is uncertain, the county
agency shall not count that portion of the assistance group's income that is
uncertain. When the exact amount of the income is not known, that portion of it
that is anticipated with reasonable certainty is considered income. In cases
where the receipt of income is reasonably certain but the monthly amount may
fluctuate, the county agency must average income.
(B)How is income
anticipated?
Income received during the past thirty days shall be used as an
indicator of the income that is and will be available to the assistance group
during the certification period. However, the county agency shall not use past
income as an indicator of income anticipated for the certification period if
changes in income have occurred or can be anticipated. When income fluctuates
to the extent that a thirty-day period alone cannot provide an accurate
indication of anticipated income, the county agency and the assistance group
may use a longer period of past time when it will provide an accurate
indication of anticipated fluctuations in future income. Similarly, when the
assistance group's income fluctuates seasonally, it may be appropriate to use
the most recent season comparable to the certification period, rather than the
last thirty days, as one indicator of anticipated income. The county agency
shall exercise particular caution in using income from a past season as an
indicator of income for the certification period. In many cases of seasonally
fluctuating income, the income also fluctuates from one season in one year to
the same season in the next year. However, in no event shall the county agency
automatically attribute to the assistance group the amount of any past income.
The county agency shall not use past income as an indicator of anticipated
income when changes in income have occurred or can be anticipated during the
certification period.
(C)When is income
anticipated for the month received?
Income anticipated during the certification period shall be
counted as income only in the month it is expected to be received, unless the
income is averaged as described in paragraph (I) or (J) of this rule.
Nonrecurring lump-sum payments are counted as a resource starting in the month
received and not counted as income.
(D)How is income
anticipated when an assistance group is steadily employed?
In cases where the assistance group name is steadily employed,
income from the previous month is usually a good indicator of the amount of
income that can be anticipated in the month of application and subsequent
months. When information supplied by the assistance group or a collateral
contact indicates that future income will differ from the previous month's
income, the county agency will use such information to make a reasonable
estimate of anticipated income. The method used to determine income shall be
fully documented in the case file.
(E)How are hourly
and piecework wages anticipated?
When income is received on an hourly wage or piecework basis,
weekly income may fluctuate when the wage earner works less than eight hours
some days or is required to work overtime on others. In this case the county
agency should consult with the assistance group to determine the normal amount
of income to be expected as a result of one week's work and when this is
reasonably certain to be available during the certification period. This amount
should be used to determine monthly income.
(F)Are withheld
wages treated as income?
Wages held at the request of the employee shall be considered
income to the assistance group in the month the wages would otherwise have been
paid by the employer. However, wages held by the employer as a general
practice, even when in violation of law, are not counted as income to the
assistance group, unless the assistance group anticipates that it will ask for
and receive an advance or that it will receive income from wages that were
previously held by the employer as a general practice and were, therefore, not
previously counted as income by the county agency. Advances on wages shall
count as income in the month received only when reasonably anticipated.
(G)How is monthly
or semimonthly income of varying amounts anticipated?
An assistance group receiving income on a recurring monthly or
semimonthly basis shall not have its monthly income varied merely because of
changes in mailing cycles or pay dates or because weekends or holidays cause
additional payments to be received in a month.
(H)When should
actual income be used instead of converted income?
When a full month's income is anticipated and income is received
on a weekly or biweekly basis, the county agency shall determine monthly income
by multiplying weekly amounts by 4.3 and biweekly amounts by 2.15. In one-month
certifications, income on less than a monthly basis may be computed by using
the actual income that is to be received. When income that was received on a
weekly or biweekly basis has stopped, actual income (not converted) is used.
(I)When is income
averaged?
Except for destitute
assistance groups, income received on a monthly basis but whose amount fluctuates
from month-to-month and income received less often than monthly must be
averaged. Income shall not be averaged for a destitute assistance group since
doing so would result in assigning to the month of application income from
future periods which is not available to the assistance group for its current
food needs. To average income, the county agency shall use the assistance
group's anticipation of income fluctuations over the certification period. (For
example, an assistance group receives one hundred dollars every other month,
fifty dollars per month income may be used.) The number of months used to
arrive at the average income need not be the same as the number of months in
the certification period. An average must be recalculated at recertification
and in response to changes in income, in accordance with paragraph (K)(1) of
rule 5101:4-7-01 of the Administrative Code, and the county agency shall inform
the assistance group of the amount of income used to calculate the allotment.
