Utah Admin. Code R986-200-243 - Counting the Income of Sponsors of Eligible Aliens
(1) Certain aliens who have been legally
admitted into the United States for permanent residence must have a portion of
the earned and unearned countable income of their sponsors counted as unearned
income in determining eligibility and financial assistance payment amounts for
the alien.
(2) The following aliens
are not subject to having the income of their sponsor counted:
(a) paroled or admitted into the United
States as a refugee or asylee;
(b)
granted political asylum;
(c)
admitted as a Cuban or Haitian entrant;
(d) other conditional or paroled
entrants;
(e) not sponsored or who
have sponsors that are organizations or institutions;
(f) sponsored by persons who receive public
assistance or SSI;
(g) permanent
resident aliens who were admitted as refugees and have been in the United
States for eight months or less.
(3) Except as provided in subsection (7) of
this section, the income of the sponsor of an alien who applies for financial
assistance after April 1, 1983 and who has been legally admitted into the
United States for permanent residence must be counted for five years after the
entry date into the United States. The entry date is the date the alien was
admitted for permanent residence. The time spent, if any, in the United States
other than as a permanent resident is not considered as part of the five year
period.
(4) The amount of income
deemed available for the alien is calculated by:
(a) deducting 20% from the total earned
income of the sponsor and the sponsor's spouse up to a maximum of $175 per
month; then,
(b) adding to that
figure all of the monthly unearned countable income of the sponsor and the
sponsor's spouse; then the following deductions are allowed:
(i) an amount equal to 100% of the SNB amount
for the number of people living in the sponsor's household who are or could be
claimed as dependents under federal income tax policy; then,
(ii) actual payments made to people not
living in the sponsor's household whom the sponsor claims or could claim as
dependents under federal income tax policy; then,
(iii) actual payments of alimony and/or child
support the sponsor makes to individuals not living in the sponsor's
household.
(c) The
remaining amount is counted as unearned income against the alien whether or not
the income is actually made available to the alien.
(5) Actual payments by the sponsor to aliens
will be counted as income only to the extent that the payment amount exceeds
the amount of the sponsor's income already determined as countable.
(6) A sponsor can be held liable for an
overpayment made to a sponsored alien if the sponsor was responsible for, or
signed the documents which contained, the misinformation that resulted in the
overpayment. The sponsor is not held liable for an overpayment if the alien
fails to give accurate information to the Department or the sponsor is
deceased, in prison, or can prove the request for information was incomplete or
vague.
(7) In the case where the
alien entered the United States after December 19, 1997, the sponsor's income
does not count if:
(a) the alien becomes a
United States citizen through naturalization;
(b) the alien has worked 40 qualifying
quarters as determined by Social Security Administration; or
(c) the alien or the sponsor dies.
Notes
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