The county agency is to calculate claims,
make collections, and disqualify assistance group members based on the date of
overpayment, date of discovery, and the supplemental nutrition assistance
program (SNAP) regulations in effect at the time of the overpayment.
(A) How is the claim amount calculated for
non-trafficking claims?
(1)A county agency is to calculate a claim
according to the following timeframes:
(a)Except as provided in paragraph (E) of
this rule, inadvertent household error claims are to be calculated back to at
least twelve months prior to when it became aware of the overpayment; the
county agency is not to include any amounts occurring more than six years
before it became aware of the overpayment.
(b)Except as provided in paragraph (F) of
this rule, agency error claims are to be calculated back twelve months prior to
when it became aware of the overpayment.
(c)Except as provided in paragraph (D) of
this rule, intentional program violation claims are to be calculated back to
the month the act of the intentional program violation first occurred; the
county agency is not to include any amount occurring more than six years before
it became aware of the overpayment.
(2)To calculate a claim, the county agency
is to:
(a)Determine the correct amount of benefits
the applicant should have received for each month. Do not apply the earned
income deduction to any earned income the assistance group failed to report in
a timely manner. When the agency failed to act on reported earned income apply
the earned income deduction.
(b)Subtract the amount of the benefit the
applicant should have received from the benefit amount actually received. This
is the amount of the overpayment. When the overpayment equals zero or is
negative dispose of the claim referral.
(c)Reduce the overpayment amount when there
are any expunged benefits from the assistance group's electronic benefit
transfer account. The county agency is to document any reduction of an
overpayment claim by use of expunged benefits via the statewide automated
eligibility system. The difference from the amount of the expunged benefits and
the overpayment amount is the amount of the claim.
(B)How is the claim amount calculated for
trafficking claims?
Claims arising from trafficking-related
offenses are to be the value of the trafficked benefits as determined by:
(1)The individual's admission;
(2)Adjudication; or
(3)The documentation that forms the basis
for the trafficking determination.
(C) How are intentional program violation
claims processed?
When an assistance group member is found
to have committed an intentional program violation, the county agency is to
disqualify that individual and initiate collection action against the remaining
adult assistance group members.
For intentional program violation claims,
the amount of SNAP benefits collected is to be the greater of twenty per cent
or twenty dollars per month of the assistance group's monthly entitlement,
before disqualification of the assistance group member found to have committed
the intentional program violation.
(D)When should a claim resulting from an
intentional program violation by intentionally failing to report a change
begin?
When the assistance group member is
determined to have committed the intentional program violation by intentionally
failing to report a change in the assistance group's circumstances, the first
month affected by the assistance group's failure to report is to be the first
month in which the change would have been made effective had it been reported
timely. When calculating the claim amount, the county agency is to:
(1)Allow the maximum reporting allowance of
ten days following the end of the month in which the change first occured plus
the maximum allowance for notice of adverse action of fifteen days. Therefore,
for purposes of claim calculation, a change cannot be effective sooner than
twenty-five days from the date the change occured.
(2)Calculate claims back to at least twelve
months prior to when the county agency became aware of the overpyament in
accordance with paragraph (A)(1)(c) of this rule, and not include any amounts
occuring more than six years before the date of discovery.
(3)Prior to the determination of an
intentional program violation or the signing of either a waiver of right to a
disqualification hearing or a disqualification consent agreement in cases of
deferred adjudication, the claim against the assistance group is to be handled
as an inadvertent household error claim.
(E) When should a claim resulting from an
inadvertent household error for failing to report a change timely begin?
When due to a misunderstanding or
inadvertent error on the part of the assistance group, the assistance group
failed to report a change in its circumstances within ten days following the
end of the month in which the change first occurred, the first month affected
by the assistance group's failure to report is to be the first month in which
the change would have been effective had it been reported timely. When
calculating the claim amount, the county agency is to:
(1)Allow the maximum reporting allowance of
ten days following the end of the month in which the change first occured plus
the maximum allowance for notice of adverse action of fifteen days. Therefore,
for the purposes of claim calculation, a change cannot be effective sooner than
twenty-five days from the date the change occured.
(2)Calculate claims back to at least twelve
months prior to when the county agency became aware of the overpayment in
accordance with paragraph (A)(1)(a) of this rule, and not include any amounts
occuring more than six years before the date of discovery.