Conversion of income received weekly or biweekly in accordance with paragraph
(H) of this rule does not constitute averaging.
(J)How is
contract or self-employment income anticipated?
Assistance groups which, by contract or self-employment, derive
their annual income in a period of time shorter than one year shall have that
income averaged over a twelve-month period, provided the income from the
contract is not received on an hourly or piecework basis. These assistance
groups may include school employees, share croppers, farmers, and other
self-employed assistance groups. However, these provisions do not apply to
migrant or seasonal farm workers. Contract income which is not the assistance
group's annual income and is not paid on an hourly or piecework basis shall be
prorated over the period the income is intended to cover.
(K)What expenses
are included in income deductions?
Deductible expenses include only the costs described in rule
5101:4-4-23 of the Administrative Code.
(L)What types of
expenses are not allowed as deductions?
(1)Any expense, in
whole or in part, covered by educational income which is excluded income as
defined in rule 5101:4-4-13 of the Administrative Code.
(2)Any expense
covered by excluded reimbursements as described in rule 5101:4-4-13 of the
Administrative Code (including reimbursements under employment and training
programs) or vendor payments (except an energy assistance payment made under
the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Act of 1981, as amended). For example,
the portion of rent covered by excluded vendor payments is not calculated as
part of the assistance group's shelter costs. In addition, an expense which is
covered by an excluded vendor payment that has been converted to a direct cash
payment under the approval of a federally authorized demonstration project are
not deductible.
(3)The portion of
an allowable medical expense which is not reimbursable is to be included as
part of the assistance group's medical expenses. When the assistance group
reports an allowable medical expense at the time of certification but cannot
provide verification at that time, and when the amount of the expense cannot be
reasonably anticipated based upon available information about the recipient's
medical condition and public or private medical insurance coverage, the
assistance group is to have the nonreimbursable portion of the medical expense
considered at the time the amount of the expense or reimbursement is reported
and verified.
(4)An utility
expense which is reimbursed or paid by an excluded payment, including the
department of housing and urban development (HUD) or the farmers home
administration (FMHA) utility reimbursements as described in rule 5101:4-4-13
of the Administrative Code, are not deductible. Expenses are to only be
deductible when the service is provided by someone outside of the assistance
group and the assistance group is responsible for the expense. For example, a
dependent care deduction is not allowed when another assistance group member
provides the care, or compensation for the care is provided in the form of an
in-kind benefit, such as food.
(M)When are billed
expenses deducted?
Except as provided in paragraph (N) of this rule, 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 phrase "otherwise becomes due" is meant to provide
for deductions in situations where regular billing statements are not issued
but the expenses nevertheless become due each month as in most rental arrangements.
All of the preceding applies regardless of when the assistance group intends to
pay the expense. Amounts carried forward from past billing periods are not
deductible even if included with the most recent billing and actually paid by
the assistance group. In any event, a particular expense may only be deducted
once. Past due bills, except in the situation of medical expenses awaiting
reimbursement, shall not be deducted.
(N)How are
expenses anticipated?
The county agency shall calculate an assistance group's expenses
based on the expenses the assistance group expects to be billed for during the
certification period. Anticipation of the expense shall be based on the most
recent month's bills unless the assistance group is reasonably certain a change
will occur. At certification and recertification, the assistance group shall
report and verify all medical expenses. The assistance group's monthly medical
deduction for the certification period shall be based on the information
reported and verified by the assistance group, and any anticipated changes in
the assistance group's medical expenses that can be reasonably expected to
occur during the certification period based on available information about the
recipient's medical condition, public or private insurance coverage, and
current verified medical expenses. The assistance group shall not be required
to report changes about its medical expenses during the certification period.
When the assistance group voluntarily reports a change in its medical expenses,
the county agency shall act upon the change in accordance with paragraph (K)(3)
of rule 5101:4-7-01 of the Administrative Code when the change would increase
the assistance group's allotment. In the case of a reported change that would
decrease the assistance group's allotment, or make the assistance group
ineligible, the county agency shall act on the change without first requiring
verification in accordance with paragraph (K)(4) of rule 5101:4-7-01 of the
Administrative Code.
(O)When should
expenses be converted?
When the assistance group is billed more frequently than monthly
for expenses, the county agency shall use the conversion procedure.
(P)How are
expenses averaged?
Assistance groups may
elect to have fluctuating monthly expenses deducted entirely in the month
incurred or averaged.
