[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 7, Volume 4]
[Revised as of January 1, 2002]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 7CFR273.8]

[Page 654-659]
 
                          TITLE 7--AGRICULTURE
 
    CHAPTER II--FOOD AND NUTRITION SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
 
PART 273--CERTIFICATION OF ELIGIBLE HOUSEHOLDS--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 273.8  Resource eligibility standards.

    (a) Uniform standards. The State agency shall apply the uniform 
national resource standards of eligibility to all applicant households, 
including those households in which members are recipients of federally 
aided public assistance, general assistance, or supplemental security 
income. Households which are categorically eligible as defined in 
Sec. 273.2(j)(2) or 273.2(j)(4) do not have to meet the resource limits 
or definitions in this section.
    (b) Maximum allowable resources. The maximum allowable resources, 
including both liquid and nonliquid assets, of all members of the 
household shall not exceed $2,000 for the household, except that, for 
households including a member or members age 60 or over, such resources 
shall not exceed $3,000.
    (c) Definition of resources. In determining the resources of a 
household, the following shall be included and documented by the State 
agency in sufficient detail to permit verification:
    (1) Liquid resources, such as cash on hand, money in checking or 
savings accounts, savings certificates, stocks or bonds, lump sum 
payments as specified in Sec. 273.9(c)(8), funds held in individual 
retirement accounts (IRA's), and funds held in Keogh plans which do not 
involve the household member in a contractual relationship with 
individuals who are not household members. In counting resources of 
households with IRA's or includable Keogh plans, the State agency shall 
include the total cash value of the account or plan minus the amount of 
the penalty (if any) that would be exacted for the early withdrawal of 
the entire amount in the account or plan; and
    (2) Nonliquid resources, personal property, licensed and unlicensed 
vehicles, buildings, land, recreational properties, and any other 
property, provided that these resources are not specifically excluded 
under paragraph (e) of this section. The value of nonexempt resources, 
except for licensed vehicles as specified in paragraph (f) of this 
section, shall be its equity value. The equity value is the fair market 
value less encumbrances.

[[Page 655]]

    (3) For a household containing a sponsored alien, the State agency 
must deem the resources of the sponsor and the sponsor's spouse in 
accordance with Sec. 273.4(c)(2).
    (d) Jointly owned resources. Resources owned jointly by separate 
households shall be considered available in their entirety to each 
household, unless it can be demonstrated by the applicant household that 
such resources are inaccessible to that household. If the household can 
demonstrate that it has access to only a portion of the resource, the 
value of that portion of the resource shall be counted toward the 
household's resource level. The resource shall be considered totally 
inaccessible to the household if the resource cannot practically be 
subdivided and the household's access to the value of the resource is 
dependent on the agreement of a joint owner who refuses to comply. For 
the purpose of this provision, ineligible aliens or disqualified 
individuals residing with the household shall be considered household 
members. Resources shall be considered inaccessible to persons residing 
in shelters for battered women and children, as defined in Sec. 271.2, 
if
    (1) The resources are jointly owned by such persons and by members 
of their former household; and
    (2) The shelter resident's access to the value of the resources is 
dependent on the agreement of a joint owner who still resides in the 
former household.
    (e) Exclusions from resources. In determining the resources of a 
household, only the following shall be excluded:
    (1) The home and surrounding property which is not separated from 
the home by intervening property owned by others. Public rights of way, 
such as roads which run through the surrounding property and separate it 
from the home, will not affect the exemption of the property. The home 
and surrounding property shall remain exempt when temporarily unoccupied 
for reasons of employment, training for future employment, illness, or 
uninhabitability caused by casualty or natural disaster, if the 
household intends to return. Households that currently do not own a 
home, but own or are purchasing a lot on which they intend to build or 
are building a permanent home, shall receive an exclusion for the value 
of the lot and, if it is partially completed, for the home.
    (2) Household goods, personal effects, the cash value of life 
insurance policies, one burial plot per household member, and the value 
of one bona fide funeral agreement per household member, provided that 
the agreement does not exceed $1,500 in equity value, in which event the 
value above $1,500 is counted. The cash value of pension plans or funds 
shall be excluded, except that Keogh plans which involve no contractual 
relationship with individuals who are not household members and 
individual retirement accounts (IRA's) shall not be excluded under this 
paragraph.
    (3)(i) Licensed vehicles that meet the following conditions:
    (A) Used for income-producing purposes such as, but not limited to, 
a taxi, truck, or fishing boat, or a vehicle used for deliveries, to 
call on clients or customers, or required by the terms of employment. 
Licensed vehicles that have previously been used by a self-employed 
household member engaged in farming but are no longer used in farming 
because the household member has terminated his/her self-employment from 
farming must continue to be excluded as a resource for one year from the 
date the household member terminated his/her self-employment farming;
    (B) Annually producing income consistent with its fair market value, 
even if used only on a seasonal basis;
    (C) Necessary for long-distance travel, other than daily commuting, 
that is essential to the employment of a household member (or ineligible 
alien or disqualified person whose resources are being considered 
available to the household)--for example, the vehicle of a traveling 
sales person or a migrant farm worker following the work stream;
    (D) Used as the household's home and, therefore, excluded under 
paragraph (e)(1) of this section;
    (E) Necessary to transport a physically disabled household member 
(or physically disabled ineligible alien or physically disabled 
disqualified person whose resources are being considered available to 
the household) regardless of the purpose of such transportation