(F) When should a claim resulting from an
agency error for failing to act timely on a reported change begin?
When the assistance group timely reported
a change, but the county agency did not timely act on the change, the first
month affected by the county's failure to act is to be the first month the
county agency should have made the change effective. Therefore, when a notice
of adverse action was required but was not provided, the county agency is to
assume that the maximum advance notice period of fifteen days would have
expired without the assistance group requesting a fair hearing. In accordance
with paragraph (A)(1)(b) of this rule, claims are to be calculated back twelve
months prior to when the county agency became aware of the overpayment.
(G) When are claims to be offset?
After calculating the amount of the
claim, the county agency is to offset the amount of the claim (even when the
claim is one hundred twenty-five dollars or less) against any amount of lost
benefits that have not yet been restored to the assistance group. The county
agency is not to offset against retroactive or initial benefits in accordance
with paragraph (G) of rule 5101:4-8-03 of the Administrative Code. The county
agency is to then initiate collection action for the remaining balance. When
the county agency did not complete a JFS 07424, "Report of Claim
Determination/Lost Benefits" because the claim was one hundred twenty-
five dollars or less, at the time the offset action is taken, the county agency
is to complete the JFS 07424 so documentation exists as to why the lost benefit
amount was reduced.
(H)What is the disqualification period for
intentional program violations?
Individuals found to have committed an
intentional program violation either through an administrative disqualification
hearing, a federal, state, or local court, or who have signed either a waiver
of right to an administrative disqualification hearing, or a disqualification
consent agreement in cases referred for prosecution, is to be ineligible to
participate in the program as follows:
(1)For a period of twelve months upon the
first offense of any intentional program violation, except as provided in
paragraphs (I) to (L) of this rule.
(2)For a period of twenty-four months upon
the second offense of any intentional program violation, except as provided in
paragraphs (I) to (L) of this rule.
(3)Permanently upon the third offense of
any intentional program violation.
(4)The disqualification period for
non-participants at the time of the administrative disqualification or court
decision is to take precedence in accordance with division 5101:6 of the
Administrative Code.
(I) What is the disqualification period
for controlled substance violations?
Individuals found by a federal, state, or
local court to have used or received SNAP benefits in a transaction involving
the sale of a controlled substance (as defined in section 102 of the Controlled
Substances Act (21 U.S.C. 802)), (12/2014) is to be ineligible to participate
in the program as follows:
(1)For a period of twenty-four months upon
the first offense of such a violation.
(2)Permanently upon the second offense of
such a violation.
(J) What is the disqualification period for
violations involving firearms, ammunition, or explosives?
Individuals found by a federal, state, or
local court to have used or received SNAP benefits in a transaction involving
the sale of firearms, ammunition, or explosives is to be permanently ineligible
to participate in the program upon the first offense of such violation.
(K)What is the disqualification period for
violations involving trafficking SNAP benefits of five hundred dollars or more?
(1)An individual is to be permanently
disqualified when convicted by a federal, state, or local court of trafficking
SNAP benefits for an aggregate amount of five hundred dollars or more.
(2)For purposes of this rule
"trafficking" is defined as fraudulently using, transferring,
altering, acquiring or possessing SNAP benefits or presenting SNAP benefits for
payment or redemption knowing the same to have been fraudulently obtained or
transferred for cash or consideration other than eligible food. "Acquiring
SNAP benefits" does not include providing false information as part of the
certification, recertification, or reporting changes processes.
(L)What is the disqualification period for
violations involving the receipt of multiple benefits?
An individual is to be ineligible to
participate in the SNAP program for a ten-year period when the individual is
found, through an administrative disqualification hearing, a federal, state, or
local court, or who has signed either a waiver of right to administrative
disqualification hearing or a disqualification consent agreement in cases
referred for prosecution, of having made a fraudulent statement or representation
with respect to the identity or place of residence of the individual in order
to receive multiple benefits simultaneously under the SNAP program.
Replaces: 5101:4-8-17
Effective: 5/1/2021
Five Year Review (FYR) Dates: 05/01/2026
Certification: CERTIFIED ELECTRONICALLY
Date: 04/05/2021
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, 07/15/1999, 08/01/2001 (Emer.), 08/11/2001, 09/01/2004, 12/01/2009,
08/01/2015