Ill. Admin. Code tit. 89, § 121.20 - Citizenship
To be eligible for assistance, an individual shall be either a U.S. citizen or a non-citizen within specific categories and subject to the following specific restrictions:
a)
Citizenship status - Persons born in the U.S. or in its possessions are U.S.
citizens. Citizenship can also be acquired by naturalization through court
proceedings or by certain persons born in a foreign country of U.S. citizen
parents.
b) Non-citizens - The
following categories of non-citizens may receive assistance, if otherwise
eligible regardless of their time in the U.S.:
1) Lawful Permanent Resident Credited with 40
Quarters of Work
A) Aliens lawfully admitted
to the United States for permanent residence under the Immigration and
Nationality Act (INA) who have worked 40 qualifying quarters of coverage (as
defined under Title II of the Social Security Act ). Effective January 1, 1997,
in order for a quarter of work to count, the client must not have received any
benefits under a federal means-tested program during that quarter.
B) Quarters of a parent count for an alien
while the alien is under age 18.
C)
Quarters of a spouse count for an alien if the alien is still married to that
spouse or the spouse is deceased.
2) Veterans, Active U.S. Military Service
Persons and Their Dependents. A veteran honorably discharged from U.S. military
service or a person in active U.S. military duty and the spouse or dependent
child or children of such persons meet the citizenship requirement for SNAP if
their INS status is:
A) lawful permanent
resident;
B) conditional entrant
under section 203(a)(7) of INA (8 USC
1153(a)(7));
C) parolee status for at least a year under
section 212(d)(5) of INA (8 USC
1182(d)(5));
D) deportation withheld under section 243(h)
of INA (8 USC
1253(h)) prior to September
30, 1996 or section 241(b)(3) of INA (8 USC
1231(b)(3)) on or after
September 30, 1996; or
E) battered
spouse or child, or parent or child of a battered person with a petition
pending under section 204(a)(1)(A) or (B) (8
USC 1154(a)(1)(A) or (B)) or
section 244(a)(3) (8 USC
1641(c)) of INA. This status
does not apply if the non-citizen lives with the
abuser.
c) The
following non-citizens meet the citizenship requirement for SNAP indefinitely
even if their status later changes to lawful permanent resident:
1) refugees admitted under section 207 of INA
(8
USC 1157);
2) asylees admitted under section 208 of INA
(8 USC
1158);
3) persons for whom deportation has been
withheld under section 243(h) of INA (8 USC
1253(h)) prior to September
30, 1996 or section 241(b)(3) of INA (8 USC
1231(b)(3)) on or after
September 30, 1996;
4) Cuban or
Haitian national admitted on or after 4/21/80;
5) Amerasians from Vietnam and their close
family members admitted through the Orderly Departure Program beginning on
3/20/88;
6) Afghan and Iraqi
immigrants with special immigrant status under section 101(a)(27) of INA
(8
USC 1101); or
7) Victims of trafficking, or the minor
child, spouse, parent or sibling of the trafficking victim, who have been
certified by, or whose status has been verified by, the federal Office of
Refugee Resettlement (ORR).
d) Elderly non-citizens who were lawfully
residing in the U.S. on 8/22/96, and children lawfully residing in the U.S.,
and disabled persons lawfully residing in the U.S. A person qualifies as
elderly if the person was age 65 on 8/22/96. A person qualifies as a child if
the person is under age 18. A person qualifies as disabled/blind if the person
meets one of the requirements listed in Section
121.61(a)(1)(B) through
(L). The person must also have the following
status with INS:
1) lawful permanent
resident;
2) conditional entrant
under section 203(a)(7) of INA (8 USC
1153(a)(7));
3) parolee status for at least a year under
section 212(d)(5) of INA (8 USC
1182(d)(5)); or
4) battered spouse or child, or parent or
child of a battered person with a petition pending under section 204(a)(1)(A)
or (B) of INA (8 USC
1154(a)(1)(A) or (B)) or
section 240A of INA (8 USC
1229). This status does not apply if the
non-citizen lives with the abuser.
e) Hmong or Highland Laotian tribe members
and the members' close family members. A person lawfully residing in the U.S.
that was a member of a Hmong or Highland Laotian tribe when the tribe helped
U.S. personnel by taking part in a military or rescue operation during the
Vietnam era (between August 5, 1964 and May 7, 1975). This also includes the
person's spouse, unmarried surviving spouse, if deceased, and unmarried
dependent children.
f) Certain
American Indians born in Canada. An American Indian born in Canada to whom the
provisions of section 289 of INA (8 USC
1359) apply, and a member of an Indian tribe
as defined in section 4e of the Indian Self-Determination and Education
Assistance Act (25 USC
5304).
g) Noncitizens who have lived in the U.S. for
at least 5 years in the following status with INS may receive assistance, if
otherwise eligible:
1) lawful permanent
resident;
2) conditional entrant
under section 203(a)(7) of INA (8 USC
1153);
3) parolee status for at least a year under
section 212(d)(5) of INA (8 USC 1182);
or
4) battered spouse or child, or
parent or child of a battered person with a petition pending under section
204(a)(1)(A) or (B) of INA (8 USC
1154(a)(1)(A) or (B)) or
section 240A of INA (8 USC
1229). This status does not apply if the
noncitizen lives with the abuser.
Notes
Amended at 35 Ill. Reg. 17120, effective October 5, 2011
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