[[Page 656]]

(limited to one vehicle per physically disabled household member). The 
vehicle need not have special equipment or be used primarily by or for 
the transportation of the physically disabled household member; or
    (F) Necessary to carry fuel for heating or water for home use when 
the transported fuel or water is anticipated to be the primary source of 
fuel or water for the household during the certification period. 
Households must receive this resource exclusion without having to meet 
any additional tests concerning the nature, capabilities, or other uses 
of the vehicle. Households must not be required to furnish 
documentation, as mandated by Sec. 273.2(f)(4), unless the exclusion of 
the vehicle is questionable. If the basis for exclusion of the vehicle 
is questionable, the State agency may require documentation from the 
household, in accordance with Sec. 273.2(f)(4).
    (G) The value of the vehicle is inaccessible, in accordance with 
paragraph (e)(18) of this section, because its sale would produce an 
estimated return of not more than $1,500.
    (ii) On those Indian reservations that do not require vehicles 
driven by tribal members to be licensed, such vehicles must be treated 
as licensed vehicles for the purpose of this exclusion.
    (iii) The exclusions in paragraphs (e)(3)(i)(A) through (e)(3)(i)(C) 
of this section will apply when the vehicle is not in use because of 
temporary unemployment, such as when a taxi driver is ill and cannot 
work, or when a fishing boat is frozen in and cannot be used.
    (4) Property which annually produces income consistent with its fair 
market value, even if only used on a seasonal basis. Such property shall 
include rental homes and vacation homes.
    (5) Property, such as farm land or work related equipment, such as 
the tools of a tradesman or the machinery of a farmer, which is 
essential to the employment or self-employment of a household member. 
Property essential to the self-employment of a household member engaged 
in farming shall continue to be excluded for one year from the date the 
household member terminates his/her self-employment from farming.
    (6) Installment contracts for the sale of land or buildings if the 
contract or agreement is producing income consistent with its fair 
market value. The exclusion shall also apply to the value of the 
property sold under the installment contract, or held as security in 
exchange for a purchase price consistent with the fair market value of 
that property.
    (7) Any governmental payments which are designated for the 
restoration of a home damaged in a disaster, if the household is subject 
to a legal sanction if the funds are not used as intended; for example, 
payments made by the Department of Housing and Urban Development through 
the individual and family grant program or disaster loans or grants made 
by the Small Business Administration.
    (8) Resources having a cash value which is not accessible to the 
household, such as but not limited to, irrevocable trust funds, security 
deposits on rental property or utilities, property in probate, and real 
property which the household is making a good faith effort to sell at a 
reasonable price and which has not been sold. The State agency may 
verify that the property is for sale and that the household has not 
declined a reasonable offer. Verification may be obtained through a 
collateral contact or documentation, such as an advertisement for public 
sale in a newspaper of general circulation or a listing with a real 
estate broker. Any funds in a trust or transferred to a trust, and the 
income produced by that trust to the extent it is not available to the 
household, shall be considered inaccessible to the household if:
    (i) The trust arrangement is not likely to cease during the 
certification period and no household member has the power to revoke the 
trust arrangement or change the name of the beneficiary during the 
certification period;
    (ii) The trustee administering the funds is either:
    (A) A court, or an institution, corporation, or organization which 
is not under the direction or ownership of any household member, or (B) 
an individual appointed by the court who has court imposed limitations 
placed on his/her use of the funds which meet the requirements of this 
paragraph;

