[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 7, Volume 4]

[Revised as of January 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 7CFR272.1]



[Page 565-601]

 

                          TITLE 7--AGRICULTURE

 

    CHAPTER II--FOOD AND NUTRITION SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE

 

PART 272_REQUIREMENTS FOR PARTICIPATING STATE AGENCIES--Table of Contents

 

Sec. 272.1  General terms and conditions.









Sec.

272.1 General terms and conditions.

272.2 Plan of operation.

272.3 Operating guidelines and forms.

272.4 Program administration and personnel requirements.

272.5 Program informational activities.

272.6 Nondiscrimination compliance.

272.7 Procedures for program administration in Alaska.

272.8 State income and eligibility verification system.

272.9 Approval of homeless meal providers.

272.10 ADP/CIS Model Plan.

272.11 Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) Program.



    Authority: 7 U.S.C. 2011-2036.



    Editorial Note: OMB control numbers relating to this part 272 are 

contained in Sec. 271.8.





    (a) Coupons do not reduce benefits. The coupon allotment provided 

any eligible household shall not be considered income or resources for 

any purpose under any Federal, State, or local laws including, but not 

limited to, laws on taxation, welfare, and public assistance programs. 

No participating State or political subdivision shall decrease any 

assistance otherwise provided an individual or individuals because of 

the receipt of a coupon allotment.

    (b) No sales taxes on food stamp purchases. (1) A State shall not 

participate in the Food Stamp Program if State or local sales taxes or 

other taxes or fees, including but not limited to excise taxes, are 

collected within the State on purchases made with food stamp coupons. 

``Purchases made with food coupons'' for purposes of this provision 

shall refer to purchases of ``eligible foods'' as defined in Sec. 

271.2. Where the total value of groceries being bought by the recipient 

is larger than the amount of coupons being presented by the recipient, 

only the portion of the sale made in exchange for food stamps must be 

exempt from taxation in order for a State to satisfy the requirements of 

this provision. Although a food stamp recipient may use a combination of 

cash and food stamps in making a food purchase, only the dollar amount 

represented by the food coupons needs to be exempt from taxation.

    (2) State and/or local law shall not permit the imposition of tax on 

food paid for with coupons. FNS may terminate the issuance of coupons 

and disallow administrative funds otherwise payable pursuant to part 277 

in any State where such taxes are charged. Action to disallow 

administrative



[[Page 566]]



funds shall be taken in accordance with the procedures set forth in 

Sec. 276.4.

    (3) A State or local area which taxes some, but not all, eligible 

food items shall ensure that retail food stores in that locale sequence 

purchases of eligible foods paid for with a combination of coupons and 

cash so as to not directly or indirectly charge or assign a tax to food 

stamp recipients on eligible food items purchased with coupons. 

Prohibited methods include, but are not limited to, the allocation of 

coupons first to non-taxable eligible items, and the application of 

cash, rather than coupons, to taxable eligible food.

    (c) Disclosure. (1) Use or disclosure of information obtained from 

food stamp applicant or recipient households shall be restricted to:

    (i) Persons directly connected with the administration or 

enforcement of the provisions of the Food Stamp Act or regulations, 

other Federal assistance programs, federally-assisted State programs 

providing assistance on a means-tested basis to low income individuals, 

or general assistance programs which are subject to the joint processing 

requirements in Sec. 273.2(j)(2).

    (ii) Persons directly connected with the administration or 

enforcement of the programs which are required to participate in the 

State income and eligibility verification system (IEVS) as specified in 

Sec. 272.8(a)(2), to the extent the food stamp information is useful in 

establishing or verifying eligibility or benefit amounts under those 

programs;

    (iii) Persons directly connected with the verification of 

immigration status of aliens applying for food stamp benefits, through 

the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) Program, to 

the extent the information is necessary to identify the individual for 

verification purposes.

    (iv) Persons directly connected with the administration of the Child 

Support Program under part D, title IV of the Social Security Act in 

order to assist in the administration of that program, and employees of 

the Secretary of Health and Human Services as necessary to assist in 

establishing or verifying eligibility or benefits under titles II and 

XVI of the Social Security Act;

    (v) Employees of the Comptroller General's Office of the United 

States for audit examination authorized by any other provison of law; 

and

    (vi) Local, State, or Federal law enforcement officials, upon their 

written request, for the purpose of investigating an alleged violation 

of the Food Stamp Act or regulation. The written request shall include 

the identity of the individual requesting the information and his 

authority to do so, violation being investigated, and the identity of 

the person on whom the information is requested.

    (vii) Local, State or Federal law enforcement officers, upon written 

request, for the purpose of obtaining the address, social security 

number, and, if available, photograph of any household member, if the 

member is fleeing to avoid prosecution or custody for a crime, or an 

attempt to commit a crime, that would be classified as a felony (or in 

the State of New Jersey, a high misdemeanor), or is violating a 

condition of probation or parole imposed under a Federal or State law. 

The State agency shall not require a household to present photographic 

identification as a condition of eligibility and must accept any 

document that reasonably establishes the applicant's identity. The State 

agency shall also provide information regarding a household member, upon 

the written request of a law enforcement officer acting in his or her 

official capacity, where such member has information necessary for the 

apprehension or investigation of another member who is fleeing to avoid 

prosecution or custody for a felony, or has violated a condition of 

probation or parole. If a law enforcement officer provides documentation 

indicating that a household member is fleeing to avoid prosecution or 

custody for a felony, or has violated a condition of probation or 

parole, the State agency shall terminate the participation of the 

member. A request for information absent documentation would not be 

sufficient to terminate the member's participation. The State agency 

shall disclose only such information as is necessary to comply with a 

specific written request of a law enforcement agency authorized by this 

paragraph.



[[Page 567]]



    (2) Recipients of information released under paragraph (c)(1) of 

this section must adequately protect the information against 

unauthorized disclosure to persons or for purposes not specified in this 

section. In addition, information received through the IEVS must be 

protected from unauthorized disclosure as required by regulations 

established by the information provider. Information released to the 

State agency pursuant to section 6103(l) of the Internal Revenue Code of 

1954 shall be subject to the safeguards established by the Secretary of 

the Treasury in section 6103(l) of the Internal Revenue Code and 

implemented by the Internal Revenue Service in its publication, Tax 

Information and Security Guidelines.

    (3) If there is a written request by a responsible member of the 

household, its currently authorized representative, or a person acting 

on its behalf to review material and information contained in its 

casefile, the material and information contained in the casefile shall 

be made available for inspection during normal business hours. However, 

the State agency may withhold confidential information, such as the 

names of individuals who have disclosed information about the household 

without the household's knowledge, or the nature or status of pending 

criminal prosecutions.

    (d) Information available to the public. (1) Federal regulations, 

Federal procedures embodied in FNS notices and policy memos, State Plans 

of Operation, and corrective action plans shall be available upon 

request for examination by members of the public during office hours at 

the State agency headquarters as well as at FNS regional and national 

offices. State agency handbooks shall be available for examination upon 

request at each local certification office within each project area as 

well as at the State agency headquarters and FNS Regional offices. State 

agencies, at their option, may require other offices within the State to 

maintain a copy of Federal regulations.

    (2) Copies of regulations, plans of operation, State manuals, State 

corrective action plans, and Federal procedures may be obtained from FNS 

in accordance with part 295 of this chapter.

    (e) Records and reports. Each State agency shall keep such records 

and submit such reports and other information as required by FNS.

    (f) Retention of records. Each State agency shall retain all program 

records in an orderly fashion, for audit and review purposes, for a 

period of 3 years from the month of origin of each record. The State 

agency shall retain fiscal records and accountable documents for 3 years 

from the date of fiscal or administrative closure. Fiscal closure means 

that obligations for or against the Federal government have been 

liquidated. Administrative closure means that the State agency has 

determined and documented that no further action to liquidate the 

obligation is appropriate. Fiscal records and accountable documents 

include, but are not limited to claims and documentation of lost 

benefits. Retention methods for ATP cards are provided in part 274.

    (g) Implementation. The implementation schedule for any amendment to 

the regulations shall be specified in the amendment.

    (1) Amendment 132. Program changes required by Amendment 132 to the 

food stamp regulations shall be implemented as follows:

    (i) State agencies shall eliminate the purchase requirement for all 

households on or before January 1, 1979. The State agency shall 

designate the month the purchase requirement is to be eliminated. If the 

month designated is other than January 1979, the State agency shall 

obtain prior approval of FNS. FNS shall approve the designation of 

months prior to January 1979, if the State agency demonstrates that an 

accounting procedure for the new issuance system will be in place. The 

submission dates for the forms FNS-250 and FNS-256, stipulated in Sec. 

274.8(a), shall be effective with the reports for the first month of 

issuance without a purchase requirement. For example, if EPR is 

implemented in January, the FNS-250 and FNS-256 for January would be due 

by March 17, 1979. The FNS-259 shall be submitted in accordance with 

Sec. 274.8(a)(3) starting with the quarter beginning January 1979.

    (ii) State agencies may implement all eligibility rules contained in 

part



[[Page 568]]



273 and all issuance rules contained in part 274 at the same time the 

purchase requirement is eliminated, but in no case shall eligibility and 

issuance rules be implemented prior to elimination of the purchase 

requirement. State agencies may also implement portions of part 273 and 

part 274 separately after the purchase requirement is eliminated, 

provided that the eligibility rules setting the income standards, the 

income deductions and the household allotment calculation are 

implemented at the same time, and all rules are implemented no later 

than 3 months after the purchase requirement is eliminated. However, if 

a State agency implements EPR after December 1, 1978, it shall implement 

the certification and other issuance regulations for all new 

applications and recertifications no later than March 1, 1979.

    (iii) State agencies shall have up to 4 months following the first 

day that applications are taken under the new rules, to convert the 

current caseload to the new program. Households coming due for 

recertification during this time will be converted to the new program at 

recertification. Remaining households shall be converted by a desk 

review during that 4-month period. The new income definition, 

deductions, and allotment calculation shall be completed for all 

households which are converted through a desk review. To the extent that 

the case file and other information available to the State agency 

permit, other eligibility criteria, such as work registration, 

resources, tax dependency, and alien status, shall be considered during 

the desk review. Otherwise, nonincome eligibility factors shall be 

deferred until the household's scheduled recertification. In no event 

shall a household's certification period be extended as a result of the 

desk review. Until recertified or converted by a desk review, a 

household shall continue to receive the bonus portion of the allotment, 

calculated in accordance with the income, deduction, and basis of 

issuance provisons of the Food Stamp Act of 1964. During the case file 

conversion period, some households may be participating on the basis of 

the old program rules and some on the new rules. Claims against 

households and restoration of benefits shall not be assessed provided 

that whichever program rules are in use for a particular case are 

correctly applied during the conversion period. However, errors caused 

by miscalculations based on the old or new program rules which result in 

an entitlement to restoration of lost benefits or an overissuance shall 

be assessed in accordance with Sec. Sec. 273.17 and 273.18 of these 

regulations. The procedures for calculating lost benefits or 

overissuances as specified in Sec. Sec. 273.17 and 273.18 shall be 

applied to any case found to be in error after the implementation of 

these procedures, even though the action which caused the error may have 

occurred prior to the date of implementation. Notwithstanding anything 

to the contrary in the preceding provisions of this paragraph, State 

agencies shall have up to four months following the first day that 

applications are taken under the new rules, to convert the current 

caseload to the new program. Households coming due for recertification 

during this time shall be converted to the new Program at 

recertification. However, if the State agency elects to schedule a desk 

review for these households earlier in the four-month period, conversion 

shall take place after the desk review. Further, State agencies may 

elect to do a point-in-time computer conversion in lieu of individual 

desk reviews. Such a computer conversion must cover entire categories of 

households, such as public assistance households, all households in a 

particular project area, all households currently in the computer files, 

etc., and the State agency may not elect to postpone the conversion of 

certain cases until recertification.

    (iv) State agencies shall implement Sec. 273.17 on the restoration 

of lost benefits on or before March 1, 1979. State agencies are 

encouraged to implement restoration of lost benefits concurrent with the 

elimination of the purchase requirement, especially as they relate to 

households which are entitled to lost benefits but which have been 

unable to receive them because the households are currently ineligible. 

State agencies shall notify currently



[[Page 569]]



ineligible households of the availability of their lost benefits by 

using one of the following procedures:

    (A) State agencies which can readily identify the ineligible 

households which are entitled to lost benefits shall notify these 

households and restore the lost benefits within 4 months of the date 

restoration of lost benefits is implemented.

    (B) Other State agencies shall issue a one-time-only press release 

notifying ineligible households that benefits can be restored. The press 

release shall advise households to contact the local food stamp office 

for more information. In addition, State agencies issuing the press 

release shall request the assistance of local Community Action Programs, 

general assistance agencies, legal services programs funded by the Legal 

Services Corporation, State employment service and unemployment 

compensation offices and other State and Federal governmental agencies 

providing services to low-income households, such as the Social Security 

Administration or the Community Services Administration. FNS shall 

provide the State agency with copies of the letter to be used to request 

assistance from outreach organizations and governmental agencies, and 

the fliers and posters which will be distributed upon request to such 

organizations and agencies. The language of the request for assistance, 

the notice to households and the poster is contained in the appendix to 

this rulemaking. State agencies shall mail the request for assistance 

and display posters in all local agency food stamp certification and 

issuance offices and welfare offices within 30 days of receipt from FNS. 

In project areas subject to the bilingual requirements of Sec. 

272.4(c), State agencies shall provide translations of the posters and 

fliers. Upon request, FNS shall provide Spanish posters and fliers. FNS 

shall reimburse State agencies for all costs of providing translations 

of the posters and fliers in languages other than Spanish. The State 

agency shall display the posters in its offices for six months. 

Households whose entitlement to benefits has been clearly established 

may apply for restoration of lost benefits under this paragraph for an 

indefinite period. Households whose entitlement to restoration of lost 

benefits was established more than three years prior to application for 

retroactive benefits under this paragraph shall be permitted to document 

entitlement if entitlement cannot be verified from State agency records. 

Such households shall sign an affidavit under penalty of perjury 

explaining their entitlement. In lieu of the requirements of this 

paragraph, State agencies may elect to provide notice pursuant to 

paragraph (g)(1)(iv)(A) of this section, in any or all project areas 

within the State.

    (v) State agencies shall assume the authority to settle or adjust 

recipient claims delegated under Sec. 271.4(b) on or before July 1, 

1979.

    (vi) State agencies without a currently approved utility standard 

required in Sec. 273.9(d)(5) shall develop and implement an FNS 

approved utility standard on or before October 1, 1979. The State agency 

shall notify households certified at the time the utility standard is 

implemented of the availability of the standard and the conditions for 

its use in lieu of actual expenses. Households qualified to use the 

standard and which elect to do so shall have the standard applied as any 

other change in circumstances. Otherwise, actual utility expenses shall 

continue to be used for households qualified for the standard until 

their next recertification.

    (vii) State agencies shall advise FNS of their determination of the 

need for bilingual services as required by Sec. 272.4(c) on or before 

December 1, 1978. If the State agency cannot determine, based on 

available information sources, whether or not bilingual services are 

required in particular project areas, it shall so advise FNS on or 

before December 1, 1978. The State agency shall then develop procedures 

to record the number of non-English-speaking low-income households which 

make contact with its offices in these project areas as required by 

Sec. 272.4(c)(6). These procedures shall be implemented on or before 

March 1, 1979, and shall continue for 6 months. The State agency shall 

submit to FNS its determination(s) of the need for bilingual services 

not later than 60 days following the end of the 6-



[[Page 570]]



month period. Bilingual outreach materials shall be available for 

distribution within 90 days of the State agency's determination that 

such materials are required. When the State agency determines that 

bilingual staff and certification materials are required, it shall also 

make a determination of whether volunteers or paid staff will be used. 

When volunteers are to be used, the State agency shall provide the 

materials and arrange for volunteers within 90 days. Paid staff and 

materials shall be provided within 180 days.

    (viii) Prior to the certification of households under these 

regulations, State agencies shall implement staff training for the 

transition as required in Sec. 272.4(e)(3), and training for outreach 

workers, receptionists, and others, as required in Sec. 272.4(e)(1) (v) 

and (vi). Beginning with these training sessions for the transition, 

State agencies shall implement the requirements for public participation 

at training sessions, as specified in Sec. 272.4(e)(1)(iv). State 

agencies shall designate a training coordinator and develop and 

implement the ongoing training program required by Sec. 272.4(e) on or 

before July 1, 1979.

