(A) Which resources
are exempt?
The following resources are exempt:
(1) Home and surrounding
property.
(a) The home and surrounding
property that is not separated from the home by intervening property owned by others
is considered part of the home which is an exempt resource. Public rights of way,
such as roads which run through the surrounding property and separate it from the
home, will not affect the exemption of the property. The home and surrounding property
continue to be an exempt resource even if when a portion of the surrounding property is income-producing.
(b) The home and surrounding
property shall remain exempt when temporarily unoccupied for reasons of employment,
training for future employment, illness, or uninhabitability caused by casualty
or natural disaster if when
the assistance group intends to return.
(c) If the assistance group does not already own a home, the value
of a lot purchased to build a permanent home is exempt. If the new permanent home
is partially completed, its value is also exempt An
assistance group that currently does not own a home, but owns or is purchasing a
lot on which it intends to build or is building a permanent home, shall receive
an exemption for the value of the lot and, if it is partially completed, for the
home.
(2) Household and personal
goods.
(3) Cash value of a
life insurance policy.
(4) One burial plot
per assistance group member: The value of one revocable funeral
agreement per assistance group member is exempt, provided the agreement does not
exceed one thousand five hundred dollars in equity value. In the event that the
equity value exceeds one thousand five hundred dollars then the excess equity value
is counted.
(5) The value of one revocable funeral agreement
per assistance group member.
(5)(6) Vehicles in accordance with Ohio's temporary assistance
for needy families (TANF) plan as permitted by the Agriculture, Rural Development,
Food and Drug Administration and Related Agencies Appropriations Act of 2001, Pub.
L. No. 106-387, (10/2000).
(6)(7) Income-producing property.
(a) Income producing
property is:
(i) Property which
annually produces income consistent with its fair market value, even if when only used on a seasonal
basis: such property shall include rental homes and vacation homes (if when income producing);
(ii) Property, such
as farm land, which is essential to the employment or the self-employment of a household
member. Property exempt as essential to employment need not be producing income
consistent with its fair market value;
(iii) Work-related
equipment, such as the tools of a tradesman or the machinery of a farmer, which
is essential to the employment or self-employment of a household member. Property
essential to the self-employment of an assistance group member engaged in farming
shall continue to be exempt for one year from the date the assistance group member
terminates the member's self-employment from farming;
(iv) Installment contracts
for the sale of land or buildings if when the contract or agreement is producing income consistent
with its fair market value. The value of the property sold under contract or held
as security in exchange for a purchase price consistent with the fair market value
of that property is also exempt.
(7)(8) Property directly related to use and maintenance
of vehicles: the portion of real property determined necessary for maintenance or
for use of the vehicle is exempt under this rule.
(8)(9) Inaccessible resources: resources are exempt if when the cash value is
not accessible to the assistance group such as, but not limited to, irrevocable
trust funds, security deposits on rental property or utilities, property in probate,
and real property which the assistance group is making a good faith effort to sell
at a reasonable price and which has not been sold. The county agency may verify
that the property is for sale and that the assistance group has not declined a reasonable
offer. Verification may be obtained through a collateral
contact or documentation, such as an advertisement for public sale in a newspaper
of general circulation or a listing with a real estate broker. Resources
shall be considered inaccessible to the assistance group as long as they were truly
unknown to the assistance group. At the point the assistance group discovers or
is made aware of the resources that are legally available to the assistance group,
the resources must be counted in determining the assistance group's eligibility
for food assistance supplemental
nutrition assistance program (SNAP).
(9)(10) Funds transferred or produced by a trust:
any funds transferred to a trust, and the income produced by that trust, shall be
considered inaccessible to the assistance group if when:
(a) The trust is under
the control and management of an institution, corporation, or organization (the
trustee) which is not under the direction or ownership of any assistance group member,
or an individual appointed by the court who has court-imposed limitations placed
on his or her use of the funds that meet the requirements of this paragraph;
(b) The funds held
in irrevocable trust are either: established from the assistance group's own funds,
if when the trustee
uses the funds solely to make investments on behalf of the trust or to pay the educational
or medical expenses of any person named by the assistance group creating the trust;
or established from non assistance group funds by a non assistance group member;
(c) The trust investments
do not directly involve or assist any business or corporation under the control
or influence of an assistance group member;
(d) The trust arrangement
will not likely cease during the certification period; and
(e) No assistance group
member has the power to revoke the trust arrangements or change the name of the
beneficiary during the certification period.