[[Page 657]]

    (iii) Trust investments made on behalf of the trust do not directly 
involve or assist any business or corporation under the control, 
direction, or influence of a household member; and
    (iv) The funds held in irrevocable trust are either:
    (A) Established from the household's own funds, if the trustee uses 
the funds solely to make investments on behalf of the trust or to pay 
the educational or medical expenses of any person named by the household 
creating the trust, or (B) established from non-household funds by a 
nonhousehold member.
    (9) Resources, such as those of students or self-employed persons, 
which have been prorated as income. The treatment of student income is 
explained in Sec. 273.10(c) and the treatment of self-employment income 
is explained in Sec. 273.11(a).
    (10) Indian lands held jointly with the Tribe, or land that can be 
sold only with the approval of the Department of the Interior's Bureau 
of Indian Affairs; and
    (11) Resources which are excluded for food stamp purposes by express 
provision of Federal statute.
    (12) Earned income tax credits shall be excluded as follows:
    (i) A Federal earned income tax credit received either as a lump sum 
or as payments under section 3507 of the Internal Revenue Code for the 
month of receipt and the following month for the individual and that 
individual's spouse.
    (ii) Any Federal, State or local earned income tax credit received 
by any household member shall be excluded for 12 months, provided the 
household was participating in the Food Stamp Program at the time of 
receipt of the earned income tax credit and provided the household 
participates continuously during that 12-month period. Breaks in 
participation of one month or less due to administrative reasons, such 
as delayed recertification or missing or late monthly reports, shall not 
be considered as nonparticipation in determining the 12-month exclusion.
    (13) Where an exclusion applies because of use of a resource by or 
for a household member, the exclusion shall also apply when the resource 
is being used by or for an ineligible alien or disqualified person whose 
resources are being counted as part of the household's resources. For 
example, work related equipment essential to the employment of an 
ineligible alien or disqualified person shall be excluded (in accordance 
with paragraph (e)(5) of this section), as shall one burial plot per 
ineligible alien or disqualified household member (in accordance with 
paragraph (e)(2) of this section).
    (14) Energy assistance payments or allowances excluded as income 
under Sec. 273.9(c)(11).
    (15) Non-liquid asset(s) against which a lien has been placed as a 
result of taking out a business loan and the household is prohibited by 
the security or lien agreement with the lien holder (creditor) from 
selling the asset(s).
    (16) Property, real or personal, to the extent that it is directly 
related to the maintenance or use of a vehicle excluded under paragraphs 
(e)(3)(i)(A), (e)(3)(i)(B) or (e)(3)(i)(C) of this section. Only that 
portion of real property determined necessary for maintenance or use is 
excludable under this provision. For example, a household which owns a 
produce truck to earn its livelihood may be prohibited from parking the 
truck in a residential area. The household may own a 100-acre field and 
use a quarter-acre of the field to park and/or service the truck. Only 
the value of the quarter-acre would be excludable under this provision, 
not the entire 100-acre field.
    (17) The resources of a household member who receives SSI or PA 
benefits. A household member is considered a recipient of these benefits 
if the benefits have been authorized but not received, if the benefits 
are suspended or recouped, or if the benefits are not paid because they 
are less than a minimum amount. For purposes of this paragraph (e)(17), 
if an individual receives non-cash or in-kind services from a program 
specified in Secs. 273.2(j)(2)(i)(B), 273.2(j)(2)(i)(C), 
273.2(j)(2)(ii)(A), or 273.2(j)(2)(ii)(B), the State agency must 
determine whether the individual or the household benefits from the 
assistance provided, in accordance with Sec. 273.2(j)(2)(iii). 
Individuals entitled to Medicaid benefits only are not considered 
recipients of SSI or PA.