    (ix) Elimination of the purchase requirement and the implementation 

of the basic financial and nonfinancial eligibility criteria and other 

coupon issuance criteria shall not be extended for any reason. FNS may 

grant extensions for other provisions contained in these rules, provided 

that the State agency presents compelling justification for a delay and 

establishes an acceptable alternative schedule in advance of the 

implementation deadline. In no event will FNS grant an extension in 

excess of 120 days from the specified implementation date. In those 

cases where extensions are granted, the relevant Department regulations 

under the Food Stamp Act of 1964 shall remain in effect until superseded 

by implementation of the new rules.

    (2) Amendment 137. Program changes required by Amendment 137 to the 

food stamp regulations shall be implemented for all households initially 

applying for food stamp benefits no later than 90 days following the 

publication of this amendment.

    (3) Amendment 146. The procedures contained in Amendment 146 shall 

be implemented by State agencies in time to be able to issue reduced 

food stamp allotments or to suspend or cancel allotments within 60 days 

after the date of publication of this amendment in the Federal Register.

    (4) Amendment 141. State agencies shall begin planning for and 

conducting ongoing consultations with the Indian tribal organizations of 

the reservations within their jurisdiction as soon as possible after the 

effective date of this amendment. Portions of the State Plan of 

Operation to be submitted for fiscal year 1980 shall be subject to ITO 

comment as required by Sec. 281.2(a). The funding authority in Sec. 

281.9 shall apply to budgets beginning with the fourth quarter of fiscal 

year 1979.

    (5) Amendment 211. State agencies shall implement the new Social 

Security Number (SSN) provisions for new applicants no later than 

February 1, 1983 and convert the current caseload at recertification or 

when the case is otherwise reviewed, whichever occurs first. The 

citizenship provisions must be implemented on or before April 1, 1983. 

All other provisions shall be implemented at State agency discretion.

    (6) Amendment 149. Changes to States' Quality Control systems as 

required by this amendment shall be implemented as follows:

    (i) All State agencies shall continue conducting modified QC reviews 

[in accordance with regulations published February 9, 1979 (43 FR 8548)] 

through August 31, 1979 and submit Form FNS-133 to FNS by September 15.

    (ii) State agencies shall implement the requirements in subpart C of 

part 275 for conducting QC reviews no later than October 1, 1979. A 

quality control sampling plan (as specified in Sec. 275.11(a) of these 

regulations) must be submitted by each State to the appropriate FNS 

Regional Office no later than September 1, 1979 (30 days prior to 

implementation). This will allow time necessary for approval of the 

plans prior to the October 1 implementation date.

    (iii) State agencies are encouraged to implement QC September 1, if 

possible. States opting to implement early would not be required to 

operate for



[[Page 571]]



this month under an approved sampling plan. These States must, however, 

submit sampling plans in accordance with paragraph (g)(6)(ii) of this 

section. The month of September (sampling month) would serve as a test 

phase. Therefore, data collected for the sample month would not be 

required to be submitted to FNS or used in determining a State's 

cumulative allotment error rate.

    (iv) Regulations published October 17, 1978 (43 FR 47846) which 

implement major aspects of the Food Stamp Act of 1977 provide for the 

conversion of cases via a desk review (Sec. 272.1(g)(1)(iii)). Desk 

converted cases would be converted to the new eligibility criteria for 

income and deductions but may not have been converted to the new 

criteria for resources, work registration, tax depend ency, etc. 

Therefore, States will have households participating in the program 

based on some of the eligibility criteria of the 1964 Food Stamp Act. 

Desk converted cases as provided in Sec. 272.1(g)(1)(iii) and cases 

which should have been converted via desk review (some cases may not 

undergo the conversion process as required), shall be subject to 

standard QC review procedures. When the QC reviewer detects a variance 

in one of these cases which results from an element of eligibility which 

was not converted and was not required to have been converted, the 

reviewer shall disregard the variance. When the reviewer detects a 

variance in a case when an element of eligibility was, or should have 

been converted, the reviewer shall handle the variance like any other QC 

variance as identified in Sec. 275.12 of these regulations. It is 

possible that desk converted cases may continue to show up in QC samples 

through February 1980.

    (v) State agencies shall submit reports of QC review activity (one 

copy to the appropriate FNS Regional Office and one copy to the Deputy 

Administrator for Family Nutrition Programs, Washington, DC) as follows:

    (A) Each State agency shall report the monthly progress of sample 

selection and completion on a form provided by FNS. This report shall be 

submitted to FNS so that it is received no later than 10 days after the 

end of each month, beginning December 10, 1979. Each report shall 

reflect sampling and review activity for the previous month.

    (B) Each State agency shall report the results of QC review activity 

on a form provided by FNS. This report shall be submitted to FNS so that 

it is received no later than 90 days from the end of the reporting 

period.

    (C) Corrections to information on the above reports requested by FNS 

must be submitted within 10 days of the request.

    (7) Amendment 151. (i) State agencies shall implement the program 

changes required by amendment for all new applications and 

recertifications no later than January 1, 1980. Currently eligible 

households shall be converted at recertification or when they request 

conversion to the new deduction system by responding to the notice 

required in paragraph (g)(7)(iii) of this section or by otherwise 

requesting recomputation.

    (ii) State agencies may but are not required to convert the current 

caseload to the shelter deduction system provided for in Sec. 

273.9(d)(5) through desk reviews or by computer search. State agencies 

are encouraged to convert eligible households to the new shelter 

deduction as soon as possible to allow these households to benefit 

during the winter months.

    (iii) Notices explaining the changes and their applicability shall 

be available at all food stamp certification offices and shall also be 

mailed or otherwise provided individually to all currently certified 

households at least once prior to implementation. At a minimum, these 

notices shall be distributed in the month prior to implementation either 

with the ATP card or separately but no later than the 15th of the month. 

The notice shall advise the household of the availability of the new 

deductions and the procedures for reporting medical and shelter 

expenses. If the State agency can identify those households to which 

this amendment would apply, only these households need to receive the 

notice.

    (iv) Fliers advising of the changes contained in this amendment 

shall be made available to public and general assistance offices, local 

Social Security



[[Page 572]]



offices, and any interested organizations, particularly those dealing 

with the elderly or disabled or those places where the elderly or 

disabled congregate, such as housing units. Also, posters explaining the 

changes shall be displayed in food stamp certification offices and shall 

be made available to public and general assistance offices, local Social 

Security offices and any other interested groups. State agencies shall 

notify all organizations on its outreach contact list of the changes and 

of the availability of posters and fliers. State agencies shall issue 

press releases to the news media advising of the impending program 

changes.

    (v) For the first two months of implementation, State agencies shall 

have up to 30 days to process changes in medical and shelter costs 

reported in conjunction with this amendment. The change shall be 

effective for the first issuance following that 30-day period with 

restoration of lost benefits to the point at which the change would 

normally become effective under Sec. 273.12. The State agency may 

request an extension of processing time of up to 60 days to act on these 

changes. The State agency shall submit appropriate documentation to FNS 

for the State or any part of the State for which such an extension is 

requested. After the first two months the State agency shall act on 

these changes in accordance with the normal processing standards in 

Sec. 273.12(c). For changes reported during a period of two months 

following a State agency's implementation of this amendment, 

verification of shelter and medical expenses required by Sec. 273.2(f) 

must be obtained prior to the issuance of the third normal monthly 

allotment after the change is reported. If the household does not 

provide verification, the household's benefits will revert to the 

original level. State agencies are encouraged to complete such 

verification and, if needed, conduct an interview prior to processing 

the change. After this initial period, State agencies will verify these 

expenses in accordance with the normal timeliness standards.

    (vi) Medical expenses shall be subject to the same rounding 

procedures used for shelter expenses in Sec. 273.10(e)(1)(ii). This 

procedure shall be in effect until implementation of amendments to Sec. 

273.10(e)(1)(ii).

    (vii) No household shall be entitled to restoration of lost benefits 

under this amendment for any period prior to the time the State agency 

has implemented its provisions. For the initial months after 

implementation, during which the longer processing time allowed under 

this amendment is in effect, a household shall be entitled to 

restoration of lost benefits back to the month the change would have 

become effective under the normal processing standards in Sec. 

273.12(c). After this initial period, no household shall be entitled to 

restoration of lost benefits unless the State agency does not act on 

reported changes in accordance with the timeliness standards in Sec. 

273.12(c) or the household is otherwise entitled under the provisions of 

Sec. 273.17.

    (viii) Implementation of these program changes falls in the last 

three months of the October 1979 to March 1980 reporting period for 

quality control. For the months of January, February and March 1980, all 

cases in which a household member is either 60 years of age or over, 

receives SSI, or disability benefits under title II of the Social 

Security Act will be subject to standard quality control review 

procedures, except that any varying information regarding medical 

deductions and/or shelter deductions in excess of the cap found in the 

review shall be disregarded in determining errors. Such information 

shall be noted on the Face Sheet of Form FNS-245 under part VII, 

Discrepancies and Other Information, and reported to the State agency 

for appropriate action on an individual case basis. Starting with the 

April-September 1980 reporting period, when the reviewer detects a 

variance in the medical deduction and/or the shelter deduction in excess 

of the cap, and these expenses were reported at application, 

recertification or during the certification period, the reviewer shall 

handle the variance like any other QC variance as identified in Sec. 

275.12 of the Performance Reporting System regulations.

    (8) Amendment 152. The rounding procedure set forth in Sec. 

273.10(e) shall be in effect for new applications and recertifications 

no later than July 1, 1980.



[[Page 573]]



The State agency shall have up to 12 months following the implementation 

date of final regulations to convert the current caseload to the 

rounding procedure that is chosen under Sec. 273.10(e)(1)(ii). The 

State agency shall have a choice of the following three options in 

converting households that are already participating at the time the new 

rounding procedure goes into effect:

    (i) Convert households at recertification; (ii) convert households 

by conducting a desk review; or (iii) convert all households, or all 

households in a certain category, at a point-in-time. For example, the 

State agency may convert all public assistance households or all 

households in a project area by computer. Point-in-time mass conversions 

shall be conducted no later than July 1, 1980. In any case, the State 

agency shall advise FNS regarding which rounding and caseload conversion 

procedures are chosen and when the conversion will be completed.

    (9) Amendment 154. State agencies shall implement the program 

changes required by Amendment 154 as follows:

    (i) State agencies shall begin requiring social security numbers for 

all new applications and recertifications no later than the first day of 

the first month which commences 120 days from the date of publication of 

final rules. Participating households shall be requested to provide or 

apply for social security numbers (SSN) for appropriate household 

members at recertification, or at the time of office contact for any 

other reason. The State agency shall provide advance notification of 

this requirement and the consequences of noncompliance by sending an 

individual notice to all participating households and by providing press 

releases for dissemination through the media. The individual notices may 

be sent as either a one-time notice prior to implementation and/or with 

the notices of expiration of a certification period.

    (ii) If any affected member(s) of a household does not have his or 

her SSN readily available at the time of application, recertification, 

or any office contact, he or she shall follow the procedures for 

furnishing an SSN in accordance with Sec. 273.6 as amended.

    (iii) State agencies shall implement the fraud claims procedures 

contained in Sec. 273.16 and Sec. 273.18. Implementation shall be no 

later than the first of the month following the 120th day from the date 

of publication of final rules. By implementation the State agency shall 

also have an approved system for handling claims, including a method for 

accounting for the fifty percent retention of the value of funds 

collected from fraud claims. Any collection action on fraud claims after 

implementation is subject to the fifty percent retention including 

claims established under the Food Stamp Act of 1964 as amended and under 

the Food Stamp Act of 1977, as amended. However, only individuals found 

guilty of fraud through an administrative fraud hearing or through a 

court of law under regulations promulgating the Food Stamp Act of 1977, 

as amended, are subject to the recovery provisions in Sec. Sec. 273.16 

and 273.18 retroactive to implementation of fraud claim provisions under 

the 1977 Act.

    (10) Amendment 207. State agencies shall implement the changes in 

the rules required by Amendment 207 no later than January 1, 1983. 

Disabled parents who requested and were denied separate household status 

on or after September 8, 1982, will be entitled to benefits retroactive 

to the dates of their applications for separate household status.

    (11) Amendment 160. State agencies shall implement the provisions of 

this amendment as follows:

    (i) State agencies shall submit the initial State corrective action 

plans so they are received by FNS within 90 days of publication of these 

regulations as required in Sec. 275.22(a) of this chapter. This initial 

plan shall contain all known deficiencies in the State which meet the 

criteria set forth in Sec. 275.16(b) of this chapter and shall 

identify, for each such deficiency, the items required in Sec. 

275.17(b) of this chapter. Project areas also shall prepare and submit 

to the State corrective action plans for all identified deficiencies. 

These plans shall be submitted within 60 days of identification of a 

deficiency and shall include any deficiencies known to the project area 

prior to publication of these regulations for which



[[Page 574]]



corrective action has not been completed. Ninety days after publication 

of these regulations, all provisions of Sec. Sec. 275.15, 275.16, 

275.17, 275.18, 275.19 and 275.22 of this chapter shall be implemented.

    (ii) State agencies shall have submitted management evaluation (ME) 

review schedules within 90 days of publication of these regulations as 

required by Sec. 275.20 of this chapter. These review schedules shall 

contain all information required by Sec. 275.20 of this chapter and 

shall be adhered to unless a change is necessary. If a modification to 

an ME review schedule is necessary at any time in the review period, the 

State shall notify the appropriate FNS Regional Office of the 

modification.

    (iii) State agencies shall implement ME reviews within 90 days of 

publication of these regulations, following the provisions of Sec. Sec. 

275.5, 275.6, 275.7, 275.8, and 275.9 of this chapter. Any waiver from 

the requirements of Sec. 275.7 or Sec. 275.9 must be requested 60 days 

prior to its implementation as identified in Sec. 275.5(c). Development 

or submission of requests for a deviation shall not delay implementation 

of the ME review sub-system past the required implementation date.

    (iv) All provisions of these regulations which are not addressed in 

paragraphs (g)(11) (i) and (ii) of this section shall be implemented 

within 90 days of publication of these regulations. While this includes 

the requirements for a Performance Reporting System Coordinator and 

designation of an organizational entity for effecting corrective action 

as identified in Sec. 275.2(a) of this chapter, this position and 

designation may be established on an interim basis; provided that the 

provisions of Sec. 275.2(a) of this chapter are fully implemented by 

October 1, 1980. During this interim period States shall ensure that all 

responsibilities of the coordinator or entity are adhered to.

    (12) [Reserved]

    (13) Amendment 162. Program changes required by Amendment 162 of the 

Food Stamp Program regulations shall be implemented as follows:

    (i) The fee agent system for conducting interviews is currently in 

use and its continuing use is approved.

    (ii) All other rules except paragraph (p) of Sec. 272.8 shall be 

implemented as soon as practical but no later than 90 days following the 

date of final rulemaking. A fee agent training plan must be submitted 

within 45 days of the date of final rulemaking. Paragraph (p) of Sec. 

272.8 concerning points and hours shall be implemented following the 

time standards contained therein.

    (14) Amendment 142. (i) State agencies shall restore lost benefits 

to households who had their eligibility or benefit levels adversely 

affected because Federal energy assistance payments were counted as 

income and/or resources. Entitlement to restoration of lost benefits 

shall be retroactive to October 1, 1979 for payments received under 

CSA's ECAP; to November 27, 1979 for payments received under DHEW's EAP; 

and to January 7, 1980 for the one-time-only energy assistance payments 

to SSI households in accordance with Pub. L. 96-126.

    (ii) State agencies shall use the following procedures for notifying 

households of entitlement to restoration of benefits under Amendment 

142:

    (A) State agencies which can readily identify those SSI households 

who received the one-time payment and those households who received 

payments under the Energy Crisis Assistance or Energy Allowance Programs 

which lost benefits because their energy assistance payment was counted 

as income and/or resources must notify such households of entitlement to 

restoration of lost benefits.

    (B) State agencies which cannot readily identify households entitled 

to restoration of lost benefits due to the circumstances described in 

Sec. 272.1(g)(14)(i) must issue a one-time-only press release to notify 

households which have participated since October 1, 1979 of possible 

entitlement to restoration of lost benefits. State agencies may, at 

their option, use additional means of notification such as posters.

    (15) Amendment 163. State agencies shall implement the provisions in 

this amendment no later than July 1, 1980.

    (16) Amendment 174. State agencies shall implement the program 

changes required by Amendment 174 as follows:



[[Page 575]]



    (i) State agencies shall implement the income/resource disregard 

provision for Federal, State, and local energy assistance payments 

(Sec. Sec. 273.8 and 273.9 of this subchapter) no later than October 1, 

1981.