(f) Sections 1111.19 and Section 1721.211
of the Revised Code allow allows
prepaid (prearranged or pre-need) burial contracts to establish burial accounts
as irrevocable trust funds. A "prepaid burial contract" is an agreement
among the recipient, the financial institution, and the funeral director. The agreement
directs the financial institution to deliver to the funeral director, upon the recipient's
death, the funds from a designated payable-on-death account which is on deposit
at the financial institution.
(10)(11) Earmarked resources: this includes any
governmental payments which are designated for the restoration of the home which
has been damaged in a disaster, if when the assistance group is subject to a legal sanction
if when the funds are
not used as intended. Examples of payments are those made by the department of housing
and urban development and disaster loans or grants made by the small business administration.
(11)(12) Resources which have been prorated and
counted as income.
(12)(13) Indian lands held jointly with the tribe,
or land that can be sold only with the approval of the department of interior's
bureau of Indian affairs.
(13)(14) Energy assistance payments or allowances
exempt as income under rule 5101:4-4-13 of the Administrative Code.
(14)(15) Non-liquid assets against which a lien
has been placed as a result of taking out a business loan and the assistance group
is prohibited by the security or lien agreement with the lien holder (creditor)
from selling the assets.
(15)(16) A non-liquid resource that the assistance
group is unable to sell for a return of at least one thousand five hundred dollars
shall be exempt. This paragraph does not apply to financial instruments such as
stocks, bonds, and negotiable financial instruments. An assistance group shall not
divide a single resource for the purpose lessoning the return and causing the resource
to be exempt. Any dividing of property solely to obtain an exemption under this
paragraph shall be subject to the transfer of resources provisions as defined in
rule 5101:4-4-09 of the Administrative Code.
(16)(17) Individual development accounts regardless
of their funding source.
(B) How are commingled
exempt resources handled?
(1) Exempt resources
that are kept in a separate account that are not commingled with other non-exempt
resources shall retain their resource exemption for an unlimited period of time.
(2) The resources of aself-employmentself-employed assistance groupsgroup that are exempt and are commingled with non-exempt
funds shall retain their exemption for the period of time over which they have been
prorated as income.
(3) All other exempt
resources that are commingled with non-exempt funds shall retain their exemption
for six months from the date of commingling. After six months from the date of commingling,
all funds in the commingled account shall be counted as a resource.
Effective: 9/1/2018
Five Year Review (FYR) Dates: 4/27/2018 and 09/01/2023
Certification: CERTIFIED ELECTRONICALLY
Date: 08/01/2018
Promulgated Under: 111.15
Statutory Authority: 5101.54
Rule Amplifies: 329.04, 329.042, 5101.54
Prior Effective Dates: 6/2/80, 12/1/80, 4/1/81, 6/18/81,
1/22/82, 2/12/82, 7/1/82, 9/27/82, 6/1/83, 6/10/83, 8/1/83, 11/1/83 (Temp.),
12/22/83, 12/25/83 (Temp.), 2/1/84 (Temp.), 3/1/84, 3/2/84, 8/16/85 (Emer.),
11/1/85 (Emer.), 1/1/86, 4/11/86 (Emer.), 7/1/86, 8/20/86 (Emer.), 11/15/86,
8/1/87 (Emer.), 10/25/87, 10/1/88 (Emer.), 11/18/88, 1/5/90 (Emer.), 3/22/90,
2/17/91, 5/1/91 (Emer.), 6/1/91, 12/1/91, 7/1/92, 8/1/92 (Emer.), 10/30/92,
8/1/93, 9/1/94, 5/1/95, 2/1/96, 7/1/96, 10/1/96 (Emer.), 12/5/96, 4/1/97
(Emer.), 6/6/97, 8/1/98, 7/15/99, 10/11/02 (Emer.), 12/26/02, 6/1/03(Emer.),
6/16/03, 6/12/08, 10/1/08 (Emer.), 12/18/08, 9/1/13