[[Page 658]]

    (18) The State agency must develop clear and uniform standards for 
identifying kinds of resources that, as a practical matter, the 
household is unable to sell for any significant return because the 
household's interest is relatively slight or the costs of selling the 
household's interest would be relatively great. The State agency must so 
identify a resource if its sale or other disposition is unlikely to 
produce any significant amount of funds for the support of the household 
or the cost of selling the resource would be relatively great. This 
provision does not apply to financial instruments such as stocks, bonds, 
and negotiable financial instruments. The determination of whether any 
part of the value of a vehicle is included as a resource must be made in 
accordance with the provisions of paragraphs (e)(3) and (f) of this 
section. The State agency may require verification of the value of a 
resource to be excluded if the information provided by the household is 
questionable. The State agencies must use the following definitions in 
developing these standards:
    (i) ``Significant return'' means any return, after estimating costs 
of sale or disposition, and taking into account the ownership interest 
of the household, that the State agency determines are more than $1,500; 
and
    (ii) ``Any significant amount of funds'' means funds amounting to 
more than $1,500.
    (f) Determining the value of non-excluded vehicles. (1) The State 
agency must:
    (i) Individually evaluate the fair market value of each licensed 
vehicle that is not excluded under paragraph (e)(3) of this section;
    (ii) Count in full toward the household's resource level, regardless 
of any encumbrances on the vehicle, that portion of the fair market 
value that exceeds $4,650 beginning October 1, 1996;
    (iii) Evaluate such licensed vehicles as well as all unlicensed 
vehicles for their equity value (fair market value less encumbrances), 
unless specifically exempt from the equity value test; and
    (iv) Count as a resource only the greater of the two amounts if the 
vehicle has a countable fair market value of more than $4,650 after 
October 1, 1996, and also has a countable equity value.
    (2) Only the following vehicles are exempt from the equity value 
test outlined in paragraph (f)(1)(iii) of this section:
    (i) Vehicles excluded under paragraph (e)(3)(i) of this section;
    (ii) One licensed vehicle per adult household member (or an 
ineligible alien or disqualified household member whose resources are 
being considered available to household), regardless of the use of the 
vehicle; and
    (iii) Any other vehicle a household member under age 18 (or an 
ineligible alien or disqualified household member under age 18 whose 
resources are being considered available to household) drives to commute 
to and from employment, or to and from training or education which is 
preparatory to employment, or to seek employment. This equity exclusion 
applies during temporary periods of unemployment to a vehicle which a 
household member under age 18 customarily drives to commute to and from 
employment.
    (3) State agencies will be responsible for establishing 
methodologies for determining the fair market value of vehicles. In 
establishing such methodologies, the State agency must not increase the 
basic value of a vehicle by adding the value of low mileage or other 
factors such as optional equipment or special apparatus for the 
handicapped. Any household that claims that the State agency's 
determination of the value of its vehicle(s) is not accurate must be 
given the opportunity to acquire verification of the true value of the 
vehicle from a reliable source.
    (g) Handling of excluded funds. Excluded funds that are kept in a 
separate account, and that are not commingled in an account with 
nonexcluded funds, shall retain their resource exclusion for an 
unlimited period of time. The resources of students and self-employment 
households which are excluded as provided in paragraph (e)(9) of this 
section and are commingled in an account with nonexcluded funds shall 
retain their exclusion for the period of time over which they have been 
prorated as income. All other excluded moneys which are commingled in an