    (ii) State agencies shall implement the new maximum resource limit 

and the exemption of vehicles for the physically disabled (Sec. 273.12 

of this subchapter) no later than October 1, 1981 for all new 

applicants. State agencies shall convert the current caseload to the new 

resource limit at the time of recertification, or at any other time the 

casefile is reviewed prior to recertification.

    (iii) State agencies shall implement the student participation 

provisions of this amendment (Sec. Sec. 273.1, 273.2, 273.5, 273.7 and 

273.11 of this subchapter) no later than October 1, 1981 for all new 

applicants. Current caseload shall be converted at the time of 

recertification or any time the casefile is reviewed prior to 

recertification.

    (17) Amendment 158. (i) The procedures contained in part 273 

regarding SSI food stamp joint application processing shall become 

effective on August 1, 1980 for all State agencies except that:

    (A) In those areas designated as SSI/Elderly Cash-out Demonstration 

Project Sites or Demonstration Proj ect Comparison Sites, implementation 

of these provisions will be delayed. In addition, Social Security office 

service areas which contain either demonstration projects sites or 

demonstration comparison sites will be temporarily exempted, in their 

entirety, from implementation of these provisions whether or not their 

boundaries are co-terminous with demonstration proj ect sites and/or 

demonstration comparison site boundaries. This temporary exemption 

removes the administrative problem of the same SSA office simultaneously 

operating under both joint processing and cash-out regulations. The 

procedures contained in this rulemaking shall become effective for these 

project areas on the first day of the month following the ninetieth day 

after the termination of the demonstration project.

    (B) State agencies in SSI cash-out States as defined in Sec. 273.20 

shall not implement the provisions of this rulemaking. In the event an 

SSI cash-out State loses that status, the State agency shall implement 

the provisions of this rulemaking on the first day of the month 

following the ninetieth day after the Secretary of Health and Human 

Services determines that the State no longer qualifies for cash-out 

status.

    (ii) State agencies shall distribute fliers advising of the changes 

contained in this amendment to public and general assistance offices, 

local Social Security offices, any interested organizations, 

particularly those dealing with the elderly or disabled, and those 

places where the elderly or disabled congregate, such as housing units 

senior citizens centers, and elderly feeding programs. Also, posters 

explaining the changes shall be displayed in food stamp certification 

offices and shall be made available to public and general assistance 

offices, local Social Security offices and any other interested groups. 

State agencies shall notify all organizations on their outreach contact 

lists of the changes and of the availability of posters and fliers. 

State agencies shall issue press releases to the news media advising of 

the impending program changes. FNS will supply State agencies with model 

language describing the changes which State agencies may use in their 

publications.

    (18) Amendment 168. The provisions of Amendment 168 shall be 

effective on the thirtieth day following their publication. Any claims 

filed against State agencies for incidents that occur after the 

publication of this amendment shall be filed in accordance with the 

provisions of this amendment. Any claims filed against State agencies 

for incidents that occurred prior to the publication of this amendment 

shall be filed in accordance with the rules in effect at the time they 

occurred. However, the administrative review procedures contained in 

this amendment shall be applicable to all claims that are filed after 

the effective date of this amendment.

    (19)-(20) [Reserved]

    (21) Amendment 178. State agencies shall implement the provisions of 

Sec. 273.8 and Sec. 273.9 of this amendment for all new applicants no 

later than February 1, 1981. States shall convert the



[[Page 576]]



current caseload to the new rules at recertification or at the time the 

case is otherwise reviewed, whichever comes first.

    (22) Amendment 179. State agencies shall implement those 

verification procedures mandated in Sec. 273.2 and Sec. 273.8 no later 

than the first of the month 120 days following publication of final 

regulations. State agencies may implement those provisions allowed at 

State agency option in Sec. 273.2 and Sec. 273.12, once the options 

have been approved by FNS and the State certification manuals have been 

revised to incorporate the options.

    (23) Amendment 171. (i) All States operating an ATP issuance system 

shall submit the first Form FNS-46, Food Stamp Reconciliation Report, in 

accordance with Amendment No. 171, for the month of February 1981. This 

report shall be submitted to the FNS Regional Office within 90 days from 

the end of the report month.

    (ii) All States shall submit the Form FNS-388, State Coupon Issuance 

and Particpation Estimates, for February 1981 and each month thereafter. 

Those States that have not submitted procedures for estimating program 

participation, shall submit them to the FNS Regional Office on or before 

February 9, 1981.

    (24) Amendment 186. The procedures of part 275 regarding SSA/food 

stamp joint processing and demonstration cases shall become effective on 

August 1, 1980 for all applicable State agencies. These procedures must 

be implemented by October 1, 1980.

    (25) Amendment 187. State agencies shall implement the complaint 

procedures required by Sec. 271.6(a) no later than 180 days following 

publication of final regulations.

    (26) Amendment 165. State welfare agencies and State employment 

agencies shall implement the provisions of Amendment 165 no later than 

the first of the month following 120 days from publication of amendment 

165 in the Federal Register as follows:

    (i) Both agencies shall begin immediately to develop the work 

registration plan and agreements discussed in Sec. 273.7(c) and (d) of 

Amendment 165. The plan and agreements must be approved and implemented 

within the 120 day timeframe established for implementation of all 

provisions of the final rule.

    (ii) The provisions of amendment 165 shall be applied to households 

at the time of initial application, recertification, or reregistration, 

beginning no later than the first of the month following 120 days from 

publication of the amendment.

    (27) Amendment 189. State agencies shall implement the provisions of 

Amendment No. 189 no later than July 1, 1982.

    (28) Amendment 156. State agencies shall implement the program 

changes required by Amendment 156 within 120 days after publication of 

these regulations, meeting the submittal deadlines outlined in Sec. 

272.2 and Sec. 272.3.

    (29) Amendment 190. State agencies shall implement these regulations 

no later than January 1, 1982. The rules are effective November 9, 1981.

    (30) Amendment 191. Areas subject to the photo ID card requirement 

must have issued photo ID cards (or cards annotated to indicate that the 

card is valid without a photograph, in accordance with Sec. 

273.10(g)(4)(ii)(C)) to all participating households, and shall require 

presentation of photo ID cards (or the annotated cards) at issuance 

points as a precondition of issuing coupons to households, no later than 

the first of the month that is 12 months after the publication of final 

regulations. Any areas that become subject to the photo ID card 

requirement at a later date shall also come into full compliance no 

later than the first of the month that occurs 12 months after FNS 

notifies the State agency that the area is subject to the requirement.

    (31) Amendment 169. The provisions of Amendment 169 shall be 

effective March 30, 1981. These provisions shall apply to the period 

beginning October 1, 1980, except that the provisions of Sec. 

277.4(b)(2) shall apply to the period October 1, 1978 through October 1, 

1980. No State shall be subject to sanctions based upon quality control 

error rates for any period prior to October 1, 1980. No State shall 

receive enhanced funding based upon quality control data for a period 

prior to the date upon which its quality control system was in 

operation.

    (32)-(33) [Reserved]



[[Page 577]]



    (34) Amendment 198. State agencies opting to match earnings data 

provided by applicants and participants with information maintained by 

the Social Security Administration shall first execute data exchange 

agreements with the Social Security Administration. After the effective 

date of this rule and after execution of this agreement, State agencies 

may implement wage match provisions at their discretion.

    (35) Amendment 202. State agencies shall implement the provisions of 

Amendment No. 202 as follows:

    (i) The rules shall be implemented no later than October 1, 1981, 

including the provisions for a medical deduction, separate dependent 

care deduction, and uncapped shelter expense deduction for the elderly 

and disabled in Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Virgin Islands. All 

households who apply October 1 or later and those households who are 

recertified October 1, 1981 or later shall be processed in accordance 

with these provisions. The proration of initial month benefits shall 

begin no later than October 1, 1981.

    (ii) Conversion of the current caseload to the new gross income test 

and earned income deduction amount shall be completed no later than 90 

days from October 1, 1981, or 90 days from the date of implementation 

approved through waiver requests in accordance with paragraph 

(g)(35)(vi) of this section.

    (iii) Conversion of the current caseload to the new household 

definition; ineligibility of strikers and boarders; and, in Puerto Rico, 

Guam, and the Virgin Islands, a medical deduction, separate dependent 

care deduction, and uncapped excess shelter expense deduction shall be 

completed at or before recertification. In no event shall the new 

medical, dependent care, and excess shelter provisions for Guam, Puerto 

Rico and the Virgin Islands be implemented prior to October 1, 1981.

    (iv) Notification to affected households of these changes shall be 

done, at a minimum, in the same manner required for mass changes in 

public assistance grants prescribed in Sec. 273.12(e)(2)(ii).

    (v) Beginning October 1,1981, outreach activities engaged in by 

State agencies shall be ineligible for Federal matching funds.

    (vi) FNS will consider requests for waivers to these timeframes, 

except for the timeframe in paragraph (g)(35)(v) of this section, on a 

state-by-state basis, if good cause can be established and justified, in 

writing, for the need for a longer timeframe.

    (36) Amendment 259. State agencies may implement this Monthly 

Reporting and Retrospective Budgeting rule at any time, but shall 

implement this rule no later than January 1, 1984. Prior to January 1, 

1984, this rule may be implemented Statewide, in only part of a State 

(such as in certain project areas), or for only certain reasonable 

classifications of households (such as for only households receiving 

Temporary Assistance for Needy Families) so long as the implementation 

is completed by January 1, 1984. State agencies shall have begun to send 

monthly reports to households so that they can report their January 1984 

circumstances in accordance with Sec. 273.21(h). However, the changes 

in the interim provisions made by this final rule need not be 

implemented on January 1, 1984. The changes made by this final rule 

shall be implemented no later than May 1, 1984. Unless otherwise 

specified in Sec. 273.21 of this chapter, all other food stamp 

regulations shall apply to State agencies and to applying or 

participating households.

    (37) Amendment 205. The procedures extending eligibility to 

otherwise eligible residents of shelters for battered women and children 

contained in Amendment 205 shall be implemented by State agencies no 

later than April 1, 1982.

    (38)-(39) [Reserved]

    (40) Amendment 213. All State agencies shall execute the appropriate 

data exchange agreements and implement the provisions of this amendment 

not later than January 1, 1983. State agencies may opt to match earnings 

data with information maintained by the Social Security Administration 

upon publication of final regulations provided they have executed data 

exchange agreements with the Social Security Administration. State 

agencies which are not prohibited by State law



[[Page 578]]



from wage matching with agencies administering unemployment compensation 

may do so upon publication of final regulations, provided they have 

executed the appropriate data exchange agreements.

    (41) State agencies shall implement the provisions of Amendment 215 

upon publication.

    (42) Amendment 217. The regulations concerning the optional workfare 

program contained in Amendment 217 shall be in effect November 8, 1982. 

Workfare programs may be implemented after this date provided FNS has 

approved the workfare plan.

    (43) Amendment 220. State agencies shall implement Amendment 220 on 

October 1, 1982.

    (44) Amendment 221. State agencies shall implement on a case by case 

basis the provisions of this rule, excluding the provision which revises 

the application form, beginning the first of the month 30 days from the 

date of publication. The provision requiring a notice of verification on 

the application form shall be implemented on or before the first day of 

the month beginning at least 90 days from the date of publication. If 

the State agency has not depleted its existing supply of application 

forms, the State agency may opt to implement this provision by providing 

an insert to the application form containing the notice of verification.

    (45) Amendment 222. This amendment shall be implemented by the first 

day of the month following the 30th day after publication. As of that 

date prior approval of forms, manuals, instructions, or any other type 

of operating guidelines will no longer be required and waivers will be 

granted or denied based on the new criteria contained herein. 

Additionally, as of that date State agencies shall inform FNS of 

changes, as they occur, in their organizational outline and agreements 

with other agencies. The submission requirement for the Budget 

Projection Statement, Form FNS-366A, as set forth in Sec. 272.2(e) 

shall become effective on August 15, 1983, for the 1984 Federal fiscal 

year beginning October 1, 1983 through September 30, 1984.

    (46) Amendment 225. The State agency shall obtain FNS approval for 

the exclusion of energy assistance provided under any State or local 

program, in accordance with the criteria set forth in Sec. Sec. 

273.8(e)(14) and 273.9(c)(11), within six months of the date of 

publication of the final rule. State or local energy assistance which is 

not approved during this six month period shall cease to be excluded at 

the end of the period. The new provisions concerning restoration of lost 

benefits in Sec. 273.17 (a) and (e) shall be implemented no later than 

120 days following publication of the final rule.

    (47) Amendment 227. (i) In accordance with Sec. 276.2(b)(3) (iii), 

FNS will hold State agencies strictly liable for losses by issuance 

agents where reconciliation shows noncompliance with photographic 

identification (photo ID) card requirements beginning with the fiscal 

quarter that begins January 1, 1983.

    (ii) State agencies shall include provisions establishing the 

liability to the State agency of an issuing agent for the issuance 

losses covered in Sec. 274.1(b)(6) in the next contract or agreement 

between the State agency and the issuing agent that is entered into or 

renewed after publication of this rule. Not later than one year 

following such publication, all contracts or agreements shall contain 

the required provision establishing the liability. However, failure of 

State agencies to include this language in contracts will not absolve 

the State agencies of the liability referred to in paragraph (g)(47)(i) 

of this section.

    (48) Amendment 228. FNS will consider requests for waivers to 

monthly reporting requirements beginning November 5, 1982.

    (49) Amendment 245. The mail issuance loss rates of 0.75 percent and 

$2,250 are effective January 1, 1983. The mail issuance loss rate of 0.5 

percent and $1,500 are effective October 1, 1983. For the second quarter 

of fiscal year 1983 only, FNS will look at Statewide loss rates and the 

loss rates of individual reporting units within the State. Where the 

loss rate for individual reporting units within the State is over the 

tolerance in that quarter and the Statewide loss rate is also over 

tolerance, FNS will assess liability for losses exceeding the tolerance 

reported for the second quarter of 1983. Where



[[Page 579]]



the loss rate for individual reporting units within a State are over 

tolerance for the second quarter, but the Statewide loss rate is under 

tolerance, State agencies shall have one additional quarter (the third 

Fiscal Year 1983 quarter) to bring such individual reporting units' loss 

rates into compliance with the tolerance levels. Thus for these 

reporting units, FNS will assess liability beginning with the fourth 

quarter of fiscal year 1983 and each quarter thereafter for losses which 

exceed the tolerance levels, regardless of Statewide loss rate. FNS will 

bill State agencies for losses on a semiannual basis.

    (50) Amendment 230. State agencies shall implement the provisions of 

Amendment 230 no later than January 1, 1983.

    (51)-(52) [Reserved]

    (53) Amendment 233. State agencies shall implement these regulations 

no later than February 1, 1983.

    (54) Amendment 234. The provisions of Amendment 234 shall apply to 

those sponsored aliens on behalf of whom the sponsor signed an affidavit 

of support or similar statement (as a condition of the alien's entry 

into the United States as a lawful permanent resident) on or after 

February 1, 1983.

    (55) Amendment 235. Except for the provisions which simply extend 

options to State agencies, State agencies shall implement the changes 

made by Amendment 235 no later than February 1, 1983. Elderly/disabled 

persons who requested and were denied separate household status or other 

considerations granted disabled persons on or after September 8, 1982, 

will be entitled to benefits retroactive to the dates of their 

applications for separate household status or other special 

considerations.

    (56) [Reserved]

    (57) Amendment 240. The provisions of Amendment 240 shall be 

effective on January 11, 1983. The enhanced funding, which the amendment 

implements, is available to political subdivisions retroactive to 

October 1, 1982. The enhanced funding is available to a political 

subdivision for a workfare participant who begins working on or after 

October 1, 1982.

    (58) Amendment 242. State agencies shall implement the 

disqualification penalties for intentional Program violation, and the 

improved recovery of overpayments provisions contained in Amendment 242 

no later than April 1, 1983.

    (i) The provision in Sec. 273.11(c) for handling the income and 

resources of an individual disqualified for intentional Program 

violation shall apply to any individual disqualified for such a 

violation since the implementation of the fraud disqualification 

provisions of the Food Stamp Act of 1977. The disqualification 

procedures for intentional Program violation in Sec. 273.16 shall apply 

to any individual alleged to have committed one or more acts of 

intentional Program violation since the implementation of the fraud 

disqualification provisions under the Food Stamp Act of 1977. However, 

the disqualification penalties in Sec. 273.16(b) shall apply only to 

individuals disqualified for acts of intentional Program violation which 

occur after implementation of this amendment. In addition, the 

disqualification penalties in Sec. 273.16(b) shall apply only to 

individuals disqualified for acts of intentional Program violation which 

occurred either during a certification period based on an application 

form containing these penalties or after receipt of written notification 

from the State agency of these penalties. Recurring acts of intentional 

Program violation which occur over a period of time prior to and after 

implementation of this final rule shall not be separated. Only one 

penalty can be imposed for such recurring violations and the household 

member shall be disqualified in accordance with the disqualification 

penalties specified in this amendment. The reporting requirements of 

Sec. 273.16(i) shall become effective upon implementation, however, the 

State agency shall have until October 1, 1983, to submit such reports on 

individuals disqualified under previous regulations implementing the 

Food Stamp Act of 1977.

