(A) What is the
state income and eligibility verification system (IEVS) match?
An IEVS match is wage and benefit information that has been
requested by the Ohio department of job and family services (ODJFS) or county
agencies. Through IEVS, ODJFS and county agencies can request income, resource,
and benefit information from the agencies identified in paragraph (B) of this
rule. This information can then be maintained and used in verifying eligibility
and in determining the amount of benefits. IEVS information shall be requested and
used with respect to all assistance group members. This includes ineligible
assistance group members as set forth in rule 5101:4-6-13 of the Administrative
Code, whenever the social security numbers (SSNs) of such ineligible assistance
group members are available to the county agency.
(B) What benefit
information is collected through IEVS and what agency is it from?
(1) Wage
information is obtained from the state wage information collection agency
(SWICA);
(2) Income from
self-employment, wages, federal retirement, and survivors, disability,
supplement security income (SSI), and related benefit information maintained by
the social security administration (SSA). Employers provide wage and retirement
information to the SSA on an annual basis. The SSA makes this information
available pursuant to Section 6103 (l)(7)(A) of the Internal Revenue Service
(IRS) Code of 1954.
(a) Twice a month
ODJFS transmits a request through the SSA's benefit earnings exchange record
for all medicaid, Ohio works first (OWF), and supplemental nutrition assistance
program applicants and assistance group members. Whenever information is added
to the file, it is matched against all other data in the file. The SSA
processes the benefit earnings exchange record request twice a month and
returns the matched file information to ODJFS for review.
(b) The benefit
earnings exchange record match includes out-of-state employers, federal
employers and beneficiary and earnings data exchange (BENDEX) wage information.
This information is expected to duplicate most of the information provided by
SWICA. However, the federal wage records match includes employers who do not
report to SWICA. Matches from this source will be displayed to the county
agency as soon as they are received and are to be considered as a lead that
shall be verified in accordance with paragraph (E) of this rule before benefits
may be affected.
(c) The ODJFS
state verification and exchange system (SVES) provides an electronic interface
with the SSA. The interface allows the transfer of social security and SSI
benefit information from the SSA.
(3) Unearned
income information is obtained from the IRS and is available pursuant to
Section 6103 (l)(7)(B) of the IRS Code of 1954; and
(4) The office of
unemployment compensation within ODJFS provides claim information about
unemployment benefits, and any information in addition that is useful for
verifying eligibility and benefits, subject to the provisions and limitations
of Section 303 (d) of the Social Security Act of 1935.
(C) What are data
exchange agreements?
Data exchange agreements shall specify the information to be
exchanged and the procedures that will be used to exchange the information.
Policy regarding data exchange agreements is the responsibility of the office
of fiscal and monitoring services within ODJFS. ODJFS maintains data exchange
agreements with the agencies listed in paragraph (B) of this rule in order to
exchange information with other agencies.
(D) Under what
programs can ODJFS and county agencies exchange IEVS information?
ODJFS and the county agency may exchange IEVS information with
other state agencies when it is determined that the information is being used
for the same program determinations that include:
(1) Temporary
assistance for needy families;
(2) Medicaid;
(3) Unemployment
compensation;
(4) supplemental
nutrition assistance program;
(5) Any state
program administered under a plan approved under title I, X, or XIV adult
categories, or title XVI of the Social Security Act of 1935; and
(6) Agencies
administering the child support program (title IV-D of the Social Security Act)
and titles II (federal old age, survivors, and disability insurance benefits)
and title XVI (SSI for the aged, blind and disabled of the Social Security Act
of 1935.)
(E) What should
county agencies do when IEVS information is received?
(1) Information
verified upon receipt includes:
(a) The county
agency shall send proper notices to the assistance group to terminate, deny, or
reduce benefits based on information obtained through IEVS that is considered
verified upon receipt. Information considered verified upon receipt includes:
(i) Social
security and SSI benefit information obtained from SSA; and
(ii) Unemployment
compensation benefit information.
(b) When the
information in IEVS is obtained about a particular assistance group and is
questionable, the information shall be considered unverified and the county
agency shall take action as specified in paragraph (E)(2) of this rule.
(2) Information
unverified upon receipt:
Prior to taking action to terminate, deny, or reduce benefits
based on information obtained through IEVS that is considered unverified upon
receipt, county agencies shall independently verify the information.
Information considered unverified upon receipt includes:
(a) IRS information;
and
(b) Wage
information from SSA or SWICA.
(3) What is
considered independent verification of unverified information and how does the
county agency obtain it?
