22 Va. Admin. Code § 40-295-50 - Income eligibility
A. Income
eligibility for all cases is based on a prospective determination that
anticipates the countable income of the assistance unit. The assistance unit is
income eligible if the net income of the assistance unit is less than the
standard of assistance.
B. The
following income of members of the assistance unit, a parent not included in
the assistance unit, or anyone whose income is used in determining eligibility
or the amount of TANF assistance, shall be disregarded:
1. Home produce of the assistance unit
utilized for their own consumption;
2. The value of food benefits under the Food
Stamps program;
3. The value of
foods donated under the United States Department of Agriculture Commodity
Distribution Program, including those furnished through school meal
programs;
4. Payments received
under Title II of the Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property
Acquisition Policies Act of 1970 (42 USC §§
4601 et seq.);
5. Benefits received under Title VII,
Nutrition Program for the Elderly, of the Older Americans Act of 1965, as
amended (42 USC §§
3001 et seq.);
6. Grants or loans to any undergraduate
students for educational purposes made or insured under any program
administered by the United States Secretary of Education. Programs that are
administered by the United States Secretary of Education include: Pell Grant,
Supplemental Education Opportunity Grant, Perkins Loan, Guaranteed Student Loan
(including the Virginia Education Loan), PLUS Loan, Congressional Teacher
Scholarship Program, College Scholarship Assistance Program, and the Virginia
Transfer Grant Program;
7. Funds
derived from the College Work Study Program;
8. A scholarship or grant obtained and used
under conditions which preclude its use for current living costs;
9. Training allowance (transportation, books,
required training expenses, and motivational allowance) provided by the
Department of Rehabilitative Services (DRS) for persons participating in
Rehabilitative Services Programs. This disregard is not applicable to the
allowance provided by DRS to the family of the participating
individual;
10. Any portion of an
SSI payment or Auxiliary Grant;
11.
Payments to VISTA Volunteers under Title I, when the monetary value of such
payments is less than minimum wage as determined by the Director of the Action
Office, and payments for services of reimbursement for out-of-pocket expenses
made to individual volunteers serving as foster grandparents, senior health
aides, or senior companions, and to persons serving in the Service Corps of
Retired Executives (SCORE) and Active Corps of Executives (ACE) and other
programs pursuant to Titles II and III, of Public Law 93-13, the Domestic
Volunteer Service Act of 1993 (42 USC §§
4950 et
seq.);
12. The Veterans
Administration educational amount for the caretaker 18 or older when used
specifically for education purposes. Any additional money included in the
benefit amount for dependents is to be counted as income to the assistance
unit;
13. Foster care payments
received by anyone in the assistance unit;
14. Unearned income received from Title IV,
Part B (Job Corps) of the Job Training Partnership Act (JTPA) ( 29 USC
§§ 1501 et seq.) by an eligible child is to be disregarded as an
incentive payment. However, any payment received by any other Job Corps
participant or any payment made on behalf of the participant's eligible child
or children is to be counted as income to the assistance unit;
15. Income tax refunds including earned
income tax credit advance payments and refunds;
16. Payments made under the Energy Assistance
Program;
17. The value of
supplemental food assistance received under the Child Nutrition Act of 1966
(42 USC §§
1771-
1789). This includes all school
meals programs; the Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) program; and the Child
Care Food program;
18. All federal,
state, or local government rent and housing subsidies and utility
payments;
19. Unearned income
received by an eligible child under Title II, Parts A and B, and Title IV, Part
A, of the Job Training Partnership Act (JTPA) ( 29 USC §§ 1501 et
seq.);
20. Funds distributed to, or
held in trust for, members of any Indian tribe under Public Laws 92-254,
93-134, 94-540, 97-458, 98-64, 98-123, or 98-124. Additionally, interest and
investment income accrued on such funds while held in trust, and purchases made
with such interest and investment income;
21. The following types of distributions
received from a Native Corporation under the Alaska Native Claims Settlement
Act ( Public Law 100-241; 43
USC §§
1601 et seq.):
a. Cash (including cash dividends on stock
received from a Native Corporation) to the extent that it does not, in the
aggregate, exceed $2,000 per individual per year;
b. Stock (including stock issued or
distributed by a Native Corporation as a dividend or distribution on
stock);
c. A partnership
interest;
d. Land or an interest in
land (including land or an interest in land received from a Native Corporation
as a dividend or distribution on stock); and
e. An interest in a settlement
trust.