    (ii) The recovery provisions for claims against households in Sec. 

273.18 shall apply to any overissuance caused by an action which 

occurred after implementation of regulations promulgating the Food Stamp 

Act of 1977, as



[[Page 580]]



amended. And, the procedures for calculating the amount of overissuances 

as specified in Sec. 273.18(c) shall apply to any month in which an 

overissuance occurred retroactive to March 1, 1979. However, State 

agency retention of 50 percent of the value of collected intentional 

Program violation claims and 25 percent of the value of collected 

inadvertent household error claims as provided in Sec. 273.18(h) shall 

apply to any collection action retroactive to January 1, 1982. The State 

agency shall have the option of reinstating any claim previously 

suspended, but not terminated, under the recovery provisions of 

regulations implementing the Food Stamp Act of 1977 and, once 

reinstated, such claims shall be subject to the recovery provisions 

contained in this amendment. However, the State agency shall not 

reinstate any amount of a claim compromised or any claim terminated 

under previous regulations implementing the Food Stamp Act of 1977, as 

amended. The submission requirements for the Form FNS-209, Status of 

Claims Against Households, as set forth in Sec. 273.18(h) shall become 

effective with the quarter ending March 31, 1983.

    (59) Amendment 243. (i) State agencies shall implement the 

provisions contained in Sec. 274.1(d) statewide no later than October 

1, 1983. FNS will consider requests for waivers to this timeframe on a 

State-by-State basis if the State agency establishes good cause through 

submission of written justification of the need for a longer timeframe 

and submits a plan that shows when the system will be implemented.

    (ii) State agencies shall implement the correction made to Sec. 

273.1(a)(1)(iv) retroactive to September 8, 1982.

    (iii) The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico shall implement the changes to 

part 285 on January 1, 1984, as published in the Federal Register for 

December 21, 1984.

    (60) Amendment 244. State agencies shall implement the provisions 

regarding joint food stamp/public assistance case processing at State 

agency discretion. The provisions regarding certification periods must 

be implemented at time of application or at recertification no later 

than July 1, 1983.

    (61) [Reserved]

    (62) Amendment 247. State agencies must implement the provisions 

relative to noncompliance with other programs no later than April 1, 

1985. The provisions relative to disclosure of information must be 

implemented no later than February 1, 1985.

    (63) Amendment 251. State agencies shall implement the program 

changes required by this amendment as follows:

    (i) State agencies shall apply the work registration, job search, 

and voluntary quit provisions of this rule, amending portions of Sec. 

273.7, to new applicants no later than January 2, 1985. The provisions 

shall apply to participating households at recertification or at the 

time of office contact for any other reason.

    (64) Amendment 252. (i) The sanction/incentive provisions of Sec. 

275.25 were effective October 1, 1982. The previous provisions of Sec. 

275.25 shall continue to apply to the review periods prior to October 

1982.

    (ii) The funding provisions of Sec. 277.4(b)(2) were effective on 

October 1, 1982, and shall apply to the October 1982, through September 

1983, review period and every review period thereafter.

    (iii) The revised funding provisions of Sec. 277.4(b)(7) shall 

apply to the 6-month review periods October 1, 1981 through March 1982 

and April through September 1982.

    (65) Amendment 253. The provisions of Sec. 274.8(a)(6) (i), (ii), 

and (iii) shall be implemented the first month beginning on or after the 

90th day following publication of this final rule. In that month, the 

FNS-388 report shall provide the actual second preceding month data. The 

initial semiannual coupon issuance and NA/PA household and person 

participation data shall be provided in September 1985 for the month of 

July 1985. State agencies will cease submission of the FNS-256 report as 

of July 1985.

    (66) Amendment 254. State agencies shall implement the provisions of 

Amendment 254 no later than October 19, 1983.

    (67) [Reserved]

    (68) Amendment 260. (i) The quality control review provisions 

contained in Amendment 260 are effective starting with the beginning of 

Fiscal Year 1984,



[[Page 581]]



except as provided in the following sentences. All cases sampled for the 

six months October 1983 through March 1984 shall be disposed of and 

reported within 95 days of March 31, 1984. Cases sampled for April 1984 

and for months thereafter shall be disposed of and reported according to 

Sec. 275.21. For example, 90 percent of April cases are due within 75 

days of April 30, and 100 percent are due within 95 days of that date. 

The structure of sample frames specified in Sec. 275.11(e) must be 

implemented no later than the sample month of October 1984.

    (ii) Starting with the October 1983 sample month, cases must be 

determined complete, not complete, or not subject to review according to 

Sec. Sec. 275.12(g) and 275.13(e). As of the beginning of Fiscal Year 

1984 the sample sizes stated in Sec. 275.11(b) and related sampling 

plan requirements are effective, and State agencies are required to meet 

the completion standard stated in Sec. 275.11(d). State agencies 

currently sampling at the levels provided in Sec. 275.11(b)(1)(iii) 

must submit to their respective FNS Regional Offices the reliability 

statement required by Sec. 275.11(a)(2) within 30 days of the 

publication of this rule, or no later than the second month after 

publication of this rule begin sampling at the levels specified in Sec. 

275.11(b)(1)(ii).

    (69) Amendment 261. State agencies shall implement this amendment 

establishing the Alaska urban and rural allotment levels and the new cap 

for Guam no later than August 1, 1984. Households in rural Alaska which 

request retroactive benefits by February 1, 1985 will be entitled to 

retroactive benefits for the period after September 8, 1982, during 

which they lived in rural Alaska and participated in the Food Stamp 

Program in that area. These retroacive benefits will be provided over a 

period of time not to exceed one year. The amount provided each month 

will be the higher of $50 or one-twelfth of the total amount due. 

Households in Guam which request retroactive benefits by February 1, 

1985 will be entitled to retroactive benefits for the period October 1, 

1982, through September 30, 1983, during which they lived in Guam, 

participated in the Food Stamp Program in that area, and were in 

household sizes two, five, or eight or more.

    (70) Amendment 264. These rules are effective on May 29, 1986. No 

later than that date State agencies are required to submit the 

attachment to their State Plan of Operation specified in Sec. 272.2 and 

in Sec. 272.8(i), documenting either full implementation of these rules 

or good faith efforts to implement them. The documentation of full 

implementation or of good faith efforts shall show either that the State 

agency is routinely requesting and using, or shall show the dates when 

it will begin routinely to request the use, information from the various 

data sources specified in Sec. 272.8(a) according to the frequencies 

for requests, timeframes and other requirements of Sec. 272.8(e), (f) 

and (g). Full implementation shall include requests for available 

information from the Social Security Administration for all recipients 

for which such information has not been previously requested. The 30-day 

timeframe specified in Sec. 272.8(g) is effective for applicant 

households which become recipients as discussed in Sec. 272.8(e)(1) as 

soon as a State agency begin receiving information from particular data 

sources.

    (i) A Plan describing good faith efforts shall at a minimum document 

that the State agency is currently in compliance with wage match 

criteria as specified in the final rulemaking of November 5, 1982 (47 FR 

50180), assure that such compliance will continue at current levels 

until such time as these provisions are implemented, and provide an 

implementation schedule that reflects full compliance in the minimum 

amount of additional time. Requests for delays of implementation beyond 

May 29, 1986 shall identify the applicable regulation part, the date for 

implementation, justification for the delay, and the implementation 

plan.

    (ii) The Secretary shall consult with the Secretary of the 

Department of Health and Human Services and with the Secretary of the 

Department of Labor prior to the approval of Plans of Operation 

documenting good faith efforts. In no event shall the Secretary approve 

a delay of the provisions of individual notification in Sec. 

273.2(f)(9) beyond the initial implementation date of any of these new 

provisions.



[[Page 582]]



    (iii) Implementation schedules beyond September 30, 1986 are not 

approvable, with the following exception: If on April 1, 1985 no SWICA 

exists in a particular State, the provisions of the rule as they relate 

to SWICAs shall be effective upon the designation of a SWICA. 

Implementation of a SWICA after April 1, 1985 shall take place as soon 

thereafter as possible but in no event later than September 30, 1988. 

All SWICAs with delayed implementation shall be in operation so that 

wage information is reported to them starting with the month of October 

1988.

    (71) Amendment No. 266. The provisions contained in Amendment No. 

266 shall be implemented by March 6, 1987.

    (i) All Fiscal Year 1987 review schedules shall continue in force 

despite the implementation of these provisions. However, a State agency 

may, at its option, seek a change in that schedule.

    (ii) Waivers shall remain in force until their expiration. If a 

State agency wishes to cancel a waiver it should contact its Regional 

Office and negotiate whatever change it needs.

    (iii) The first periodic Corrective Action Plan update required by 

this amendment shall be submitted by May 1, 1987.

    (72) Amendment 267. State agencies shall implement the eligibility 

requirements of this rulemaking as they apply to offsetting farm self-

employment losses and publicly operated community mental health centers 

not later than March 27, 1986. State agencies must begin taking 

applications from residents of publicly operated community mental health 

centers (as defined in Sec. 271.2) not later than March 27, 1986. FNS 

field offices may authorize these centers to act as retail food stores 

on February 25, 1986.

    (73) Amendment 269. The correction to Sec. 273.7(n)(1)(v) outlined 

in amendment 269 is effective retroactively to October 3, 1984. State 

agencies which may have implemented the voluntary quit error prior to 

receiving FNS notification not to effectuate the change, shall issue 

lost benefits to affected households, but not prior to November 2, 1984 

(the effective date of the October 3, 1984 final rule). State agencies 

shall implement the revisions to the rules outlined in amendment 269 for 

all new applicants no later than the first day of the month following 

June 26, 1986. Any conversion of the current caseload necessitated by 

this amendment shall be done at recertification or at the time the case 

is next reviewed, whichever occurs first.

    (74) Amendment 270. (i) State agencies shall implement the earned 

income and dependent care deduction amounts and the resource limit 

provisions of Amendment 270 on May 1, 1986. If, for any reason, a State 

agency fails to implement these provisions on that date, households 

shall be provided the lost benefits which they would have received if 

the State agency had implemented these provisions as required.

    (ii) The provisions of Sec. 272.1(b) regarding the prohibiton of 

State or local sales taxes on foods purchased with food stamp coupons 

shall be implemented on October 1 of the calender year during which the 

first regular session of each State's Legislature is convened following 

enactment of Pub. L. 99-198 (enacted December 23, 1985). A ``regular 

session'' means a scheduled session of a State's legislature convened to 

address the usual range of statutory and budgetary issues. A 

``budgetary'' session of a legislature shall be considered a ``regular 

session'' if State rules allow for statutory issues to be introduced at 

these ``budgetary'' sessions even if rules governing these special 

procedures are stringent.

    (A) FNS may approve a delay in the above implementation date if a 

State provides FNS a request documenting that such date would either:

    (1) Have an adverse and disruptive effect on the administration of 

the Food Stamp Program in such State; or

    (2) would provide inadequate time for retail stores to implement 

required changes in sales tax policy.

    (B) FNS has no authority to approve any State implementation 

schedule with an effective date later than October 1, 1987.

    (75) Amendment 273. The State agency shall implement this amendment 

establishing Alaska urban, Rural I, and Rural II allotment levels by 

April 1, 1986.

    (76) Amendment 274. (i) The provisions of this amendment at 

Sec. Sec. 271.2, 273.2, 273.5, 273.9, 273.10(d)(6), and 273.21(b)



[[Page 583]]



shall be implemented for all new applications and the current caseload 

no later than August 1, 1986. If, for any reason, a State agency fails 

to implement these provisions on this date, households shall be provided 

lost benefits which they would have received if the State agency had 

implemented these provisions as required.

    (ii) The provisions of this amendment at Sec. 273.18 and part 285 

shall be implemented June 20, 1986.

    (iii) The provisions of this amendment at Sec. 273.21(a)(4)(i)(A) 

and the second sentence in Sec. 273.10(f)(7) are effective retroactive 

to August 31, 1981. Section Sec. 273.21(a)(4)(ii)(A) and the first two 

sentences of Sec. 273.21(a)(4)(ii)(B) described in this amendment are 

retroactive to September 8, 1982. The provisions of this amendment at 

Sec. Sec. 272.3, 273.21(a), 273.21(a)(3), 273.21(a)(4)(i)(B), the third 

sentence at Sec. 273.10(f)(7), and the last two sentences of Sec. 

273.21(a)(4)(ii)(B) are effective retroactive to December 2, 1983. The 

provision of this amendment at Sec. 276.7(j) is effective retroactive 

to December 23, 1985.

    (77) Amendment 275. The program change in Sec. 273.2(l) of 

Amendment 275 shall be effective October 1, 1986.

    (78) Amendment 276. (i) This rule is effective retroactively to 

December 23, 1985. Any household that applied and was denied benefits 

from that date until implementation of this rule is entitled to restored 

benefits if it:

    (A) Was categorically eligible as defined in this rule;

    (B) Is otherwise entitled to benefits; and

    (C) Requests a review of its case or if the State agency otherwise 

becomes aware that a review is needed.



Restored benefits for these households shall be made available, if 

appropriate, in accordance with Sec. 273.17 back to the date of the 

food stamp application or December 23, 1985, whichever is later. The 

State agency shall implement the changes in this rule immediately upon 

publication and any eligibility determination or issuance made on or 

after that date shall be made in accordance with this rule.

    (ii) For quality control (QC) purposes only, QC reviewers shall not 

identify variances resulting solely from either implementation or 

nonimplementation of this rule in cases with review dates between 

December 23, 1985 and October 31, 1986, inclusive.

    (79) Amendment 277. State agencies shall implement the provisions of 

Amendment 277 on August 22, 1986. If, for any reason, a State agency 

fails to implement the provisions, affected households shall be entitled 

to restored benefits but not prior to August 22, 1986.

    (80) [Reserved]

    (81) Amendment 279. (i) For State agencies which elected to 

implement a $160 dependent care deduction limit for all households prior 

to October 18, 1986, the dependent care deduction provision of Amendment 

No. 279 is effective retroactive to May 1, 1986 in accordance with 

section 638 of Pub. L. 99-500. In such States, for QC purposes only, QC 

reviewers shall not include in the error determination variances which 

resulted from early implementation by these States of the deduction 

limit provided the implementation occurred during the period beginning 

May 1, 1986 through October 1986.

    (ii) For all other State agencies, the $160 dependent care deduction 

provision of Amendment No. 279 shall be implemented for elderly and 

disabled applicant and participating households on December 1, 1986. 

State agencies shall implement the provision as a mass change in 

accordance with Sec. 273.12(e), except that affected households in 

Alaska, Hawaii and Guam shall be issued an individual notice which, at a 

minimum, informs the households of the general nature of the mass 

change, the effect of the deduction limit on the household's allotment, 

and the month the change will take effect. If for any reason the State 

agency fails to implement the provision on the required date, affected 

households shall be provided restored benefits, back to December 1, 

1986. For QC purposes only in such States, QC reviewers shall not 

include in the error determination variances which resulted solely from 

a State agency's implementation or nonimplementation of the deduction 

limit between December 1, 1986 and January 1, 1987.



[[Page 584]]



    (82) Amendment 281. State agencies shall implement the provisions of 

this amendment no later than April 1, 1987.

    (83) Amendment 282. The changes to Sec. 273.2(i)(3)(i) contained in 

Amendment No. 282 are effective January 12, 1987 and shall be 

implemented no later than February 11, 1987.

    (84) Amendment 285. (i) The provisions of Amendment No. 285 at 

Sec. Sec. 273.9(d)(6)(i), 273.9(d)(6)(ii), 273.9(d)(6)(v)(B), 

273.10(d)(1)(i) and 273.10(d)(6) are retroactively effective to October 

1, 1986. The State agency shall implement the provisions immediately 

upon publication and any eligibility determination made on or after that 

date shall be made in accordance with this rule. The State agency shall 

review a case to determine if the household was denied benefits under 

these amendments whenever the household requests a review or the State 

agency becomes aware that such a denial may have occurred. Any household 

that was denied benefits as a result of an eligibility or benefit 

calculation (e.g., processed change report) made on or after October 1, 

1986 is entitled to restored benefits. Restored benefits for these 

households shall be made available, if approporiate, in accordance with 

Sec. 273.17 back to: (A) October 1, 1986 or the date of application 

whichever is later for new applications; or (B) October 1, 1986 or the 

first month in which the application of these amendments would have 

affected the household's benefits, whichever is later, for certified 

households.