(1)Averaging less
frequent bills
Assistance groups may
elect to have expenses that are billed less often than monthly treated as
follows:
(a)The entire
expense may be deducted during the month the expense is billed or otherwise
becomes due.
(b)The expense may
be averaged forward over the interval between scheduled billings.
(c)When there is
no scheduled interval between billings, the expense may be averaged forward
over the period the expense is intended to cover.
(d)Whether
expenses are averaged forward between scheduled billings or averaged forward
over the period the expense is intended to cover, deductions shall not be
limited to the certification period in which the bill was received. When the
expense is incurred on an ongoing basis, it may be deducted on an ongoing
basis.
(e)"One-time-only"
expenses may be averaged over the entire certification period in which they are
billed when they are verified at the time of certification.
(2)Averaging
"one-time only" expenses excluding medical
Assistance groups
reporting "one-time-only" expenses (excluding medical expenses)
during their certification period may elect to have them treated as follows:
(a)The total
"one-time-only" expense may be deducted in the month it is billed,
rather than have the expenses averaged; or
(b)"One-time-only"
expenses may be averaged over the certification period in which they were
billed. For example, when the expense occurs during the fourth month of a
six-month certification period, then only one-sixth of the expense can be
deducted in each of the remaining two months. The other unused portion is lost.
In these cases, it may be to the assistance group's advantage to have the total
expense deducted in the month it is billed, rather than to have the expense
averaged.
(3)Averaging
medical expenses
Assistance groups
reporting "one-time-only" medical expenses during their certification
period may elect to have them treated as follows:
(a)The total
medical expense in excess of thirty-five dollars may be deducted for one month;
or
(b)The medical
expense may be averaged forward over the remaining months of the certification
period. When this option is chosen, only the amount in excess of thirty-five
dollars each month may be deducted. Averaging shall begin the month the change
becomes effective.
(c)When an
assistance group is certified for twenty-fourthirty-six months, the "one-time-only"
medical expenses incurred during the first twelve month in excess of
thirty-five dollars will be treated as follows:
(i)The medical
expense may be deducted for one month; or
(ii)The medical
expense may be averaged over the remainder of the first twelve months of the
certification period; or
(iii)The medical
expense may be averaged forward over the remaining months of the certification
period. Averaging is to begin the month the change becomes effective.
(d)When an
assistance group is certified for twenty-fourthirty-six months, the "one-time-only"
medical expenses incurred after the first twelve months in excess of
thirty-five dollars will be treated as follows:
(i)The medical
expense may be deducted for one month; or
(ii)The medical
expense may be averaged forward over the remaining months of the certification
period. Averaging is to begin the month the change becomes effective.
(Q)How is SNAP
eligibility determined and how are the appropriate income standards applied?
Participation in SNAP shall be limited to those assistance
groups whose incomes are determined to be a substantial limiting factor in
permitting them to obtain a more nutritious diet.
Assistance groups shall
meet the gross and net income eligibility standards as described in this rule
unless at least one member is elderly or disabled as defined in rule
5101:4-1-03 of the Administrative Code or the assistance group is considered
categorically eligible. Assistance groups that contain an elderly or disabled member,
but do not qualify for categorical eligibility, shall meet the net income
eligibility standards. These assistance groups shall not have gross income
compared to the gross income eligibility standards. An assistance group that is
categorically eligible does not have to meet either the gross or the net income
standard. All other assistance groups are subject to first the gross income
test, and then the net income test. Assistance groups containing no elderly or
disabled members must meet both test criteria in order to be determined
eligible. When an assistance group contains a member who is fifty-nine years
old on the date of application, but who will become sixty before the end of the
month of application, the county agency shall determine the assistance group's
income eligibility in accordance with paragraph (W) of this rule. An assistance
group containing a student with excluded income who turns eighteen during the
month of application or during the certification period shall have its income
eligibility determined in accordance with paragraph (G) of rule 5101:4-4-13 of
the Administrative Code.
(R)How is gross
monthly income calculated?