(a) Independent
verification shall include verification of the amount of the asset or income
involved, whether the assistance group actually has or had access to such asset
or income and the period during which access occurred. When a county agency has
information that indicates that independent verification is not needed, such
verification is not required. Unearned income from IRS is the exception to this
policy.
(b) The county
agency shall obtain independent verification of unverified information obtained
from IEVS by contacting the assistance group or the appropriate source of the
income, resource or benefit. When the county agency chooses to contact the
assistance group, it shall do so in writing, informing them of the information
that has been received, and requesting the assistance group to respond within
ten days. When the assistance group fails to respond within ten days of the
request, the county agency shall send a notice of adverse action as specified
in Chapter 5101:6-2 of the Administrative Code. The county agency may contact
the appropriate source by the means best suited to the situation. When the
assistance group or appropriate source provides the independent verification,
the county agency shall properly notify the assistance group of the action it
intends to take and provide the assistance group an opportunity to request a state
hearing prior to any adverse action.
(F) What actions
shall be taken when data exchange information is received?
When information is received as a result of data exchange
agreements, county agencies shall initiate and pursue action on the assistance
groups. The following should occur:
(1) Review of the
information and comparison of it to case record information;
(2) For all new or
previously unverified information received, contact the assistance groups
and/or collateral contacts to resolve discrepancies as specified in rule
5101:4-2-09 of the Administrative Code and paragraphs (E)(1) and (E)(2) of this
rule; and
(3) When
discrepancies warrant reducing benefits or terminating eligibility, send
notices of adverse action.
(4) County
agencies shall initiate, pursue and complete the actions specified in this
paragraph within ninety days forty-five days from receipt of the information.
Actions may be completed later than ninety days forty-five days from the match when the only reason
the actions cannot be completed is the non-receipt of verification requests
from the collateral contacts and the actions are completed as specified in rule
5101:4-7-01 of the Administrative Code. The results of these actions should be
documented on the compliance tracking screens in the statewide automated
eligibility system.
(5) When an
overpayment is determined, county agencies shall establish and take actions on
claims as specified in Chapter 5101:4-8 of the Administrative Code.
(G) What are the
appropriate uses for data received through IEVS?
(1) County
agencies shall use information obtained through IEVS to:
(a) Verify an
assistance group's eligibility;
(b) Verify the
proper amount of benefits;
(c) Investigate
to determine whether participating assistance groups received benefits to which
they were not entitled; and
(d) Obtain
information that can be used in conducting criminal or civil prosecutions based
on receipt of supplemental nutrition assistance program benefits to which
participating assistance groups were not entitled.
(2) ODJFS may
continue to use income information from an alternate source or sources to meet
the requirements specified in this rule.
(H) What are the
timeframes for the county agencies to request and process the IEVS data?
(1) Information
shall be requested at the next available opportunity after the date of
application even when the applicant assistance group has been determined
eligible by that time.
(2) Information
about members of applicant assistance groups who cannot provide SSNs at
application shall be requested at the next available opportunity after the
county agency is notified of their SSNs.
(3) Information
received within the thirty-day application period shall be used to determine the
assistance group's eligibility and benefits. However, county agencies shall
make eligibility and benefit determinations without waiting for receipt of IEVS
data to comply with the promptness standard of rule 5101:4-2-11 of the
Administrative Code.
(4) Information
received from a source after an eligibility determination has been made shall
be used as specified in paragraph (E) of this rule.
(I) When is IEVS
information received and is it considered verified upon receipt?
(1) SWICA data -
Ohio employers report earnings information to SWICA quarterly. Older
information may be available for new applicants. State wage information is
generally more current than federal wage information. None of the information
is considered verified upon receipt.
(2) IRS - IRS information
is a year old upon receipt and is considered unverified. The information is
based on 1099 data sent to the IRS.
(3) Unemployment -
this information is reported weekly as the payments are rendered to recipients
and the information is considered verified upon receipt.
(4) BENDEX
information matches may be eighteen months old or older due to the reporting
requirements for employers and the time needed for SSA to process the
information. There is a lag time from the source to the reporting agency to
ODJFS. Only the year of employment can be determined from the match. None of
the information is considered verified upon receipt. Only by supplementing
correct matches with employer verification can a determination be made of
earnings received during an active certification period. This information may
be a lead to current employment and should be used to check past eligibility.
(J) Is there a
requirement to safeguard matches with federal tax information?
(1) Matches
containing federal tax information are confidential. County agencies shall
ensure that the information is safeguarded as required in rule 5101:4-1-13 of
the Administrative Code. The data shall be stored in an area that is physically
safe from access by unauthorized individuals and the information cannot be
commingled with the rest of the case record.
(2) Records
destruction is addressed in rule 5101:9-9-21 of the Administrative Code.