    (ii) For quality control (QC) purposes only, a variance resulting 

solely from either the implementation or non-implementation of this rule 

shall not be identified between October 1, 1986 and April 1, 1987.

    (85) Amendment No. 286. (i) The provisions of Amendment No. 286 

which permit homeless meal providers to apply for authorization to 

accept food stamps were effective March 11, 1987.

    (ii) All other provisions of this amendment were effective April 1, 

1987.

    (86) Amendment No. 287. The provisions of this amendment are 

effective April 7, 1987.

    (87) Amendment No. 288. The removal of the word ``funded'' from the 

last sentence in Sec. 273.11(e)(1), the amendments to the first and 

fourth sentences in Sec. 278.1(e), and the revision of paragraph 

(a)(2)(iii) in Sec. 273.11 are effective February 25, 1986 and shall be 

implemented not later than March 27, 1986.

    (88) Amendment No. 292. (i) The effective date of the provisions of 

this amendment is retroactive to November 6, 1986.

    (ii) The actual dates upon which aliens may become eligible under 

Sec. 273.4(a) (8), (9), (10), and (11) are specified in those 

paragraphs. State agencies must inform their staff of the respective 

dates as they pertain to the eligibility or ineligibility of applicant 

aliens.

    (89) Amendment No. 293. The provisions of Amendment No. 293 are 

effective retroactively to October 17, 1986 and shall be implemented as 

follows:

    (i) State agencies shall implement the provisions of this amendment 

for new applicant households which apply for program benefits on or 

after June 1, 1987.

    (ii) State agencies shall convert their affected current caseload to 

the provisions of this amendment at household request, at 

recertification, or when the case is next reviewed, whichever occurs 

first and provide restored benefits, if appropriate, back to the date of 

application of October 17, 1986, whichever occurred later.

    (iii) Any affected household that applied for Program benefits from 

October 17, 1986 until implementation of this rule and was denied 

benefits is entitled to restored benefits back to the date of 

application or October 17, 1986, whichever occurred later, if the 

household:

    (A) Is otherwise entitled to benefits, and

    (B) Requests a review of its case or the State agency otherwise 

becomes aware that review is needed.

    (iv) For quality control (QC) purposes only, QC shall not identify 

variances resulting solely from either implementation or 

nonimplementation of the provisions of this amendment for cases with 

review dates between October 17, 1986 (the date of enactment of Pub. L. 

99-498) and August 31, 1987.

    (90) Amendment No. 294. State agencies shall implement the Title IV-

D



[[Page 585]]



child support income exclusion provision of Amendment No. 294 at its own 

option, provided it has procedures in place, at the time of 

implementation, for applying the provision to all affected households 

and for calculating and reimbursing FNS as required under the provision. 

State agencies shall implement the remaining provisions of Amendment No. 

294 retroactively to April 1, 1987. State agencies shall provide 

restored benefits, if appropriate, back to the date of application or 

April 1, 1987, whichever occurred later. Any affected household that 

applied for Program benefits from April 1, 1987 until implementation of 

this rule and was denied benefits is entitled to restored benefits back 

to the date of application or April 1, 1987, whichever occurred later, 

if the household is otherwise entitled to benefits and requests a review 

of its case or the State agency otherwise becomes aware that a review is 

needed. The provision at 7 CFR 273.17, limiting restored benefits to 12 

months, shall not apply to households entitled to resorted benefits 

under the provisions of Amendment No. 294. For QC purposes, 

implementation variances shall not be identified unless a case meets all 

four of the following conditions: the case's review date is after August 

31, 1987; the State agency certified or recertified the case (or was 

required to recertify the case) after August 31, 1987; the certification 

or recertification was effective for the review date (or the required 

recertification should have been effective for the review date); and in 

a retrospective budget system, the household's budget month was 

September 1987 or later or in a prospective budget system, the 

household's issuance month was September 1987 or later. For the purpose 

of this amendment, State agencies shall not establish a claim against 

any household which received overissued benefits resulting solely from 

retroactive implementation of the JTPA income provision in Sec. 

273.9(b)(1)(v).

    (91) Amendment No. 295--(i) Automated Federal information exchange 

systems. States' QC liability exemption for errors resulting from proper 

use of a Federal automatic information exchange system is effective 

beginning with the Fiscal Year 1986 reporting period.

    (ii) FNS timeframes. The timeframes for notifying States of their 

payment error rates and payment error rate liabilities, if any, and the 

timeframe by which FNS must initiate collection action on claims for 

such liabilities are effective beginning with the Fiscal Year 1986 

reporting period.

    (92) Amendment No. 284. State agencies shall submit their ADP/CIS 

plans to FNS for approval no later than October 1, 1987. Portions of 

ADP/CIS plans may be submitted no later than January 1, 1988. Plans must 

be approvable within 60 days of State agency receipt of FNS comments but 

no later than March 1, 1988. State agencies must begin to implement 

provisions contained in their approved plans by October 1, 1988.

    (93) Amendment No. 298. The provisions of Amendment No. 298 are 

effective, and shall be implemented, as follows:

    (i) The provision in Sec. 271.2 of this amendment which defines 

``General assistance'' and the provisions contained in Sec. 

273.9(b)(2)(i), Sec. 273.9(c)(1)(ii)(A), (c)(1)(ii)(B), and 

(c)(1)(ii)(C), regarding exclusion of certain PA/GA vendor payments are 

effective retroactively to April 1, 1987. The provision in Sec. 

273.9(c)(1)(iv)(B), exclusion of emergency/special PA/GA vendor 

payments, is also effective retroactive to April 1, 1987, however, this 

provision reflects current policy and requires no implementation efforts 

by State agencies. State agencies shall immediately implement the other 

provisions listed above. Affected households shall be entitled to 

restored benefits back to the date of application or April 1, 1987, 

whichever occured later.

    (ii) The technical amendment to part 277 is effective September 29, 

1987, and does not require implementation efforts by State agencies. The 

remaining provisions of Amendment No. 298 are effective, and must be 

implemented, as follows:

    (A) Section 271.2, definition of ``Homeless individual,'' effective 

July 22, 1987. State agencies shall immediately inform caseworkers of 

the new definition. No other implementation efforts are required to the 

State agencies.



[[Page 586]]



    (B) Section 273.9(c)(1)(ii)(D), the income exclusion of certain PA/

GA vendor payments, is effective and shall be implemented for new 

applicant households which apply for benefits during the period 

beginning October 20, 1987 and ending September 30, 1989. This provision 

does not apply to allotments issued to any household for any month 

beginning before the effective period of the provision. State agencies 

shall convert their affected current caseload to this provision, if 

otherwise eligible, at recertification, when the household requests a 

review of its case, or when the State agency otherwise becomes aware 

that a review is needed but not prior to October 20, 1987.

    (C) Section 272.5, the financial reimbursement for Program 

informational activities for the homeless, is effective July 22, 1987.

    (D) Section 273.1(a)(2)(i)(C), Sec. 273.1(a)(2)(i)(D), Sec. 

273.10(f)(2), the exception to certain household composition 

requirements, and the rule regarding recertification of households 

subject to the exception, are effective and must be implemented on 

October 1, 1987. Households which apply for benefits on or after October 

1, 1987 may be granted separate household status under this provision. 

Current participants which may be eligible for separate household status 

under this provision, may be granted separate status, but not prior to 

October 1, 1987, if the household requests separate status and the State 

agency determines that the household meets the requirements of this 

provision.

    (E) Section 273.2(i), the expansion of expedited service, is 

effective, and must be implemented, for affected households applying for 

Program benefits on or after December 1, 1987.

    (F) Section 273.9(a)(3), regarding the date of making the annual 

adjustment to the income standards, is effective with the 1988 annual 

adjustment. The July 1, 1987 income limits will remain in effect until 

October 1, 1988.

    (G) The first three sentences of Sec. 273.9(d)(8)(i), the raising 

of the shelter deduction limit for the 48 States and DC., Alaska, 

Hawaii, Guam and Virgin Islands, are effective October 1, 1987. State 

agencies shall implement the higher deduction limits appearing in the 

first sentence of Sec. 273.9(d)(8)(i) on October 1, 1987 only for 

households whose certification periods begin on or after October 1, 

1987. State agencies shall implement the lower deduction limits 

appearing in the second sentence of Sec. 273.9(d)(8)(i) on October 1, 

1987 only for households whose certification periods begin before 

October 1, 1987. The State agency shall implement the higher deduction 

limits for households whose certification periods begin before October 

1, 1987 beginning with the month in which such household is recertified 

after October 1, 1987.

    (H) Section 273.9(d)(7)(i), the change in the standard deduction 

methodology, is effective October 1, 1987.

    (I) The last sentence of Sec. 273.9(d)(8)(i), the change in the 

excess shelter deduction methodology, is effective, October 1, 1988.

    (J) Section 273.18(c)(2)(ii), the earned income deduction penalty, 

is effective on September 5, 1987. State agencies which issue on a 

calendar month basis, shall apply this provision to allotments issued 

for October 1987 and all allotments for subsequent months. State 

agencies which issue on other than a calendar month basis shall apply 

the provision to the issuance for the first issuance month beginning 

after September 5, 1987.

    (iii) State agencies must implement the provisions as outlined in 

paragraph (g)(93)(ii) of this section on the specific dates required for 

each provision. If, for any reason, the State agency fails to implement 

the provisions on the required date, affected households, if 

appropriate, shall be entitled to restored benefits back to the date of 

application or the effective date of the provision involved, whichever 

occurred later.

    (iv) Quality control variance exclusion.

    (A) For QC purposes only, QC reviewers shall not identify variances 

resulting solely from implementation or nonimplementation of the 

following provisions in cases with review dates during the periods 

indicated:

    (1) Sections 273.9(b)(2)(i), 273.9(c)(1) (ii)(A), 

273.9(c)(1)(ii)(B), 273.9(c)(1)(ii)(C) and 273.9(c)(1)(iv)(B), 

concerning PA/GA vendor payments, from April 1, 1987 to December 31, 

1987;



[[Page 587]]



    (2) Section 271.2, concerning the definition of ``Homeless 

individual'', from July 22, 1987 to December 31, 1987;

    (3) Section 273.9(c)(1)(ii)(D), concerning PA/GA vendor payments for 

certain housing assistance provided on behalf of households residing in 

temporary housing, from October 20, 1987 to December 31, 1987;

    (4) Sections 273.1(a)(2)(i) (C) and (D), concerning household 

composition, from October 1, 1987 to December 31, 1987;

    (5) Section 273.2(i), concerning entitlement to expedited service, 

from December 1, 1987 to December 31, 1987;

    (6) Section 273.9(d)(8)(i), the first three sentences only, 

concerning the shelter deduction limit, from October 1, 1987 to December 

31, 1987.

    (B) State agencies may choose to exclude these variances in Federal 

subsample reviews; State agencies are not required to do so. To exclude 

the variances, they shall provide FNS with the following information by 

April 1, 1994: The review number of each affected Federal subsample 

review, the sample month, the reason and justification for excluding the 

variance, and the revised finding.

    (94) Amendment No. 299. The changes to Sec. 273.2(i)(3)(ii) are 

effective January 12, 1987 and shall be implemented no later than 

February 11, 1987.

    (95) Amendment No. 268. The QC arbitration provisions shall be 

implemented by State agencies on February 22, 1988, for all cases for 

which the regional case findings or the regional arbitrator's decision 

are received on or after February 22, 1988.

    (96) Amendment 301. This rule pertains to the Income and Eligibility 

Verification System (IEVS). It is effective March 18, 1988, except for 

paragraphs 272.8(i) (3) and (4) and 272.8(j)(1) which will be effective 

upon publication in the Federal Register of the approval of the 

information collection burden by the Office of Management and Budget 

(OMB).

    (97) Amendment No. 278. State agencies shall implement the 

provisions of this amendment no later than October 18, 1988.

    (98) Amendment No. 303. The income exclusion provision Sec. 

273.9(c) of Amendment No. 303 shall be implemented immediately upon 

publication of the Amendment as follows:

    (i) State agencies must apply the provision of this amendment for 

any eligibility or benefit calculation made on or after February 1, 

1988.

    (ii) Affected households which were denied benefits because the 

household's eligibility or benefit calculation during the second Federal 

fiscal year quarter of 1988 (but not prior to February 1, 1988) did not 

include the income exclusion provision of this amendment shall be 

entitled to restored benefits at the time of recertification, whenever 

the household requests a review of its case, or when the State agency 

otherwise becomes aware that a review of a particular case is needed.

    (iii) Benefits shall be restored back to February 1, 1988 or the 

date of the food stamp application, whichever occured later. Restoration 

shall be made in accordance with Sec. 273.17 except that the twelve-

month limit for restoring benefits shall not apply.

    (iv) For Quality Control (QC) purposes only, QC reviewers shall not 

identify variances resulting solely from implementation or 

nonimplementation of Amendment No. 303 for cases with review dates 

between February 1, 1988 and August 31, 1988. For retrospectively 

budgeted cases, QC reviewers shall begin identifying variances when 

September becomes the budget month. Variances shall not be identified in 

cases where Amendment No. 303 was not implemented prior to the QC review 

when the State agency correctly followed the implementation provisions 

of this section.

    (99) [Reserved]

    (100) Amendment 289.

    (i) This rule is effective August 11, 1988.

    (ii) State agency Work Plans setting forth proposals for conducting 

Simplified Application/Standardized Benefit Projects must be postmarked 

no later than November 9, 1988. Local agency Work Plans must be 

postmarked no later than December 9, 1988.

    (101) Amendment No. 291. The provisions of Amendment No. 291 are 

effective September 19, 1988.

    (102) Amendment No. 307. The provisions of this amendment are 

effective



[[Page 588]]



immediately and shall be implemented as follows:

    (i) No later than October 1, 1988, for all new applicants, and no 

later than the first recertification on or after October 1, 1988, for 

the participating caseload, State agencies shall implement the 

provisions of Sec. 272.2(b) relating to the alien/citizenship statement 

and notification of verification with INS; the provisions of Sec. 

273.1(b) relating to nonhousehold members; the provisions of Sec. 

273.2(f)(1)(ii) relating to the mandatory verification of alien status; 

the provisions of Sec. 273.2(h)(3) relating to delays in application 

processing; and the provisions of Sec. 272.11(c) relating to the 

treatment of income and resources of nonhousehold members; and

    (ii) Unless a waiver has been approved by FNS by October 1, 1988, 

State agencies shall implement all other provisions of this rule no 

later than October 1, 1988. Implementation by October 1, 1988 shall be 

accomplished either by obtaining FNS approval to a Plan of Operation as 

required in the rule at Sec. 272.11(e) or by submitting to FNS a 

substantially approvable Plan of Operation as described in material 

which FNS Regional Offices provided State agencies on or about September 

2, 1988. That material provided points for State agencies to consider 

relative to requesting waivers. State agencies should contact FNS 

Regional Offices if they need further guidance on waivers.

    (103) Amendment No. 308. The quality control changes to Sec. 

275.12(d)(2) shall be implemented for the quality control review period 

beginning October 1, 1988.

    (104) Amendment No. 300. State agencies shall implement the 

requirements of this rulemaking no later than May 1, 1989.

    (105) Amendment No. 271. This rule becomes effective April 1, 1989, 

and the State agencies shall implement all provisions on that date, with 

the exception of the following provisions: the new provisions on 

replacement issuances shall be implemented by October 1, 1989; the new 

liabilities for State agencies using authorization document issuance 

systems shall be implemented on October 1, 1989; the new mail issuance 

reporting and liability assessments shall be implemented on October 1, 

1989; State agencies wanting to change their current unit-level of mail 

issuance loss reporting must submit their initial plans by May 15, 1989; 

the new provision on quality control case reviews shall be implemented 

for federal Fiscal Year 1990; State agencies shall begin to use the 

revised Form FNS-46, Issuance Reconciliation Report, to report figures 

for the month of October 1989; and, provisions pertaining to staggered 

issuance contained in any currently-approved waivers will automatically 

be cancelled April 1, 1989.

    (106) Amendment No. 310. (i) The provisions of this amendment which 

adopt, as final, interim provisions published July 17, 1987 and those 

which redesignate or otherwise slightly modify the July 17 interim 

provisions for clarity only are effective retroactively to April 1, 

1987. The conforming amendment at Sec. 273.11(e)(7) is effective 

retroactively to February 25, 1986. The remaining technical amendments 

contained in this amendment at Sec. 273.2(e)(2), Sec. 