[[Page 659]]

account with nonexcluded funds shall retain their exemption for six 
months from the date they are commingled. After six months from the date 
of commingling, all funds in the commingled account shall be counted as 
a resource.
    (h) Transfer of resources. (1) At the time of application, 
households shall be asked to provide information regarding any resources 
which any household member (or ineligible alien or disqualified person 
whose resources are being considered available to the household) had 
transferred within the 3-month period immediately preceding the date of 
application. Households which have transferred resources knowingly for 
the purpose of qualifying or attempting to qualify for food stamp 
benefits shall be disqualified from participation in the program for up 
to 1 year from the date of the discovery of the transfer. This 
disqualification period shall be applied if the resources are 
transferred knowingly in the 3-month period prior to application or if 
they are transferred knowingly after the household is determined 
eligible for benefits. An example of the latter would be assets which 
the household acquires after being certified and which are then 
transferred to prevent the household from exceeding the maximum resource 
limit.
    (2) Eligibility for the program will not be affected by the 
following transfers:
    (i) Resources which would not otherwise affect eligibility, for 
example, resources consisting of excluded personal property such as 
furniture or of money that, when added to other nonexempt household 
resources, totaled less at the time of the transfer than the allowable 
resource limits;
    (ii) Resources which are sold or traded at, or near, fair market 
value;
    (iii) Resources which are transferred between members of the same 
household (including ineligible aliens or disqualified persons whose 
resources are being considered available to the household); and
    (iv) Resources which are transferred for reasons other than 
qualifying or attempting to qualify for food stamp benefits, for 
example, a parent placing funds into an educational trust fund described 
in paragraph (e)(9) of this section.
    (3) In the event the State agency establishes that an applicant 
household knowingly transferred resources for the purpose of qualifying 
or attempting to qualify for food stamp benefits, the household shall be 
sent a notice of denial explaining the reason for and length of the 
disqualification. The period of disqualification shall begin in the 
month of application. If the household is participating at the time of 
the discovery of the transfer, a notice of adverse action explaining the 
reason for and length of the disqualification shall be sent. The period 
of disqualification shall be made effective with the first allotment to 
be issued after the notice of adverse action period has expired, unless 
the household has requested a fair hearing and continued benefits.
    (4) The length of the disqualification period shall be based on the 
amount by which nonexempt transferred resources, when added to other 
countable resources, exceeds the allowable resource limits. The 
following chart will be used to determine the period of 
disqualification.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                            Period of
        Amount in excess of the resource limit          disqualification
                                                            (months)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
$0 to 249.99..........................................               1
250 to 999.99.........................................               3
1,000 to 2999.99......................................               6
3,000 to 4,999.99.....................................               9
5,000 or more.........................................              12
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (i) Resources of non-household members. (1) The resources of non-
household members, as defined in Sec. 273.1(b)(7)(i) and (ii), must be 
handled as outlined in Sec. 273.11(d).
    (2) The resources of non-household members, as defined in 
Sec. 273.1(b)(7)(iii) through (vi), must be handled as outlined in 
Sec. 273.11(c) and (d), as appropriate.

[Amdt. 132, 43 FR 47889, Oct. 17, 1978]

    Editorial Note: For Federal Register citations affecting Sec. 273.8, 
see the List of CFR Sections Affected, which appears in the Finding Aids 
section of the printed volume and on GPO Access.

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