Except for assistance groups containing at least one member who
is elderly or disabled as defined in rule 5101:4-1-03 of the Administrative
Code, or considered categorically eligible, all assistance groups shall be
subject to the gross income eligibility standard for the appropriate assistance
group size. To determine the assistance group's total gross income, add the gross
monthly income earned by all assistance group members and the total monthly
unearned income of all assistance group members, minus income exclusions. When
an assistance group has income from a farming operation (with gross proceeds of
more than one thousand dollars per year) that operates at a loss, see rule
5101:4-6-11 of the Administrative Code. The total gross income is compared to
the gross income eligibility standard for the appropriate assistance group
size. When the total gross income is equal to or less than the standard,
proceed with calculating the adjusted net income as described in paragraph (S)
of this rule. When the total gross income is more than the standard, the
assistance group is ineligible for program benefits and the case is either denied
or terminated at this point.
(S)How is net
monthly income calculated?
For assistance groups containing at least one member who is
elderly or disabled as defined in rule 5101:4-1-03 of the Administrative Code,
but are not categorically eligible, income eligibility is calculated as
described in this paragraph. For assistance groups considered categorically
eligible, the assistance group cannot be ineligible for the program because of
excess income. Categorically eligible assistance groups have their net income
determined as described in the following paragraphs, but do not have their net
income compared to the net income standard prior to determining level of
benefits. After determining net income, go directly to the "Basis of
Coupon Issuance Tables" located in rule 5101:4-4-27 of the Administrative
Code to determine the assistance group's allotment. For all other assistance
groups who are determined eligible after applying the gross income eligibility
test, net income eligibility is determined as described in this paragraph.
(1)Total gross
income
Add the gross monthly income earned by all assistance group
members and the total monthly unearned income of all assistance group members,
minus earned income exclusions, to determine the assistance group's total gross
income. Net losses from the self-employment income of a farmer shall be offset
in accordance with rule 5101:4-6-11 of the Administrative Code.
(2)Earned income
deduction
Multiply the total gross monthly earned income by twenty per
cent and subtract that amount from the total gross income.
(3)Standard
deduction
Subtract the standard deduction.
(4)Excess medical
deduction
When the assistance group is entitled to an excess medical
deduction, determine if total medical expenses exceed thirty-five dollars. If
so, subtract that portion which exceeds thirty-five dollars.
(5)Dependent care
deduction
Subtract monthly dependent care expenses, if any.
(6)Legally
obligated child support deduction
Subtract the allowable monthly child support payments in accordance
with rule 5101:4-4-23 of the Administrative Code.
(7)Standard
homeless shelter deduction
Subtract the standard homeless shelter deduction amount if any,
when the assistance group is homeless and it incurs shelter costs during the
month and has not claimed an excess shelter cost according to paragraph (S)(8)
of this rule.
(8)Determining any
excess shelter cost
Total the allowable shelter expenses to determine shelter costs,
unless a deduction has been subtracted in accordance with paragraph (S)(7) of
this rule. Subtract from total shelter costs fifty per cent of the assistance
group's monthly income after all the above deductions have been subtracted. The
remaining amount, if any, is the excess shelter cost. When there is no excess
shelter cost, go to the next step.
(9)Applying any
excess shelter cost
Subtract the excess shelter cost up to the maximum amount
allowed (unless the assistance group is entitled to the full amount of its
excess shelter expenses) from the assistance group's monthly income after all
other applicable deductions. Assistance groups not subject to the shelter
limitation shall have the full amount exceeding fifty per cent of their
adjusted income subtracted. The assistance group's net monthly income has been
determined.
(T)What is the
rounding technique used when calculating monthly income?
In calculating gross income (both earned and unearned) the
monthly amounts shall be rounded down to the nearest whole dollar by dropping
all cents. All cents in gross weekly, biweekly, or semimonthly income shall be
dropped before and after adding, dividing or multiplying. Hourly rates that
contain cents are not rounded. However, because these procedures could result
in a significant decrease in the medical and shelter expenses the assistance
group may be entitled to use in determining excess medical and shelter costs,
the individual costs used in paragraphs (S)(4) and (S)(8) of this rule shall be
computed using exact dollars and cents. The cents will be dropped from the
total medical and shelter costs prior to determining the medical and shelter
deductions for the assistance group's net monthly income.
(U)What is the
rounding technique used when calculating the monthly allotment?
In manually calculating monthly allotments as described in rule
5101:4-4-39 of the Administrative Code, after multiplying the net income by
thirty per cent, the county agency shall round the product up to the next whole
dollar when it ends in one through ninety-nine cents prior to subtracting that
amount from the maximum SNAP allotment.
(V)What is the
rounding technique used when calculating the initial month benefit?