273.7(b)(1)(vii), Sec. 273.9(b)(1)(iii), Sec. 276.2(d) and Sec. 

278.1(e) are effective April 24, 1989. These provisions do not alter or 

change current policy or procedures under which State agency are 

operating or do not require special implementation efforts by State 

agencies.

    (ii) The provision in Sec. 273.9(b)(1)(v) which limits application 

of the provision to on-the-job training programs under section 204(5), 

Title II, of the Job Training Partnership Act is effective retroactively 

to April 1, 1987 and shall be implemented as follows:

    (A) State agencies shall implement the provision for all new 

applicant households no later than June 1, 1989. Affected applicant 

households which applied for Program benefits during the period April 1, 

1987 and the date the State agency implemented this change and were 

denied benefits shall be provided restored benefits, if applicable, back 

to April 1, 1987 or the date of the food stamp application, whichever 

occurs later, if the household is otherwise entitled to benefits and 

requests a review of its case or the State agency otherwise becomes 

aware that a review is needed.

    (B) All other households shall be converted to the provision at 

household request, at recertification, or when the



[[Page 589]]



case is next reviewed, whichever occurs first. Restored benefits shall 

be provided, if applicable, for such households back to April 1, 1987 or 

the date of the food stamp application, whichever occurs later.

    (C) The provision at 7 CFR 273.17, limiting restored benefits to 12 

months, does not apply for households entitled to restored benefits 

under Amendment No. 310.

    (107) Amendment No. 313. The performance-based funding provisions 

for Employment and Training programs shall be effective October 1, 1989.

    (108) Amendment No. 314. (i) The provision of Amendment No. 314 

which adds five sentences to Sec. 273.2(j)(1)(iv) and the provisions 

which add a new paragraph Sec. 273.2(j)(2)(iii)(B) and amend Sec. Sec. 

273.17 and 273.18 are effective July 7, 1989 and shall be implemented no 

later than September 1, 1989.

    (ii) All remaining provisions of Amendment No. 314, which adopt the 

interim provisions of August 5, 1986 as final without change or modify 

the interim provisions for clarity only, are effective retroactively to 

December 23, 1985 (the effective date of the interim rulemaking). These 

provision do not reflect a change in intended policy and, therefore, do 

not require special implementation efforts by State agencies.

    (109) Amendment No. 315. Program changes required by Amendment No. 

315 to the food stamp regulations shall be implemented as follows:

    (i) The provisions relating to migrant and seasonal farmworkers (7 

CFR 273.9(c)(1)(ii)(E) and 273.10(a)(1)(ii)) are effective September 1, 

1988 for all households applying or certified subsequent to August 31, 

1988. Changes affecting currently participating households are to be 

implemented at recertification or when it is necessary to implement 

other changes affecting the household.

    (ii) State agencies were required to implement the provision of this 

rule regarding a technical correction concerning energy assistance 

payments (7 CFR 273.9(c)(11)) on September 19, 1988.

    (iii) State agencies were required to implement revised food stamp 

allotments on October 1, 1988 (7 CFR 271.2, 271.7, 273.10(e)(2), 

273.10(e)(4)(ii), and 273.12(e)). Revised allotments were implemented as 

mass changes in accordance with 7 CFR 273.12(e).

    (iv) State agencies were required to implement the provision 

relating to the dependent care deduction, 7 CFR 273.9(d)(4), 

273.10(d)(1)(i), and 273.10(e)(1)(i)(E), and monthly reporting and 

retrospective budgeting, 7 CFR 273.21(a) and (b), on October 1, 1988. 

These provisions were immediately effective for all households certified 

subsequent to September 30, 1988. Changes affecting currently 

participating households were to be implemented upon recertification, at 

the household's request, or when it was necessary to implement other 

changes affecting the household. (For example, a change reported by a 

nonmonthly reporting retrospectively budgeted household was to be 

implemented in accordance with 7 CFR 273.12.) The Department was not 

requiring State agencies to conduct a casefile review to implement 

monthly reporting and retrospective budgeting changes for currently 

participating households. Monthly reports submitted by households which 

became exempt from MRRB as a result of the Hunger Prevention Act, such 

as non-migrant seasonal farmworkers or the homeless, were to be treated 

as change reports and processed prospectively in accordance with 7 CFR 

273.12(c).

    (v) State agencies were required to implement the provisions of this 

rule concerning the exclusion of advance payment of earned income tax 

credits, 7 CFR 273.8(c)(1) and 273.9(c)(14), on January 1, 1989. 

Households applying subsequent to December 31, 1988 should have had this 

provision applied to them as of their date of application. Changes 

affecting households participating as of December 31, 1988 were to be 

implemented upon recertification, at the household's request, or when it 

was necessary to implement other changes affecting the household.

    (vi) All other provisions of this rule, relating to technical 

corrections concerning the urban Alaska TFP (7 CFR 272.7(c)), Alaska 

proration (7 CFR 272.7(f)(3)(iii)), and the dependent care deduction (7 

CFR 273.11(c)(2)(iii) and 273.12(e)(1)(i)(C)), are to be implemented 

August 1, 1989.

    (vii) Quality control errors made as a result of this rule's changes 

to Sec. Sec. 273.9,



[[Page 590]]



273.10, and 273.21 during the required implementation time frame 

established by this rulemaking shall be handled in accordance with 

interim regulations published at 53 FR 44171, dated November 2, 1988. 

Food stamp allotment changes are not covered by the interim regulation 

because this is a mass change.

    (viii) State agencies which failed to implement any of these 

provisions by the required dates shall provide affected households with 

the lost benefits they would have received if the State agency had 

implemented these provisions as required.

    (110) Amendment No. 316. State welfare agencies shall implement the 

provisions of Amendment No. 316 as follows:

    (i) The provisions contained in Sec. 274.2(b) of Amendment No. 316 

are effective retroactively to January 1, 1989 and shall be implemented 

by State welfare agencies no later than January 1, 1990 for all 

households which newly apply for Program benefits or apply for 

recertification on or after that date.

    (ii) The remaining provisions are effective July 1, 1989 and must be 

implemented on that date for all households which newly apply for 

Program benefits or apply for recertification on or after that date. The 

current caseload shall be converted to these provisions at household 

request, at the time of recertification, or when the case is next 

reviewed, whichever occurs first and restored benefits shall be 

provided, if appropriate, back to July 1, 1989 or the date of the 

application, whichever is later. Additionally, households which applied 

for Program benefits between July 1, 1989 and the date the State agency 

implemented these provisions, and were denied benefits, shall be 

entitled to restored benefits back to July 1, 1989 or the date of the 

application, whichever occurred later, if the household:

    (A) Is otherwise entitled to benefits, and

    (B) Requests a review of its case or the State agency otherwise 

becomes aware that a review is needed.

    (111) Amendment No. 296. The provisions of Amendment 296 are 

effective July 5, 1989.

    (112) Amendment No. 309. (i) The State agency shall have until June 

18, 1990, to request regional arbitration of regional office case 

findings which the State received before February 22, 1988.

    (ii) The State agency shall have until June 18, 1990, to request 

national office arbitration of regional arbitration decisions which the 

State agency received before February 22, 1988.

    (113) Amendment (320). (i) The provisions of this rule are effective 

April 2, 1990.

    (ii) The provisions relating to the Expanded Food and Nutrition 

Education Program (Sec. 272.5(b)(1)(iv)), the collection of fraud 

claims Sec. 273.18, the monitoring of claims against households (Sec. 

273.18(k)(5)), adverse action notice on claim demand letters (Sec. 

273.18(d)(3)), notices of fair hearings (Sec. 273.18(d)(3)), and the 

results of geographic error prone profiles (Sec. 275.15(g)) shall be 

implemented no later than July 2, 1990. The provision relating to fraud 

detection units (Sec. 272.4(h)) shall be implemented no later than 

September 4, 1990. State agencies shall complete the first review of 

food stamp office hours (Sec. 272.4(g)) during Federal Fiscal Year 

1990.

    (iii) State agencies may submit attachments to their Plans of 

Operation pertaining to the intercept of unemployment compensation 

benefits to repay intentional Program violations claims as specified in 

Sec. 272.2 (a) and (d) and Sec. 272.12(a) of this amendment as of 

February 22, 1990.

    (114) Amendment No. 322. The changes contained in this amendment are 

effective October 15, 1990 and shall be implemented no later than that 

date. The changes to 7 CFR 273.11 contained in this amendment will apply 

only to disqualifications imposed after the effective date of this 

rulemaking.

    (115) Amendment No. 324. The quality control changes to Sec. 275.12 

that are made by Amendment No. 324 shall be implemented for the quality 

control review period beginning January 1, 1991.

    (116) Amendment No. 330. The provisions of Amendment No. 330 are 

effective and must be implemented on August 1, 1991. Any variance 

resulting from implementation of the provisions of this amendment shall 

be excluded from error analysis for 90 days from this required 

implementation date in accordance with 7 CFR 275.12(d)(2)(vii).



[[Page 591]]



The provisions must be implemented for all households that newly apply 

for Program benefits on or after the required implementation date. The 

current caseload shall be converted to these provisions at household 

request, at the time of recertification, or when the case is next 

reviewed, whichever occurs first, and the State agency must provide 

restored benefits back to the required implemention date. If for any 

reason a State agency fails to implement on the required implementation 

date, restored benefits shall be provided, if appropriate, back to the 

required implementation date or the date of application, whichever is 

later.

    (117) Amendment No. 332. The provision of Amendment No. 332 

regarding the resource exemption for PA and SSI recipients is effective 

and must be implemented no later than February 1, 1992. Any variances 

resulting from implementation of the provisions of this amendment shall 

be excluded from error analysis for 90 days from this required 

implementation date, in accordance with 7 CFR 275.12(d)(2)(vii). The 

provision must be implemented for all households that newly applied for 

Program benefits on or after the required implementation date. The 

current caseload shall be converted to these provisions at household 

request, at the time of recertification, or when the case is next 

reviewed, whichever occurs first, and the State agency must provide 

restored benefits back to the required implementation date. If for any 

reason a State agency fails to implement on the required implementation 

date, restored benefits shall be provided, if appropriate, back to the 

required implementation date or the date of application whichever is 

later.

    (118) Amendment No. 321. (i) The provisions contained in Sec. 

273.7(d)(1)(ii)(A) and 273.9(c)(5)(i) (A) and (F) of Amendment No. 321, 

which implement section 404(c) of the Hunger Prevention Act of 1988, are 

effective and must be implemented retroactively to July 1, 1989.

    (ii) The remaining provisions of Amendment No. 321 are effective 

October 1, 1988 and must be implemented no later than March 1, 1992. 

State agencies may implement the conciliation procedure provisions 

contained in Sec. 273.7(g)(1)(ii) immediately upon publication of 

Amendment No. 321. However, in no case shall the conciliation procedures 

be implemented any later than March 1, 1992. By implemented, the 

Department means that the State agency shall begin to use conciliation 

procedures in all cases where the State agency has determined on or 

after the above implementation date that an individual has refused or 

failed to comply with an E&T requirement under Sec. 273.7(f).

    (119) Amendment No. 328. (i) The requirements for State agencies to 

begin implementation or corrective action for deficiencies which are the 

cause for non-entitlement to enhanced funding for the Fiscal Year 1986 

review period, and review periods thereafter were effective as of 

October 1, 1985, pursuant to section 604 of Public Law 100-435.

    (ii) The requirements for State agencies to begin the implementation 

of corrective action for deficiencies which result in underissuances, 

improper denials or improper terminations of benefits to eligible 

households where such errors are caused by State agency rules, practices 

or procedures were effective July 1, 1989, pursuant to section 320 of 

Public Law 100-435. The corrective action must address all such 

deficiencies which occurred on or after July 1, 1989.

    (iii) The State agency shall have until December 27, 1991, to 

implement changes in the development of quality control sampling plans, 

such that only those State agencies proposing non-proportional 

integrated, or other alternative sampling plan designs must:

    (A) Demonstrate that the alternative design provides payment error 

rate estimates with equal-or-better predicted precision than would be 

obtained had the State agency reviewed simple random samples of the 

sizes specified in Sec. 275.11(b)(1) of the regulations,

    (B) Describe all weighting, and estimation procedures if the sample 

design is non-self-weighted, or uses a sampling technique other than 

systematic sampling,

    (C) Demonstrate that self-weighting is actually achieved in sample 

designs claimed to be self-weighting.



[[Page 592]]



    (iv) The State agency shall have until January 27, 1992, to request 

regional arbitration of any federally subsampled underissuance cases for 

which the State agency received FNS regional office QC findings on or 

after February 22, 1988.

    (v) The State agency shall have until January 27, 1992, to request 

national arbitration of any regional arbitration decisions involving 

underissuance cases for which the State agency received FNS regional 

arbitration findings on or after February 22, 1988.

    (120) Amendment No. 335. The provisions contained in Amendment No. 

335 are effective and shall be implemented as follows:

    (i) The provisions contained in Sec. Sec. 271.2, 271.7, 

273.1(e)(1)(iii), 273.2(k)(1)(i)(H), 273.2(m), 273.10, 273.18 and 278.1 

of Amendment No. 335 are effective on February 1, 1992 and shall be 

implemented on that date as follows:

    (A) The Guam and Virgin Islands State agencies shall communicate the 

two new group home provisions (Sec. Sec. 271.2, 273.1(e)(1)(iii) and 

278.1) to group homes in their areas by this date so that they can apply 

for the appropriate certification and residents can apply for food 

stamps without delay. All State agencies shall implement the expanded 

group home provisions for applicants newly applying for program benefits 

on or after February 1, 1992 for approved group homes.

    (B) No special implementation efforts are required with regard to 

the provisions in Sec. Sec. 273.2(k)(1)(i)(H) and 273.2(m) about 

informing SSI applicants about the Food Stamp Program and the 

availability of an application at the social security office.

    (C) State agencies are not required to adjust their computers or 

train their caseworkers immediately in order to implement the provisions 

in Sec. Sec. 271.2, 271.7, 273.10 and 273.18 relative to the minimum 

benefit for one- and two-person households because the methodology for 

annually adjusting the minimum benefit will not result in an increase in 

the minimum benefit for some time. However, State agencies are expected 

to have the capability of implementing a change in the minimum benefit 

in a timely manner when such a change in announced and, therefore, shall 

not wait until an actual change in the minimum benefit to adjust 

computers and train caseworkers.

    (ii) The remaining provisions of Amendment No. 335 are effective 

February 1, 1992. The provisions which reflect that a joint application 

is no longer required for SSI applicants Sec. Sec. 273.2 (c)(1), 

273.2(i)(3)(i), and 273.2(k)(1)(i)(D) do not require implementation 

efforts by State agencies. The remaining provisions (Sec. Sec. 273.4, 

273.9(b) and 273.9(c)) also do not require special implementation 

efforts by State agencies as the provisions reflect current policy.

    (iii) Any variance resulting from implementation of the provisions 

of this amendment shall be excluded from quality control error analysis 

for 90 days from the required implementation date which shall be handled 

in accordance with 7 CFR 275.12(d)(2)(vii).

    (121) Amendment No. 336. The provisions of Amendment No. 336 are 

effective and must be implemented as follows:

    (i) The provision that gives State agencies the option of using 

retrospective budgeting for nonmonthly reporting households other than 

those exempt from monthly reports (7 CFR 273.21(b) introductory text) 

was effective as of November 28, 1990, the date of enactment of the 

Leland Act.

    (ii) The delegation of the responsibility for design of the monthly 

report form (Sec. 273.21(h)(3) and Sec. 273.21(j)(1)(ii) of this 

chapter) must be implemented by February 1, 1992.

    (iii) The remaining provisions are effective January 3, 1992 and 

must be implemented by July 1, 1992.

    (iv) Any variances resulting from implementation of the provisions 

of this amendment shall be excluded from error analysis for 90 days from 

the required implementation dates in accordance with 7 CFR 

275.12(d)(2)(vii).

    (122) Amendment No. 337. The provisions of Amendment No. 337 are 

effective and must be implemented as follows:

    (i) State agencies shall implement the provisions of Amendment No. 

337 on February 1, 1992, except as provided in paragraph (g)(122)(ii) of 

this section.

    (ii) The amendments to revise the introductory text of Sec. 

273.2(j) and



[[Page 593]]



Sec. 273.2(j)(3) as they relate to categorical eligibility and the 

amendment adding Sec. 273.2(j)(4) are effective and must be implemented 

February 1, 1992 for recipients of GA from a State program. They are 

effective and must be implemented August 1, 1992 for recipients of GA 

from a local program.

