[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 7, Volume 4]
[Revised as of January 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 7CFR273.17]

[Page 754-756]
 
                          TITLE 7--AGRICULTURE
 
    CHAPTER II--FOOD AND NUTRITION SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
 
PART 273--CERTIFICATION OF ELIGIBLE HOUSEHOLDS--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 273.17  Restoration of lost benefits.

    (a) Entitlement. (1) The State agency shall restore to households 
benefits which were lost whenever the loss was caused by an error by the 
State agency or by an administrative disqualification for intentional 
Program violation which was subsequently reversed as specified in 
paragraph (e) of this section, or if there is a statement elsewhere in 
the regulations specifically stating that the household is entitled to 
restoration of lost benefits. Furthermore, unless there is a statement 
elsewhere in the regulations that a household is entitled to lost 
benefits for a longer period, benefits shall be restored for not more 
than twelve months prior to whichever of the following occurred first:
    (i) The date the State agency receives a request for restoration 
from a household; or
    (ii) The date the State agency is notified or otherwise discovers 
that a loss to a household has occurred.
    (2) The State agency shall restore to households benefits which were 
found by any judicial action to have been wrongfully withheld. If the 
judicial action is the first action the recipient has taken to obtain 
restoration of lost benefits, then benefits shall be restored for a 
period of not more than twelve months from the date the court action was 
initiated. When the judicial action is a review of a State agency 
action, the benefits shall be restored for a period of not more than 
twelve months from the first of the following dates:
    (i) The date the State agency receives a request for restoration:
    (ii) If no request for restoration is received, the date the fair 
hearing action was initiated; but
    (iii) Never more than one year from when the State agency is 
notified of, or discovers, the loss.
    (3) Benefits shall be restored even if the household is currently 
ineligible.
    (b) Errors discovered by the State agency. If the State agency 
determines that a loss of benefits has occurred, and the household is 
entitled to restoration of those benefits, the State agency shall 
automatically take action to restore any benefits that were lost. No 
action by the household is necessary. However, benefits shall not be 
restored if the benefits were lost more than 12 months prior to the 
month the loss was discovered by the State agency in the normal course 
of business, or were lost more than 12 months prior to the month the 
State agency was notified in writing or orally of a possible loss to a 
specific household. The State agency shall notify the household of its 
entitlement, the amount of benefits to be restored, any offsetting that 
was done, the method of restoration, and the right to appeal through the 
fair hearing process if the household disagrees with any aspect of the 
proposed lost benefit restoration.
    (c) Disputed benefits. (1) If the State agency determines that a 
household is entitled to restoration of lost benefits, but the household 
does not agree with the amount to be restored as calculated by the State 
agency or any other action taken by the State agency to restore lost 
benefits, the household may request a fair hearing within 90 days of the 
date the household is notified of its entitlement to restoration of lost 
benefits. If a fair hearing is requested prior to or during the time 
lost benefits are being restored, the household shall receive the lost 
benefits as determined by the State agency pending the results of the 
fair hearing. If the fair hearing decision is favorable to the 
household, the State agency shall restore the lost benefits in 
accordance with that decision.
    (2) If a household believes it is entitled to restoration of lost 
benefits but the State agency, after reviewing the case file, does not 
agree, the household has 90 days from the date of the State

[[Page 755]]