The county agency shall determine initial benefits based on the
day of the month assistance groups apply for benefits. In manually calculating
the initial month's benefits, the county agency shall use the formula described
in rule 5101:4-4-27 of the Administrative Code. When the result ends in one
through ninety-nine cents, the county agency shall round the product down to
the nearest lower whole dollar. When the computation results in an allotment of
less than ten dollars, then no issuance shall be made for the initial month.
(W)What are the
income standards for assistance groups subject to only the net income standard?
An assistance group that is not considered categorically
eligible is subject to the following income standards prior to determining the
level of benefits. An assistance group that has a member who meets the
definition of elderly or disabled, as described in rule 5101:4-1-03 of the
Administrative Code, shall have its net monthly income, as calculated in this
rule, compared to the monthly net income standard for the appropriate
assistance group size to determine eligibility for the month. When the
assistance group's net income exceeds the appropriate income standard, the
assistance group is ineligible to participate in SNAP. When the assistance
group's net income is equal to or less than the appropriate net income
standard, the assistance group's level of benefits is determined, if otherwise
eligible. Gross income is not an eligibility factor for these assistance
group's gross income standard does not apply. An assistance group that is
considered categorically eligible is not subject to either the gross or net
income standard, and, therefore, paragraphs (W) and (X) of this rule are not
applicable to a categorically eligible assistance group.
(X)What are the
income standards for assistance groups subject to the gross and net income
standards?
An assistance group which has no elderly or disabled member as
described in rule 5101:4-1-03 of the Administrative Code shall have its gross
monthly income, as calculated in accordance with this rule, compared to the
monthly gross income eligibility standard for the appropriate assistance group
size to determine eligibility for the month. When the assistance group's gross
monthly income exceeds the appropriate income standard, the assistance group is
ineligible to participate in SNAP. When the assistance group's gross monthly
income is equal to or less than the standard for the appropriate assistance
group size, the assistance group shall then have its net monthly income, as
calculated in this rule, compared to the net monthly income eligibility
standard for the appropriate assistance group size to determine eligibility for
the month. When the assistance group's net income is equal to or less than the
appropriate net income standard, the assistance group's level of benefits is
determined, if otherwise eligible. When the gross income is more than the
standard for the appropriate assistance group size, the assistance group is
ineligible and the assistance group is either terminated or denied at that
point.
(Y)How is income
anticipated for destitute assistance groups?
For assistance groups considered destitute, the county agency
shall determine an assistance group's eligibility by first applying the
procedures contained in rule 5101:4-6-09 of the Administrative Code and then
apply the appropriate income standard in accordance with paragraphs (W) and (X)
of this rule, whichever is appropriate. For destitute assistance groups who
apply after the fifteenth of the month and who have postponed submitting
required verifications, refer to paragraph (G) of rule 5101:4-6-09 of the
Administrative Code.
Effective: 8/1/2022
Five Year Review (FYR) Dates: 2/1/2026
Certification: CERTIFIED ELECTRONICALLY
Date: 07/07/2022
Promulgated Under: 111.15
Statutory Authority: 5101.54
Rule Amplifies: 329.04, 329.042, 5101.54
Prior Effective Dates: 06/02/1980, 01/01/1981, 06/01/1981,
06/18/1981, 04/14/1983, 06/17/1983, 12/25/1983 (Temp.), 03/01/1984, 12/31/1984
(Emer.), 04/01/1985, 05/01/1986 (Emer.), 08/01/1986 (Emer.), 10/01/1986, 01/16/1987,
04/06/1987, 08/01/1987 (Emer.), 10/25/1987, 12/25/1987, 07/20/1988 (Emer.), 10/16/1988,
05/01/1989 (Emer.), 07/17/1989, 10/01/1989, 10/01/1989 (Emer.), 12/21/1989, 05/01/1991
(Emer.), 06/01/1991, 08/01/1992 (Emer.), 10/31/1992, 09/01/1994, 12/01/1994,
08/01/1995, 08/01/1995 (Emer.), 10/31/1995, 07/01/1996, 09/22/1996 (Emer.),
12/01/1996, 04/01/1997 (Emer.), 06/06/1997, 09/28/1998, 05/01/1999, 06/01/2001 (Emer.),
08/27/2001, 06/01/2003 (Emer.), 06/16/2003, 11/01/2003, 05/22/2004, 10/01/2008
(Emer.), 12/18/2008, 09/01/2009, 06/01/2015, 07/01/2019, 02/01/2021