    (iii) Any variance resulting from implementation of the provisions 

of this amendment shall be excluded from error analysis in accordance 

with 7 CFR 275.12(d)(2)(vii) for 90 days from the required 

implementation date. The provisions must be implemented for all 

households that newly apply for Program benefits on or after the 

required implementation date. If for any reason a State agency fails to 

implement on the required implementation date, restored benefits shall 

be provided, if appropriate, back to the required implementation date, 

the date of the food stamp application or the date the household was 

determined categorically eligible in accordance with Sec. 273.2(j)(4), 

whichever is later.

    (iv) The current caseload shall be converted to these provisions at 

household request, at the time of recertification, or when the case is 

next reviewed, whichever occurs first. The State agency must provide 

restored benefits back to the required implementation date.

    (123) Amendment No. 338. The provisions of Amendment No. 338 are 

effective and must be implemented on February 1, 1992. The provisions 

must be implemented for all households that newly apply for Program 

benefits on or after the required implementation date of February 1, 

1992. The current caseload shall be converted to these provisions at 

household request, at the time of recertification, or when the case is 

next reviewed, whichever occurs first. If, for any reason, a State 

agency fails to implement by the required implementation date, restored 

benefits shall be provided, if appropriate, back to the required 

implementation date or the date of the food stamp application, whichever 

is later. Any variances resulting from implementation of the provisions 

of this amendment shall be excluded from error analysis for 90 days from 

this required implementation date in accordance with 7 CFR 

275.12(d)(2)(vii).

    (124) Amendment No. 325. The quality control changes to Sec. 275.23 

that are made by Amendment No. 325 shall be implemented effective 

January 24, 1992.

    (125) Amendment No. 345. The provisions of Amendment No. 345 are 

effective on April 1, 1992, and shall be implemented as follows:

    (i) Currently operating demonstration projects shall submit to FNS 

for approval a plan no later than June 30, 1992, to satisfy the 

requirements of this regulation. The plan shall address the areas in 

which the State EBT demonstration project does not comply with the 

provisions of this rule and how the State agency plans to bring its 

system into compliance. The State agency shall submit a schedule of any 

actions it proposes to take and when they are to be completed. 

Compliance with the provisions of this final regulation shall occur 

within two years from the effective date unless approved by FNS to 

continue operations under the authority of section 17 of the Act (7 

U.S.C. 2026) as a demonstration project. In seeking FNS approval to 

continue under Section 17 authority, the State agency shall state what 

research value would be obtained in continuing the demonstration.

    (ii) For State agencies that have proposals or planning documents 

currently under review by the Department, the State agencies and the 

Department shall establish at what point the State agency is in the 

planning process and how the State agency will fit into the approval 

process of these rules. All such State agencies will be expected to 

comply with the standards of these rules.

    (iii) A State agency that wishes to obtain approval for an EBT 

system shall submit a Planning Advanced Planning Document for FNS 

approval as prescribed herein.

    (126) Amendment No. 327. (i) The statutory provision reflected in 

Sec. 275.23(e)(6)(v) of Amendment No. 327 was effective October 1, 1985 

pursuant to Public Law 100-435.

    (ii) The remaining provisions are effective October 28, 1992.

    (127) Amendment No. 340. (i) The provisions at Sec. 

273.7(d)(1)(i)(A) and Sec. 273.7(d)(1)(i)(B) are effective retroactive 

to October 1, 1991.



[[Page 594]]



    (ii) The provision at Sec. 273.7(c)(4)(viii) is effective and must 

be implemented by August 15, 1993, the date E&T plans must be submitted 

to FNS.

    (iii) The provision at Sec. 273.10(d)(1)(i) is effective January 

19, 1993 and must be implemented by March 1, 1993.

    (iv) The remaining provisions of Amendment No. 340 are effective and 

must be implemented retroactively to February 1, 1992.

    (v) Any variances resulting from implementation of the provision at 

Sec. 273.10(d)(1)(i) shall be excluded from error analysis for 90 days 

from the required implementation date in accordance with 7 CFR 

273.12(d)(2)(vii).

    (128) Amendment No. 326. The provisions of this amendment are 

effective and must be implemented no later than December 1, 1993. Any 

variance resulting from implementation of the provisions of this 

amendment shall be excluded from quality control error analysis for 60 

days from the required implementation date which shall be handled in 

accordance with 7 CFR 275.12(d)(2)(vii).

    (129) Amendment No. 349. The provisions of Amendment No. 349 are 

effective, and shall be implemented, as follows:

    (i) Sec. 273.1(a)(2)(i)(C), Sec. 273.1(a)(2)(i)(D) and Sec. 

273.10(f)(2) are effective as of October 1, 1987; Sec. 273.2(i)(1) 

(iii) and (iv) are effective as of December 1, 1987; the new Sec. 

273.9(c)(1)(ii)(G) is effective as of April 1, 1987. However, 

application of Sec. 273.9(c)(1)(ii)G) in conjunction with the 

provisions at Sec. 273.9 (c)(1)(ii) (A) through (F) and (c)(5)(i)(F) is 

effective as of the date the individual provisions at 7 CFR 273.9 

(c)(1)(ii) (A) through (F) and (c)(5)(i)(F) became effective. Those 

dates are: Sec. 273.9(c)(1)(ii) (A), (B), and (C), April 1, 1987; Sec. 

273.9(c)(1)(ii)(D), October 20, 1987; Sec. 273.9(c)(1)(ii)(E), 

September 1, 1988, and Sec. 273.9(c)(1)(ii)(F), August 1, 1991. The 

amendment to the first sentence of Sec. 273.9(c)(1)(iv)(B) to include a 

regulatory reference to 7 CFR 273.9(c)(5)(i)(F) is effective as of 

August 1, 1991 (the date the individual provision at 7 CFR 

273.9(c)(5)(i)(F) became effective), and Sec. 273.18(c)(2)(ii) is 

effective as of September 5, 1987. To the extent that these provisions 

represent new or different policy from that under which the State agency 

is currently operating, the State agency shall implement the provisions 

not later than April 1, 1994 for households newly applying for Program 

benefits on or after such implementation date. State agencies shall 

convert their affected current caseload to these provisions (except for 

Sec. 273.18(c)(2)(ii)) at recertification, when the household requests 

a review of its case, or when the State agency otherwise becomes aware 

that a review is needed, whichever occurs first. To the extent that the 

provisions will result in restored benefits for affected households, 

such benefits shall be provided back to the effective date of the 

provision or the date of the household's first initial application, 

whichever occurs later;

    (ii) The remaining provisions of Amendment No. 349 adopt as final, 

without change, interim provisions published September 29, 1987 and are 

effective as of the date the corresponding interim provision became 

effective as established at 7 CFR 272.1(g)(93). These provisions and the 

effective dates are: Sec. 271.2, definition of ``Homeless individual,'' 

July 22, 1987; Sec. 272.5, July 22, 1987; Sec. 273.9(a)(3), October 1, 

1988; Sec. 271.2, definition of ``General assistance,'' April 1, 1987; 

Sec. 273.9(b)(2)(i), April 1, 1987; Sec. 273.9(c)(1) (ii)(A), (ii)(B) 

and (ii)(C), April 1, 1987; Sec. 273.9(d)(7)(i), October 1, 1987; Sec. 

273.9(d)(8)(i), October 1, 1987 (except for the last sentence, which is 

effective October 1, 1988). The provisions do not change policy or 

procedures under which State agencies are currently operating and, 

therefore, do not require specific implementation efforts by State 

agencies.

    (130) Amendment No. 342. The provision relating to household 

election of repayment method for IPV claims at Sec. 273.18(d)(4)(ii) is 

effective retroactive to November 28, 1990. The provision relating to 

household election of repayment method for IHE claims at Sec. 

273.18(d)(4)(i) is effective December 13, 1991. The provisions for State 

agency retention rates on claim collections at Sec. 273.18(h)(2) and 

(i) are effective retroactive to October 1, 1990. The provisions at 

Sec. 277.18 which reduce the enhanced funding level for ADP is 

effective October 1, 1991, for costs incurred on that date and 

thereafter and does



[[Page 595]]



not apply to ADP funding approved prior to November 28, 1990.

    (131) Amendment No. 347. The provisions of this amendment are 

effective as specified in paragraphs (g)(131)(ii) (A), (B), and (C) of 

this section. State agencies are not required to do file searches for 

cases relating to PASS households unless the question on an income 

exclusion for PASS had been raised with the State agency prior to 

December 13, 1991.

    (i) The provisions at Sec. 271.2, Sec. 273.1, and Sec. 273.11 

were effective and had to be implemented no later than February 1, 1992.

    (ii) The provision at Sec. 273.9(c)(17) is effective the earlier 

of:

    (A) December 13, 1991, the date of enactment of Pub. L. 102-237;

    (B) October 1, 1990, for food stamp households for which the State 

agency knew, or had notice, that a household member had a PASS; or

    (C) Beginning on the date that a fair hearing was requested 

contesting the denial of an income exclusion for amounts provided for a 

PASS.

    (132) Amendment No. 316. The provisions of this final rule that 

amend 7 CFR 273.2(b)(3), 273.2(c)(5), 273.2(f)(8)(i)(A) and (ii), and 

paragraph (11) of the ``Elderly or disabled member'' definition in 7 CFR 

271.2 are effective as of May 6, 1994. The State agency shall implement 

the provisions not later than September 5, 1994 for all households newly 

applying for Program benefits on or after such implementation date. The 

current caseload shall be converted to these provisions at household 

request, at the time of recertification, or when the case is next 

reviewed, whichever occurs first, and the State agency must provide 

restored benefits back to the required implementation date. If for any 

reason a State agency fails to implement on the required implementation 

date, restored benefits shall be provided, if appropriate, back to the 

required implementation date or the date of application whichever is 

later. Any variances resulting from implementation of the provisions of 

this amendment shall be excluded from error analysis for 90 days from 

this required implementation date in accordance with 7 CFR 

275.12(d)(2)(vii).

    (133) Amendment No. 352. The provisions of this amendment are 

effective April 11, 1994.

    (134) Amendment No. 355. The provisions of Amendment No. 355 are 

effective and must be implemented on August 1, 1994. Any variance 

resulting from implementation of the provisions of this amendment shall 

be excluded from error analysis for 120 days from this required 

implementation date in accordance with 7 CFR 275.12(d)(2)(vii) as 

modified by section 13951(c)(2) of Pub. L. 103-66. The provisions must 

be implemented for all households that newly apply for Program benefits 

on or after the required implementation date. The current caseload shall 

be converted to these provisions at household request, at the time of 

recertification, or when the case is next reviewed, whichever occurs 

first, and the State agency must provide restored benefits back to the 

required implementation date. If for any reason a State agency fails to 

implement on the required implementation date, restored benefits shall 

be provided, if appropriate, back to the required implementation date or 

the date of application, whichever is later.

    (135) Amendment No. 348. The provisions of Amendment No. 348 are 

effective August 5, 1994 and must be implemented for all QC billing 

actions beginning with Fiscal Year 1986.

    (136) Amendment No. 346. The provision of Amendment No. 346 

regarding an income exclusion for homeless households living in 

transitional housing is effective and must be implemented no later than 

September 1, 1994. Any variances resulting from implementation of the 

provisions of this amendment shall be excluded from error analysis for 

120 days from this required implementation date in accordance with 7 CFR 

275.12(d)(2)(vii). The provision must be implemented for all households 

that newly apply for Program benefits on or after the required 

implementation date. The current caseload shall be converted to these 

provisions at the household's request, at the time of recertification, 

or when the case is next reviewed, whichever occurs first. The State 

agency must provide restored benefits to such



[[Page 596]]



households back to the required implementation date or the date of 

application whichever is later. If for any reason a State agency fails 

to implement on the required implementation date, restored benefits 

shall be provided, if appropriate, back to the required implementation 

date or the date of application, whichever is later.

    (137) Amendment No. 350. The provisions of Amendment No. 350 are 

effective and must be implemented as follows:

    (i) The provision at Sec. 273.8(e)(12)(i) of this chapter is 

effective and must be implemented according to statute retroactive to 

January 1, 1991.

    (ii) The provision at Sec. 273.8(e)(12)(ii) of this chapter will be 

effective and must be implemented on September 1, 1994.

    (iii) The provision at Sec. 273.21(b) of this chapter against 

establishing new monthly reporting requirements for households residing 

on Indian reservations if no monthly reporting system was in place on 

March 25, 1994 is effective and must be implemented according to statute 

retroactive to March 25, 1994.

    (iv) The provision in Sec. 273.2(j) of this chapter concerning 

categorical eligibility for GA recipients is effective and must be 

implemented according to statute retroactive to February 1, 1992.

    (v) The remaining provisions are effective and must be implemented 

October 28, 1994.

    (138) Amendment No. 359. The provision of Amendment No. 359 

regarding the medical expense deduction is effective and must be 

implemented no later than October 1, 1994. Any variances resulting from 

implementation of the provisions of this amendment shall be excluded 

from error analysis for 120 days from this required implementation date 

in accordance with 275.12(d)(2)(vii) of this chapter. The provision must 

be implemented for all households that newly apply for Program benefits 

on or after the required implementation date. State agencies must notify 

households eligible for the deduction of the change in medical deduction 

reporting requirements and the right of the household to be converted to 

those new procedures immediately. The current caseload shall be 

converted to these provisions at the household's request, at the time of 

recertification, or when the case is next reviewed, whichever occurs 

first.

    (139) Amendment No. 351. The provisions of Amendment No. 351 to 

amend 7 CFR 273.7(d) are effective October 1, 1993. State agencies are 

not required to take any action to implement these provisions.

    (140) Amendment No. 333. The provisions of Amendment No. 333 are 

effective and must be implemented as follows:

    (i) The provisions relating to aggregated (combined) allotments to 

households applying after the 15th of the month and mail issuance in 

rural areas where households experience transportation difficulties in 

obtaining benefits are effective and must be implemented by statute 

retroactive to February 1, 1992.

    (ii) The provision relating to staggered issuance on Indian 

reservations was in place on March 25, 1994, is effective and must be 

implemented according to statute retroactive to March 25, 1994.

    (iii) The remaining provisions are effective and must be implemented 

September 1, 1995.

    (141) Amendment No. 360. This provision is effective September 20, 

1995, and must be implemented no later than the first day of the first 

month beginning December 19, 1995.

    (142) Amendment No. 357. The provisions of Amendment No. 357 are 

effective and must be implemented as follows:

    (i) The provision relating to the increased penalties at 7 CFR 

273.16(b) is effective and must be implemented retroactive to September 

1, 1994. This includes providing notification of the increased penalties 

on the application form.

    (ii) The remaining provisions are effective and must be implemented 

October 23, 1995.

    (143) Amendment 367. The provisions of Amendment 367 must be 

implemented no later than October 2, 1995 except that State agencies 

currently participating in the Federal Income Tax Refund Offset Program 

(FTROP) must implement section 272.2(d)(1)(xii), which relates to the 

submission of the Plan of Operations, within November 30, 1995.



[[Page 597]]



    (144) Amendment No. (370). The provisions of Amendment No. (370) are 

effective and must be implemented as follows:

    (i) Sections 273.5(b)(1), (b)(4), and (b)(9) are effective February 

1, 1992. The introductory paragraph of 273.5(b)(6) is effective February 

1, 1992. The introductory paragraph of 273.5(b)(10) is effective 

February 1, 1992. Sections 273.5(b)(11)(ii), (b)(11)(iii), and 

(b)(11)(iv) are effective February 1, 1992.

    (ii) Sections 273.5(b)(6)(i) and (b)(6)(ii) and sections 

273.5(b)(10)(i) and (b)(10)(ii) and the remaining provisions of this 

regulation are effective November 1, 1995 and shall be implemented no 

later than February 1, 1996.

    (iii) The current caseload shall be converted to these provisions at 

the household's request, at the time of recertification, or when the 

case is next reviewed, whichever occurs first. The State agency shall 

provide restored benefits back to the effective date.

    (iv) Any variance resulting from implementation of a provision in 

this rule shall be excluded from error analysis for 120 days from the 

required implementation date of that provision.

    (145) Amendment No. 369. The provisions of Amendment No. 369 are 

effective May 31, 1996. State agencies must implement no later than 

November 27, 1996. The provisions of this amendment are applicable for 

determinations of intentional failure to comply made on or after the 

effective date of the amendment.

    (146) Amendment No. 368. The provisions of Amendment No. 368 are 

effective on July 29, 1996.

    (147) Amendment No. 364. Except for the provisions of Sec. 

