Ariz. Admin. Code § R6-12-310 - Deprivation
A. No child shall
receive CA unless the child is deprived of parental support or care due to the
continued absence, death, incapacity, or unemployment of the child's
parent.
B. A child suffers
deprivation by continued absence when the following 3 conditions are met:
1. The child's natural or adoptive parent is
out of the home for a minimum of 30 continuous days;
2. The absence interrupts or terminates the
parent's ability to provide maintenance, physical care, or guidance to the
child; and
3. The duration of the
absence prevents the child from relying on the absent parent for support or
care.
C. When the
conditions listed in subsection (B) are met, the situations listed in this
subsection may constitute deprivation by continued absence.
1. A parent is absent due to involuntary
hospitalization, incarceration, or deportation.
2. A parent is a convicted offender who is
living in the home while serving a sentence of unpaid public or community
service; however, such parent shall not be considered part of the assistance
unit for computation of the grant. The Department shall consider the parent to
be out of the home for the purpose of deprivation.
3. A single parent has adopted a
child.
4. The child's mother and
putative father both dispute paternity, and there is no documentation to
substantiate paternity.
5. The
parents have joint legal or physical custody of the child, but the child
resides with 1 parent more than 50% of the time.
D. When a child satisfies the conditions set
forth in subsection (B), the following circumstances shall not automatically
preclude a finding of deprivation:
1. A
stepparent, substitute parent, parental co-habitant, or person other than the
child's parent resides in the child's home;
2. The child's home is considered unsuitable
because of neglect, abuse, or exploitation;
3. The parent or NPCR refuses to cooperate
with the Department regarding child support enforcement or collection
activities;
4. The absent parent
visits the child; or
5. The mother
and father of the child have some form of on-going contact or relationship.
E. The circumstances
listed in this subsection do not constitute deprivation by continued absence.
1. The parent is voluntarily absent to visit
friends or relatives, to seek employment, to maintain a job, to attend school
or training, so long as the parent in the home and the absent parent do not
regard themselves as separated.
2.
The parent is absent solely to serve active military duty.
3. The parents maintain separate dwellings
but consider themselves part of a single home or family unit.
4. One parent is deliberately absent from
home in order to qualify the remaining family members for benefits.
F. A child is deprived if either
parent of the child is deceased and the child has not been adopted. The
applicant or recipient shall provide the Department with documentation
verifying a death.
G. A child is
deprived if either parent has a physical or mental defect, illness, or
impairment that:
1. Substantially decreases
or eliminates the parent's ability to support or care for the child,
and
2. Is expected to last for a
minimum of 30 continuous days.
H. A child is deprived when the primary wage
earning parent is unemployed if the assistance unit meets all the requirements
set forth in
R6-12-609.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.