22. Income
derived from certain submarginal land of the United States which is held in
trust for certain Indian tribes ( Public Law 92-114);
23. The first $50 of total child or spousal
support payments received each month by an assistance unit;
24. Federal major disaster and emergency
assistance provided under the Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance
Amendments of 1988 (42 USC
§
5121 nt.), and disaster assistance
provided by state and local governments and disaster assistance organizations (
Public Law 100-707);
25. Payments
received by individuals of Japanese ancestry under the Civil Liberties Act of
1988, and by Aleuts under the Aleutian and Pribilof Islands Restitution Act (
Public Law 100-383; 50 USC Appx. §§ 1989 et seq.);
26. Agent Orange payments;
27. Payments received by individuals under
the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act (Public Law 101-426 ;
42 USC §
2210 nt.);
28. Funds received pursuant to the Maine
Indians Claims Settlement Act of 1980 ( Public Law 96-420) and the Aroostook
Band of Micmacs Settlement Act (Public Law 102-171 ;
25 USC §
1721);
29. Student financial assistance received
under Title IV of the Higher Education Amendments of 1992 (Public Law
102-325 );
30. Student financial assistance received
under the Carl D. Perkins Vocational and Applied Technology Education Act made
available for attendance costs (Public Law 101-392 ;
20 USC §
2301 nt.);
31. Student financial assistance received
under the Bureau of Indian Affairs student assistance programs;
32. All bona fide loans. The loan may be for
any purpose and may be from a private individual as well as from a commercial
institution. The disregard is limited to the principal of the loan. A simple
statement signed by both parties indicating that the payment is a loan and must
be repaid is sufficient to verify that a loan is bona fide. Interest earned on
the proceeds of a loan while held in a savings or checking account or other
financial instrument shall be counted as income only in the month
received;
33. Up to $2,000 per year
of income received by individual Indians, which are derived from leases or
other uses of individually-owned trust or restricted lands shall be disregarded
as income, and shall not be used to reduce or deny assistance or benefits to
which the individual, or household, would otherwise be entitled to
receive;
34. Nonrecurring monetary
gifts for special occasions, such as birthdays, Christmas,
graduations;
35. All other unearned
income that is specifically disregarded in the calculation of TANF benefits by
federal or state law or regulation.
C. When determining initial eligibility, or
ongoing eligibility for non-VIEW participants, the following is disregarded
from the monthly earned income of the assistance unit:
1. An amount equal to the standard deduction
used in the Food Stamp program; and
2. Twenty percent of the remainder.
D. The earned income of a student,
who is not the head of household, under 18 years of age shall be
disregarded.
E. When a person is
excluded or removed from the assistance unit due to noncompliance with a TANF
rule, all income of the person is considered available to the assistance unit
to the same extent if the person were not excluded or removed from the
assistance unit.
F. For
self-employment, the profit obtained through self-employment is gross income in
determining TANF eligibility. Profit is the income minus expenses.
G. The income of a child who is not required
to be in the assistance unit due to the application of
22VAC40-295-30 B
is not considered available to the assistance unit.
H. The TANF payment shall be suspended if the
amount of child support collected by the Division of Child Support Enforcement
for two consecutive months, when treated like income, makes the family
ineligible for TANF. The TANF case shall be closed if in the month of
suspension the amount of child support collected by the Division of Child
Support Enforcement, when treated like income, makes the family
ineligible.
I. The monthly payment
amount is equal to the standard of assistance minus the net income.
Notes
Statutory Authority
§ 63.2-217 of the Code of Virginia.
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