273.14(b)(2), the provisions of Amendment No. 364 are effective November 

18, 1996 and must be implemented no later than May 1, 1997. The 

effective date and implementation date of the provisions of Sec. 

273.14(b)(2) will be announced in a document in the Federal Register. 

The provisions must be implemented for all households that newly apply 

for Program benefits on or after either the required implementation date 

or the date the State agency implements the provision prior to the 

required implementation date. The current caseload shall be converted to 

these provisions following implementation at the household's request, at 

the time of recertification, or when the case is next reviewed, 

whichever occurs first. The State agency must provide restored benefits 

to required implementation date or the date the State agency implemented 

the provision prior to the required implementation date. If for any 

reason a State agency fails to implement by the required implementation 

date, restored benefits shall be provided, if appropriate, back to the 

required implementation date or the date of application whichever is 

later, but for no more than 12 months in accordance with Sec. 273.17(a) 

of this chapter. Any variances resulting from implementation of the 

provisions of this amendment shall be excluded from error analysis for 

120 days from this required implementation date in accordance with Sec. 

275.12(d)(2)(vii) of this chapter and 7 U.S.C. 2025(c)(3)(A).

    (148) Amendment No. 362. The provision of section 13921 of Public 

Law 103-66 establishing a child support deduction was effective 

September 1, 1994, and was required to be implemented no later than 

October 1, 1995. The provisions of Amendment No. 362 are effective 

December 16, 1996 and must be implemented no later than May 1, 1997. 

State agencies shall implement the provisions no later than the required 

implementation date. The provisions must be implemented for all 

households that newly apply for Program benefits on or after either the 

required implementation date or the date the State agency implemented 

the provision prior to the required implementation date, whichever is 

earlier. State agencies are required to adjust the cases of 

participating households at the next recertification, at household 

request, or when the case is next reviewed, whichever comes first. State 

agencies which fail to implement or adjust cases by the required 

implementation date shall provide restored benefits as appropriate. For 

quality control purposes, any variances resulting from implementation of 

the provisions are excluded from error analysis for 120 days from the 

required implementation date, in accordance with 7 CFR 275.12(d)(2)(vii) 

and 7 U.S.C.



[[Page 598]]



2025(c)(3)(A). State agencies which implement prior to the required 

implementation date must notify the appropriate regional office prior to 

implementation that they wish the variance exclusion period to begin 

with actual implementation, as provided in 7 CFR 275.12(d)(2)(vii)(A). 

Absent such notification, the exclusionary period will begin with the 

required implementation date.

    (149) Amendment No. 374. The Higher Education Act Amendments of 

1986, as amended in 1987, were effective and required to be implemented 

for the 1988-89 school year; the Perkins Act was effective and required 

to be implemented on July 1, 1991; the Mickey Leland Act (as amended by 

the 1991 Technical Amendments to the Food Stamp Act) was effective and 

required to be implemented on February 1, 1992, and the exclusions 

contained in the Higher Education Act Amendments of 1992 for the Tribal 

Development Student Assistance Revolving Loan Program were effective and 

required to be implemented on October 1, 1992, and for Title IV and BIA 

student assistance on July 1, 1993. The provisions of Amendment No. 374 

are effective December 16, 1996 and must be implemented by March 1, 

1997. The current caseload shall be converted to these provisions at the 

household's request, at the time of recertification, or when the case is 

next reviewed, whichever occurs first. If implementation of the acts 

referenced in this paragraph or this amendment is delayed, benefits 

shall be restored, as appropriate, in accordance with the Food Stamp 

Act. Any variance resulting from implementation of this amendment shall 

be excluded from error analysis for 120 days from March 1, 1997.

    (150) Amendment No. 365. This provision is effective December 16, 

1996 and must be implemented no later than March 1, 1997. Any variances 

resulting from implementation of the provisions of this amendment shall 

be excluded from error analysis for 120 days from this required 

implementation date in accordance with Sec. 275.12(d)(2)(vii) of this 

chapter.

    (151) Amendment No. 375. Public Law 103-66, the Mickey Leland 

Childhood Hunger Relief Act, was effective and required to be 

implemented on September 1, 1994. The provisions of Amendment No. 375 

are effective December 16, 1996, and must be implemented by March 1, 

1997. The State agency shall implement the provisions of this amendment 

no later than the appropriate required implementation date for all 

households newly applying for Program benefits on or after such 

implementation date. The current caseload shall be converted to these 

provisions at household request, at the time of recertification, or when 

the case is next reviewed, whichever occurs first, and the State agency 

must provide restored benefits, as may be appropriate under the Food 

Stamp Act, back to the appropriate required implementation date. If for 

any reason a State agency fails to implement on the appropriate 

implementation date, restored benefits shall be provided, if 

appropriate, back to the appropriate required implementation date or the 

date of application, whichever is later. Any variances resulting from 

implementation of this amendment shall be excluded from quality control 

error analysis for 120 days from March 1, 1997.

    (152) Amendment No. 361 The provisions of Amendment No. 361 are 

effective December 26, 1996, and must be implemented May 27, 1997. Any 

variances resulting from implementation of the provisions of this 

amendment shall be excluded from error analysis for 120 days from this 

required implementation date in accordance with 7 CFR 275.12(d)(2)(vii). 

The provision must be implemented for all households that newly apply 

for Program benefits on or after the required implementation date. The 

current caseload shall be converted to these provisions at the 

household's request, at the time of recertification, or when the case is 

next reviewed, whichever occurs first. The State agency must provide 

restored benefits to such households back to the required implementation 

date or the date of application whichever is later.

    If for any reason a State agency fails to implement on the required 

implementation date, restored benefits shall be provided, if 

appropriate, back to the required implementation date or the date of 

application whichever is later,



[[Page 599]]



but for no more than 12 months in accordance with Sec. 273.17(a) of 

this chapter.

    (153) Amendment No. 366. (i) With the exception of the changes to 

Sec. 275.3(c)(4) [Arbitration], Sec. 275.23(e)(5) [State agencies' 

liabilities for payment error-Fiscal Year 1992 and beyond], Sec. 

275.23(e)(7) [Good Cause], and Sec. 275.23(e)(9) [timeframes], all 

quality control changes that are made by Amendment No. 366 shall be 

implemented July 2, 1997.

    (ii) The quality control changes to Sec. 275.3(c)(4) [Arbitration], 

Sec. 275.23(e)(5) [State agencies' liabilities for payment error-Fiscal 

Year 1992 and beyond], Sec. 275.23(e)(7) [Good Cause], and Sec. 

275.23(e)(9) [Timeframes], shall be implemented after approval of the 

provisions at Sec. 275.3(c)(4) [Arbitration], and Sec. 275.23(e)(7) 

[Good Cause] by the Office of Management and Budget under the Paperwork 

Reduction Act of 1995. FNS will publish a notice in the Federal Register 

announcing the implementation date. It shall be a date occurring after 

the publication date of the notice.

    (154) Amendment No. 386. The provisions of Amendment No.386 are 

effective August 4, 2000. State agencies may begin implementing the rule 

August 4, 2000 but not later than January 2, 2001. State agencies that 

have already implemented EBT shall have one year in which to grandfather 

adjustment disclosure into their training materials according to 7 CFR 

274.12(f)(10)(viii).

    (155) Amendment No. 373. The provision at Sec. 275.23(e)(5)(iii) is 

effective and is to be implemented on July 16, 1999. The following 

provisions are effective on October 1, 1999 and are to be implemented on 

October 1, 2000, with the start of the Fiscal Year 2001 quality control 

review period: Sec. 271.2; Sec. 275.3(c)(3)(ii); Sec. 275.10(a); 

Sec. 275.11(c)(1); Sec. 275.11(e)(2); Sec. 275.11(f)(2); Sec. 

275.13(a); Sec. 275.13(b); Sec. 275.13(c)(1); Sec. 275.13(c)(2); 

Sec. 275.13(f)(2) and Sec. 275.23(c)(4). The remaining provisions of 

this rule are effective and are to be implemented October 1, 1999, with 

the start of the Fiscal Year 2000 quality control review period, which 

begins with the October 1999 sample month.

    (156) Amendment No. 379. The provision of Amendment No. 379 

regarding the 15-percent exemption and additional funding for E&T is 

effective and must be implemented no later than November 2, 1999. Any 

variances resulting from implementation of the provisions of this 

amendment shall be excluded from error analysis for 120 days from this 

required implementation date in accordance with Sec. 275.12(d)(2)(vii) 

of this chapter.

    (157) Amendment No. 381. The provisions of Amendment 381 are 

implemented as follows:

    (i) The definition of ``Homeless individual'' in Sec. 271.2, and 

the amendments to Sec. 273.1(b)(1)(ii), Sec. 273.2(i)(3)(i) and 

(i)(3)(ii) were to be implemented August 22, 1996;

    (ii) The amendments to Sec. 273.8(f)(1) and Sec. 273.10(e)(4)(ii) 

were to be implemented October 1, 1996;

    (iii) The amendment to Sec. 273.9(d)(8) was to be implemented 

January 1, 1997;

    (iv) The amendments to Sec. 273.1(b)(1)(iii) and Sec. 

273.8(e)(3)(i)(A) must be implemented no later than March 1, 2001; and

    (v) All remaining amendments must be implemented no later than 

January 1, 2001.

    (158) Amendment No. 382. The provisions of Amendment No.379 are 

effective and must be implemented March 30, 2000.

    (159) Amendment (385). The provisions in Sec. 277.11(d) regarding 

time limits for State agencies to file claims to amend a prior 

expenditure report to request retroactive funding for costs previously 

incurred are effective October 1, 2000. The conforming amendments to 

Food Stamp Program regulations in Sec. Sec. 272.1(g), 272.2(c)(3), 

272.11(d) and (e), 274.12(k), 277.4(b) and (g), 277.9(b), 277.18(b), 

(d), (e), (g) and (p)(5), and Appendix A to Part 277 and the removal of 

Sec. Sec. 277.15 and 277.19 are effective June 23, 2000.

    (160) Amendment 389. The Personal Responsibility and Work 

Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996, Pub. L. 104-193, (PRWORA) set 

the date of enactment, August 1, 2000, as the effective date for the 

provisions of the law relating to recipient claims. These non-

discretionary provisions of this rule are at Sec. 273.18(c)(1)(ii)(B), 

Sec. 273.18(f) and Sec. 273.18(g) and are effective retroactive to 

August 1, 2000. The remaining amendments of this rule are effective



[[Page 600]]



and must be implemented no later than August 1, 2000.

    (161) Amendment No. 388 The provisions of Amendment No. 388 are 

implemented as follows:

    (i) State agencies may implement the following amendments at their 

discretion at any time on or after the effective date: Sec. 272.8; 

Sec. 272.11(a); Sec. 273.2(f)(9)(i); Sec. 273.2(f)(10); Sec. 

273.2(j)(2)(ii); Sec. 273.9(d)(6)(i); Sec. 273.9(d)(6)(iii)(E); Sec. 

273.11(a)(3)(v); Sec. 273.12(a)(1)(vii); Sec. 273.25; and Sec. 

277.4(b).

    (ii) State agencies may implement the following amendment at their 

discretion at any time after the effective date established by OMB 

approval of the associated information collection burden: Sec. 

273.12(f)(4).

    (iii) State agencies must implement the following amendments no 

later than 180 days after the effective date established by OMB approval 

of the associated information collection burden for all households newly 

applying for Program benefits: Sec. 273.2(c)(2)(i), Sec. 273.2(e)(1), 

Sec. 273.2(e)(2)(i), Sec. 273.2(e)(2)(ii), Sec. 273.2(e)(3), Sec. 

273.4(c)(3)(iv); and Sec. 273.12(c)(3). State agencies must convert 

current caseloads no later than the next recertification following the 

implementation date.

    (iv) State agencies must implement the amendment to Sec. 

273.2(b)(4)(iv) no later than August 1, 2001, for all households newly 

applying for Program benefits.

    (v) State agencies must implement all remaining amendments no later 

than June 1, 2001, for all households newly applying for Program 

benefits. State agencies must convert current caseloads no later than 

the next recertification following the implementation date.

    (vi) Acting under policy guidance the Department issued previous to 

the publication of this final rule, several State agencies that have 

identified programs to confer categorical eligibility for food stamps 

that do not meet the criteria established at Sec. Sec. 

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) of this chapter. Any such State agency may continue 

to use these programs to confer categorical eligibility for food stamp 

purposes until September 30, 2001.

    (vii) A State agency which first implements option 1 under 7 CFR 

273.11(c)(3)(ii), and then decides at a later date to implement option 2 

under that same paragraph is entitled to a second variance exclusion 

period under 7 CFR 275.12(d)(2)(vii).

    (162) Amendment No. 384. The provisions of Amendment No. 384 are 

effective September 14, 2000, and must be implemented as follows:

    (i) Any new contract executed after October 16, 2000, must have 

provisions for interoperability and portability which include an 

implementation date for this functionality no later than October 1, 

2002, except under the following circumstances:

    (A) State agencies with contracts entered into before October 16, 

2000, are not required to re-negotiate their EBT services contract to 

include interoperability and portability, even if the contract expires 

after the October 1, 2002 deadline; such State agencies are exempt from 

the interoperability requirement until they re-negotiate or re-procure 

their EBT contract.

    (B) Smart Card systems are not required to be interoperable with 

other State EBT systems until such time that the Department determines a 

practicable technological method is available for interoperability with 

on-line EBT systems.

    (ii) Enhanced funding is available for interoperability costs 

incurred after February 11, 2000, and before October 1, 2002, for State 

agencies which have implemented standards of interoperability and 

portability adopted by a majority of State agencies, and for such costs 

incurred after September 1, 2002, for State agencies that have adopted 

standards for interoperability and portability in accordance with this 

regulation at 7 CFR 274.12.

    (163) [Reserved]

    (164) Amendment No. 390. The provisions of Amendment No. 390 are 

effective November 3, 2000. State agencies may implement the provisions 

anytime after the effective date. However, Electronic Benefit Transfer 

(EBT) systems must be in place statewide no later than October 1, 2002, 

as required by the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity 

Reconciliation Act of 1996.



[[Page 601]]



    (165) Amendment No. 387--This rule is effective no later than 

{insert the first day of the month 60 days after publication of the 

final rule, except for the amendment to 7 CFR 272.2(d)(1)(xiii) which is 

effective August 1, 2001. State agencies must implement the provisions 

in this final rule no later than August 1, 2001.

    (166) Amendment No. 393. The provisions of Amendment No. 393, 

regarding the Work Provisions of the Personal Responsibility and Work 

Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 are effective August 19, 2002.

    (167) Amendment No. 376. The provisions of Amendment No. 376 are 

effective May 29, 2003 and must be implemented no later than November 1, 

2003. The provisions must be implemented for all households that newly 

apply for Program benefits on or after either the required 

implementation date or the date the State agency implements the 

provision prior to the required implementation date. The current change 

reporting caseload shall be converted to these provisions no later than 

the required implementation date in accordance with procedures 

established by the State agency. However, for households subject to the 

reporting requirements at Sec. 273.12(a)(1)(i)(C)(1) or (2) of this 

chapter, the State agency has until January 1, 2004 to convert 

households to 6 month certification periods. Monthly reporting 

households shall be converted in accordance with Sec. 273.21(r) of this 

chapter. For quality control purposes, any variances resulting from the 

implementation of this rule shall be excluded from error analysis for 

120 days from the required implementation date, in accordance with Sec. 

275.12(d)(2)(vii) of this chapter.

    (168) Amendment No. 394. The interim and final provisions of 

Amendment No. 394 are effective May 11, 2005. State agencies may 

implement the provisions anytime after May 11, 2005 but no later than 

October 11, 2005.

    (169) Amendment No. 395. The provisions of Amendment 395 are 

effective December 15, 2003.

    (170) Amendment No. 396. The provisions of amendment number 396 are 

effective April 8, 2005.



[Amdt. 132, 43 FR 47884, Oct. 17, 1978]



    Editorial Note: For Federal Register citations affecting Sec. 

272.1, see the List of CFR Sections Affected, which appears in the 

Finding Aids section of the printed volume and on GPO Access.



    Effective Date Note: By Amdt. 397, 70 FR 72353, Dec. 5, 2005, Sec. 

272.1 was amended by adding paragraph (g)(171), effective January 4, 

2006. For the convenience of the user, the added text is set forth as 

follows:



Sec. 272.1  General terms and conditions.



                                * * * * *



    (g) Implementation. * * *

    (171) Amendment No. 397. The provisions of Amendment No. 397 are 

effective January 4, 2006. State agencies may implement the provisions 

anytime after the rule is published but no later than June 5, 2006.