N.Y. Comp. Codes R. & Regs. Tit. 18 § 387.11 - Income exclusions
Only the following items shall be excluded from household income:
(a) Monies withheld from an
assistance payment, earned income, or other income source, or monies received
from any income source which are voluntarily or involuntarily returned to repay
a prior overpayment received from that income source, provided that the
overpayment was not excludable under section
387.9 of this Part. However,
monies withheld from assistance from a Federal, State or local welfare program
which is means-tested and distributes public-funded benefits for purposes of
recouping an overpayment which resulted from the household's intentional
failure to comply with the other program's requirements must not be excluded.
However, assistance from a means-tested publicly-funded benefits program which
has been discontinued as a result of a penalty due to the recipient's
intentional failure to comply with one or more requirements of the means-tested
public assistance program must not be excluded.
(b) Child support payments received by ADC
recipients which must be transferred to the agency administering title IV-D of
the Social Security Act, as amended.
(c) Any gain or benefit which is not in the
form of money payable directly to the household, including nonmonetary or
in-kind benefits, such as meals, clothing, public housing, or produce from a
garden, and vendor payments. Money payments that are not payable directly to a
household, but are paid to a third party for a household expense, are vendor
payments and are excludable as follows:
(1) A
payment made in money on behalf of a household shall be considered a vendor
payment whenever a person or organization outside of the household uses its own
funds to make a direct payment to either the household's creditors or a person
or organization providing a service to the household.
(2) Payments in money that are not made to a
third party, but are made directly to the household, are to be counted as
income and are not excluded as a vendor payment except that rent or housing
subsidies paid to a landlord by the United States Department of Housing and
Urban Development shall be considered a vendor payment regardless of whether
the payment is made directly to the landlord or paid to the landlord through
the household.
(3) Monies that are
legally obligated and otherwise payable to the household, but which are
diverted by the provider of the payment to a third party for a household
expense must be counted as income and not excluded as a vendor payment.
However, emergency public assistance payments to a third party made on behalf
of migrant or seasonal farmworker households during the period such households
are in the job stream must be excluded as income.
(d) Cash donations based on need received
from one or more private non-profit charitable organizations to the extent that
such donations do not total more than $300 in any quarter of a Federal fiscal
year.
(e) Any income in the
certification period which is received too infrequently or irregularly to be
reasonably anticipated, but not in excess of $30 in a quarter.
(f) Student financial assistance received by
an individual from any program funded in whole or in part under title IV of the
United States Higher Education Act or by the Bureau of Indian Affairs student
assistance programs, is excluded as income. Student financial assistance not
funded under title IV, as provided in this subdivision, that is excludable
includes: educational loans on which payment is deferred, grants, scholarships,
fellowships, veterans' educational benefits, and similar benefits to the extent
that they are used or made available by the school, institution, a vocational
education program, a program providing for completion of a secondary school
diploma or obtaining an equivalent, or other grantor for tuition and mandatory
school fees, books, supplies, transportation and miscellaneous personal
expenses (other than living expenses) at an institution of post-secondary
education, including correspondence schools at that level, or a school at any
level for the physically or mentally handicapped. Mandatory fees include costs
for the rental or purchase of any equipment, materials or supplies related to
the pursuit of the course of study involved. Origination and insurance fees
withheld by a lending institution from the proceeds of any deferred educational
loan are excluded.
(g) All loans,
including loans from private individuals as well as commercial institutions,
other than educational loans on which repayment is deferred.
(h) Reimbursements for past or future
expenses, to the extent they do not exceed actual expenses, and do not
represent a gain or benefit to the household. Benefits provided under the Aid
to Dependent Children program, to the extent such benefit is attributed to an
adjustment for work-related or child care expenses, shall not be considered
excludable under this provision. Reimbursements for normal household living
expenses such as rent or mortgage, personal clothing, or food eaten at home are
a gain or benefit, and are not excluded. To be excluded under this subdivision,
payments must be specifically provided for an identified expense, other than
normal living expenses, and must be used for the purpose intended. When a
reimbursement, including a flat allowance, covers multiple expenses, each
expense does not have to be separately identified as long as none of the
reimbursement covers normal living expenses. The amount by which a
reimbursement exceeds the actual incurred expense shall be counted as income.