Division 5101:9 of the Administrative Code addresses access and safeguarding
provisions for systems data.
(3) IRS, SSA and
the United States department of agriculture (USDA) food and nutrition service
(FNS) shall be permitted to make on site inspections to ensure that adequate
safeguards are being maintained and that proper procedures are followed.
(K) What is considered
proper disclosure of the IEVS data?
The IEVS match information shall only be disclosed in accordance
with rule 5101:4-1-13 of the Administrative Code and used as discussed in
paragraph (G) of this rule.
(L) Is a record of
disclosure required when IEVS information is released?
IRS and SSA require ODJFS and county agencies to keep a record
of any disclosure of federal tax information, including SSA match information,
to any person or agency who is not an employee of ODJFS or the county agency.
In accordance with rule 5101:9-9-21.1 of the Administrative Code, the record of
the disclosure shall be retained in the case file for five years or the active
life of the application, whichever is longer. In addition, the county agency
shall record all disclosures in its central file of BENDEX. The record of
disclosure shall contain:
(1) A description
of the information disclosed;
(2) The date of
the disclosure;
(3) The identity
of the persons or agencies to whom the information was disclosed; and
(4) The purpose of
the disclosure.
(M) Is there a
penalty for improper disclosure of information?
Rule 5101:9-9-25 of the Administrative Code describes employee
awareness requirements for unauthorized disclosure of IEVS and federal tax
return information.
(N) Is it possible
to receive a match error?
The validity of the IEVS match information is dependent upon the
accuracy of the SSN supplied, the SSN contained in SSA's earnings file, and
IRS's file. The accuracy of the SSN supplied by ODJFS is dependent upon the
accuracy of the number provided by the county agency. SSA accuracy is dependent
upon the accuracy of the reporting employer and the employee who supplies the
SSN. Accuracy of the IRS information is dependent on the institution providing
the information. An error from any one of these financial sources may cause the
IEVS match to attribute earnings, benefits, or resources to an assistance group
member that belongs to another person. Therefore, the county agency shall
determine the match is valid prior to taking any action on benefits.
(O) How is an
error in the data match detected?
When the name of the applicant or recipient is different than
the name on the match, the match may be an error or it may be an indication of
an intentional program violation. The agency worker shall make this decision
based upon all of the information from the appropriate match source and the
case file. The following are examples of possible reasons for conflicting
information:
(1) At times the
surnames do not match, but the given names match or are similar. Sometimes a
maiden name is used for one activity and a married name for the other.
(2) The name and
address of the employer may also give an indication about whether a discrepancy
is a match error. For example, when the address of the employer is out of state
it may indicate that the match is in error. However, because this could
indicate the corporate office of a local business, this information should not
be considered conclusive.
(P) How is an SSN
validated?
Since an incorrect SSN that is undetected could cause incorrect
overpayment charges, the county agency shall review the case file to determine
how the number was verified at the time it was obtained. When there is no copy
of the social security card in the case file, the county agency shall request
the assistance group to provide it at that time. When the assistance group
member no longer has the card, the county agency shall complete an JFS 07355
"Notice of Application for a Social Security Number" (rev. 4/2001) in
order to verify the SSN with SSA files. The requirement to verify the SSN is
the responsibility of the county agency, not the assistance group. All SSNs
within IEVS are verified through SSA. The county agency may also complete the
title II and title XVI SSA benefit information and SSN verification screen
(SVRQ) in the statewide automated eligibility system to verify the SSN.
(Q) Is a match
verification of earnings, dividends, or benefits?
An IEVS match is not verification of earnings, dividends, or
benefits. It is only an indication that an assistance group member may have had
income while receiving supplemental nutrition assistance program or that an
assistance group member may have withheld income information. The match is an
opportunity for the county agency to confirm an assistance group's previous
statement. When there appears to have been unreported income, the county agency
shall obtain actual verification from a third party to check previous
eligibility.
Effective: 08/01/2017
Five Year Review (FYR) Dates: 03/01/2022
Certification: CERTIFIED ELECTRONICALLY
Date: 07/10/2017
Promulgated Under: 111.15
Statutory Authority: 5101.54
Rule Amplifies: 329.04, 329.042, 5101.54
Prior Effective Dates: 6/2/80, 3/1/84 (Temp.), 6/1/84, 11/1/86
(Emer.), 1/16/87, 10/1/89 (Emer.), 12/16/89, 8/1/95 (Emer.), 10/13/95, 7/1/96
(Emer.), 8/25/96, 5/1/99, 7/15/99, 6/1/01 (Emer.), 8/27/01, 12/08/05, 2/10/11,
3/1/17