Utah Admin. Code R986-200-235 - Unearned Income
(1) Unearned income
is income received by an individual for which the individual performs no
service.
(2) Countable unearned
income includes:
(a) pensions and annuities
such as Railroad Retirement, Social Security, VA, Civil Service;
(b) disability benefits such as sick pay and
workers' compensation payments unless considered as earned income;
(c) unemployment insurance, except, starting
March 1, 2009 and continuing as long as it is authorized by Congress and not
counted for food stamps, the $25 supplemental weekly Unemployment Compensation
payment authorized by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA)
will not be countable unearned income;
(d) strike or union benefits;
(e) VA allotment;
(f) income from the GI Bill;
(g) assigned support retained in violation of
statute is counted when a request to do so has been generated by ORS;
(h) payments received from trusts made for
basic living expenses;
(i) payments
of interest from stocks, bonds, savings, loans, insurance, a sales contract, or
mortgage. This applies even if the payments are from the sale of an exempt
home. Payments made for the down payment or principal are counted as
assets;
(j) inheritances;
(k) life insurance benefits;
(l) payments from an insurance company or
other source for personal injury, interest, or destroyed, lost or stolen
property unless the money is used to replace that property;
(m) cash contributions from any source
including family, a church or other charitable organization;
(n) rental income if the rental property is
managed by another individual or company for the owner. Income from rental
property managed by someone in the household assistance unit is considered
earned income;
(o) financial
assistance payments received from another state or the Department from another
type of financial assistance program including a diversion payment;
and
(p) payments from Job Corps and
Americorps living allowances.
(3) Unearned income which is not counted
(exempt):
(a) cash gifts for special occasions
which do not exceed $30 per quarter for each person in the household assistance
unit. The gift can be divided equally among all members of the household
assistance unit;
(b) bona fide
loans, including reverse equity loans on an exempt property. A bona fide loan
means a loan which has been contracted in good faith without fraud or deceit
and genuinely endorsed in writing for repayment;
(c) the value of food stamps, food donated
from any source, and the value of vouchers issued under the Women Infants and
Children program;
(d) any per
capita payments made to individual tribal members by either the secretary of
interior or the tribe are excluded. Profit distributions or income to tribal
members derived from tribal owned casinos and privately owned land are
countable income;
(e) any payments
made to household members that are declared exempt under federal law;
(f) the value of governmental rent and
housing subsidies, federal relocation assistance, or EA issued by the
Department;
(g) money from a trust
fund to provide for or reimburse the household for a specific item NOT related
to basic living expenses. This includes medical expenses and educational
expenses. Money from a trust fund to provide for or reimburse a household
member for basic living expenses is counted;
(h) travel and training allowances and
reimbursements if they are directly related to training, education, work, or
volunteer activities;
(i) all
unearned income in-kind. In-kind means something, such as goods or commodities,
other than money;
(j) thirty
dollars of the income received from rental income unless greater expenses can
be proven. Expenses in excess of $30 can be allowed for:
(i) taxes;
(ii) attorney fees expended to make the
rental income available;
(iii)
upkeep and repair costs necessary to maintain the current value of the
property; and
(iv) interest paid on
a loan or mortgage made for upkeep or repair. Payment on the principal of the
loan or mortgage cannot be excluded;
(k) if meals are provided to a
roomer/boarder, the value of a one-person food stamp allotment for each
roomer/boarder;
(l) payments for
energy assistance including H.E.A.T payments, assistance given by a supplier of
home energy, and in-kind assistance given by a private non-profit
agency;
(m) federal and state
income tax refunds and earned income tax credit payments;
(n) payments made by the Department to
reimburse the client for education or work expenses, or a CC subsidy;
(o) income of an SSI recipient. Neither the
payment from SSI nor any other income, including earned income, of an SSI
recipient is included;
(p) payments
from a person living in the household who is not included in the household
assistance unit, as defined in
R986-200-205, when the payment
is intended and used for that person's share of the living expenses;
(q) educational assistance and college work
study except Veterans Education Assistance intended for family members of the
student, living stipends and money earned from an assistantship program is
counted as income; and
(r) for a
refugee, as defined in
R986-300-303(1),
any grant or assistance, whether cash or in-kind, received directly or
indirectly under the Reception and Placement Programs of Department of State or
Department of Justice.
Notes
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