However, reimbursements shall not be considered to exceed actual expenses,
unless the provider or the household indicates the amount is in excess of
actual expenses. Examples of reimbursements that are excluded which are not
considered to be a gain or benefit to the household are:
(1) Job- or training-related expenses.
Reimbursements or flat allowances for job- or training-related expenses such as
travel, per diem, uniforms, and transportation to and from the job or training
site. Reimbursements which are provided over and above the basic wages for
these expenses are excluded; however, these expenses, if not reimbursed, are
not otherwise deductible. Reimbursements for the travel expenses incurred by
migrant workers are also excluded.
(2) Out-of-pocket volunteer expenses.
Reimbursements for out-of-pocket expenses of volunteers incurred in the course
of their volunteer work.
(3)
Medical or dependent care reimbursements.
(4) Specific student educational expenses.
Reimbursements or allowances from any nonfederal educational loan on which
payment is deferred, grant, scholarship, fellowship and veterans' educational
benefits provided to students for specific educational expenses, such as travel
or books, but not including allowances for normal living expenses, such as
food, rent or clothing. All portions of such nonfederal educational funding
must be specifically earmarked by the grantor for educational expenses rather
than for living expenses to be excludable as a reimbursement. No portion of any
Federal educational loan on which payment is deferred, grant, scholarship,
fellowship or veterans' benefits can, to the extent that they provide
educational assistance beyond that used for tuition and mandatory school fees,
be excluded as a reimbursement under this paragraph. However, such Federal
educational assistance may be excludable as set forth in subdivision (e) of
this section.
(5) Title XX services
reimbursement. Reimbursements received by households to pay for services
provided pursuant to title XX of the Social Security Act. (Compilation of the
Social Security Laws; 1985; 99th Congress, 1st Session; pages 765-770; U.S.
Government Printing Office; Washington, DC.)
(i) Monies received and used for the care and
maintenance of a third-party beneficiary who is not a household member. If the
intended beneficiaries of a single payment are both household and nonhousehold
members, any identifiable portion of the payment intended and used for the care
and maintenance of the nonhousehold member shall be excluded. If the
nonhousehold member's portion cannot be readily identified, the payment shall
be evenly prorated among intended beneficiaries and the exclusion applied to
the nonhousehold member's pro rata share or the amount actually used for the
nonhousehold member's care and maintenance, whichever is less.
(j) The earned income of children who are
members of the household, and are enrolled as elementary or high school
students on at least a half time basis, and who have not attained their 18th
birthday. The exclusion will continue to apply during temporary interruptions
in school attendance due to semester or vacation breaks provided that the
child's enrollment will resume following the break. If the child's earnings or
amount of work performed cannot be differentiated from that of other household
members, the total earnings must be prorated equally among the working members.
However, the child's pro rata share must be excluded.
(k) Lump-sum nonrecurring payments, including
but not limited to income tax refunds, rebates or credits, retroactive lump-sum
social security, SSI, public assistance, railroad retirement benefits, lump-sum
insurance settlements, or refunds of security deposits on rental property or
utilities. These payments shall be counted as resources in the month received,
unless otherwise specifically excluded from consideration as a
resource.
(l) The cost of producing
self-employment income as described in section
387.16 of this Part.
(m) Any income that is otherwise specifically
excluded from consideration as income for the purpose of determining
eligibility for the Food Stamp Program.
(n) Payments or allowances made under any
Federal law (other than part A of title IV of the Social Security Act) for the
purpose of energy assistance or a one-time payment or allowance made under a
Federal or State law for the costs of weatherization or emergency repair or
replacement of an unsafe or inoperative furnace or other heating or cooling
device. Among the Federal payments that would be excluded are energy assistance
payments provided through the Department of Health and Human Services Low
Income Home Energy Assistance Program. Additionally, vendor payments or
Emergency Aid to Families (EAF) or Emergency Home Relief (EHR) made by local
districts to assist public assistance households which exceed the normal public
assistance fuel allowance as set forth in section
352.5 of this Title shall be
excluded as income. Emergency payments for fuel paid to households who are not
in receipt of public assistance and emergency payments for fuel paid to SSI
households must also be excluded.
(o) Income of non-household members as
referred to in the definition of household concept in section
387.1 of this Part.
(p) Advance payment of earned income credit,
as authorized by the Internal Revenue Code, received on or after January 1,
1989.
Notes
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