agency determination to request a fair hearing. The State agency shall 
restore lost benefits to the household only if the fair hearing decision 
is favorable to the household. Benefits lost more than 12 months prior 
to the date the State agency was initially informed of the household's 
possible entitlement to lost benefits shall not be restored.
    (d) Computing the amount to be restored. After correcting the loss 
for future months and excluding those months for which benefits may have 
been lost prior to the 12-month time limits described in paragraphs (b) 
and (c) of this section, the State agency shall calculate the amount to 
be restored as follows:
    (1) If the household was eligible but received an incorrect 
allotment, the loss of benefits shall be calculated only for those 
months the household participated. If the loss was caused by an 
incorrect delay, denial, or termination of benefits, the months affected 
by the loss shall be calculated as follows:
    (i) If an eligible household's application was erroneously denied, 
the month the loss initially occurred shall be the month of application, 
or for an eligible household filing a timely reapplication, the month 
following the expiration of its certification period.
    (ii) If an eligible household's application was delayed, the months 
for which benefits may be lost shall be calculated in accordance with 
procedures in Sec. 273.2(h).
    (iii) If a household's benefits were erroneously terminated, the 
month the loss initially occurred shall be the first month benefits were 
not received as a result of the erroneous action.
    (iv) After computing the date the loss initially occurred, the loss 
shall be calculated for each month subsequent to that date until either 
the first month the error is corrected or the first month the household 
is found ineligible.
    (2) For each month affected by the loss, the State agency shall 
determine if the household was actually eligible. In cases where there 
is no information in the household's case file to document that the 
household was actually eligible, the State agency shall advise the 
household of what information must be provided to determine eligibility 
for these months. For each month the household cannot provide the 
necessary information to demonstrate its eligibility, the household 
shall be considered ineligible.
    (3) For the months the household was eligible, the State agency 
shall calculate the allotment the household should have received. If the 
household received a smaller allotment than it was eligible to receive, 
the difference between the actual and correct allotments equals the 
amount to be restored.
    (4) If a claim against a household is unpaid or held in suspense as 
provided in Sec. 273.18, the amount to be restored shall be offset 
against the amount due on the claim before the balance, if any, is 
restored to the household. At the point in time when the household is 
certified and receives an initial allotment, the initial allotment shall 
not be reduced to offset claims, even if the initial allotment is paid 
retroactively.
    (e) Lost benefits to individuals disqualified for intentional 
Program violation. Individuals disqualified for intentional Program 
violation are entitled to restoration of any benefits lost during the 
months that they were disqualified, not to exceed twelve months prior to 
the date of State agency notification, only if the decision which 
resulted in disqualification is subsequently reversed. For example, an 
individual would not be entitled to restoration of lost benefits for the 
period of disqualification based solely on the fact that a criminal 
conviction could not be obtained, unless the individual successfully 
challenged the disqualification period imposed by an administrative 
disqualification in a separate court action. For each month the 
individual was disqualified, not to exceed twelve months prior to State 
agency notification, the amount to be restored, if any, shall be 
determined by comparing the allotment the household received with the 
allotment the household would have received had the disqualified member 
been allowed to participate. If the household received a smaller 
allotment than it should have received, the difference equals the amount 
to be restored. Participation in an administrative disqualification 
hearing in which

[[Page 756]]

the household contests the State agency assertion of intentional Program 
violation shall be considered notification that the household is 
requesting restored benefits.
    (f) Method of restoration. Regardless of whether a household is 
currently eligible or ineligible, the State agency shall restore lost 
benefits to a household by issuing an allotment equal to the amount of 
benefits that were lost. The amount restored shall be issued in addition 
to the allotment currently eligible households are entitled to receive. 
The State agency shall honor reasonable requests by households to 
restore lost benefits in monthly installments if, for example, the 
household fears the excess coupons may be stolen, or that the amount to 
be restored is more than it can use in a reasonable period of time.
    (g) Changes in household composition. Whenever lost benefits are due 
a household and the household's membership has changed, the State agency 
shall restore the lost benefits to the household containing a majority 
of the individuals who were household members at the time the loss 
occurred. If the State agency cannot locate or determine the household 
which contains a majority of household members the State agency shall 
restore the lost benefits to the household containing the head of the 
household at the time the loss occurred.
    (h) Accounting procedures. Each State agency shall be responsible 
for maintaining an accounting system for documenting a household's 
entitlement to restoration of lost benefits and for recording the 
balance of lost benefits that must be restored to the household. Each 
State agency shall at a minimum, document how the amount to be restored 
was calculated and the reason lost benefits must be restored. The 
accounting system shall be designed to readily identify those situations 
where a claim against a household can be used to offset the amount to be 
restored.

[Amdt. 132, 43 FR 47889, Oct. 17, 1978, as amended by Amdt. 225, 48 FR 
16831, Apr. 19, 1983; Amdt. 314, 54 FR 24518, June 7, 1989; Amdt. 356, 
59 FR 29713, June 9, 1994]