[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: 7CFR273.18]



[Page 767-776]

 

                          TITLE 7--AGRICULTURE

 

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

 

PART 273_CERTIFICATION OF ELIGIBLE HOUSEHOLDS--Table of Contents

 

Sec. 273.18  Claims against households.



    (a) General. (1) A recipient claim is an amount owed because of:

    (i) Benefits that are overpaid or

    (ii) Benefits that are trafficked. Trafficking is defined in 7 CFR 

271.2.

    (2) This claim is a Federal debt subject to this and other 

regulations governing Federal debts. The State agency must establish and 

collect any claim by following these regulations.

    (3) As a State agency, you must develop a plan for establishing and 

collecting claims that provides orderly claims processing and results in 

claims collections similar to recent national rates of collection. If 

you do not meet



[[Page 768]]



these standards, you must take corrective action to correct any 

deficiencies in the plan.

    (4) The following are responsible for paying a claim:

    (i) Each person who was an adult member of the household when the 

overpayment or trafficking occurred;

    (ii) A sponsor of an alien household member if the sponsor is at 

fault; or

    (iii) A person connected to the household, such as an authorized 

representative, who actually trafficks or otherwise causes an 

overpayment or trafficking.

    (b) Types of claims. There are three types of claims:



------------------------------------------------------------------------

           An . . .                             is . . .

------------------------------------------------------------------------

(1) Intentional Program        any claim for an overpayment or

 violation (IPV) claim.         trafficking resulting from an individual

                                committing an IPV. An IPV is defined in

                                Sec. 273.16.

(2) Inadvertent household      any claim for an overpayment resulting

 error (IHE) claim.             from a misunderstanding or unintended

                                error on the part of the household.

(3) Agency error (AE) claim..  any claim for an overpayment caused by an

                                action or failure to take action by the

                                State agency. The only exception is an

                                overpayment caused by a household

                                transacting an untampered expired

                                Authorization to Participate (ATP) card.

------------------------------------------------------------------------



    (c) Calculating the claim amount--(1) Claims not related to 

trafficking.



------------------------------------------------------------------------



------------------------------------------------------------------------

                       (i) As a State agency, you

------------------------------------------------------------------------

must calculate a claim . . .  and . . .             and . . .



back to at least twelve       for an IPV claim,     for all claims,

 months prior to when you      the claim must be     don't include any

 become aware of the           calculated back to    amounts that

 overpayment.                  the month the act     occurred more than

                               of IPV first          six years before

                               occurred.             you became aware of

                                                     the overpayment.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

            (ii) The actual steps for calculating a claim are

------------------------------------------------------------------------

you . . .                     unless . . .          then . . .



(A) determine the correct

 amount of benefits for each

 month that a household

 received an overpayment.

(B) do not apply the earned   the claim is an AE    apply the earned

 income deduction to that      claim.                income deduction.

 part of any earned income

 that the household failed

 to report in a timely

 manner when this act is the

 basis for the claim.

(C) subtract the correct      this answer is zero   dispose of the claim

 amount of benefits from the   or negative.          referral.

 benefits actually received.

 The answer is the amount of

 the overpayment.



[[Page 769]]





(D) reduce the overpayment    you are not aware of  the amount of the

 amount by any EBT benefits    any expunged          overpayment

 expunged from the             benefits.             calculated in

 household's EBT benefit                             paragraph

 account in accordance with                          (e)(1)(ii)(C) of

 your own procedures. The                            this section is the

 difference is the amount of                         amount of the

 the claim.                                          claim.

------------------------------------------------------------------------



    (2) Trafficking-related claims. Claims arising from trafficking-

related offenses will be the value of the trafficked benefits as 

determined by:

    (i) The individual's admission;

    (ii) Adjudication; or

    (iii) The documentation that forms the basis for the trafficking 

determination.

    (d) Claim referral management.



------------------------------------------------------------------------



------------------------------------------------------------------------

                       (1) As a State agency, you

------------------------------------------------------------------------

must . . .                    and you . . .         unless . . .



establish a claim before the  will ensure that no   you develop and use

 last day of the quarter       less than 90          your own standards

 following the quarter in      percent of all        and procedures that

 which the overpayment or      claim referrals are   have been approved

 trafficking incident was      either established    by us (see

 discovered.                   or disposed of        paragraph (d)(2) of

                               according to this     this section).

                               time frame.

------------------------------------------------------------------------



    (2) Instead of using the standard in paragraph (d)(1) of this 

section, you may opt to develop and follow your own plan for the 

efficient and effective management of claim referrals.

    (i) This plan must be approved by us.

    (ii) At a minimum, this plan must include:

    (A) Justification as to why your standards and procedures will be 

more efficient and effective than our claim referral standard;

    (B) Procedures for the detection and referral of potential 

overpayments or trafficking violations;

    (C) Time frames and procedures for tracking claim referrals through 

date of discovery to date of establishment;

    (D) A description of the process to ensure that these time frames 

are being met;

    (E) Any special procedures and time frames for IPV referrals; and

    (F) A procedure to track and follow-up on IPV claim referrals when 

these referrals are referred for prosecutorial or similar action.

    (e) Initiating collection action and managing claims--(1) 

Applicability. State agencies must begin collection action on all claims 

unless the conditions under paragraph (g)(2) of this section apply.

    (2) Pre-establishment cost effectiveness determination. A State 

agency may opt not to establish and subsequently collect an overpayment 

that is not cost effective. The following is our cost-effectiveness 

policy for State agencies:



[[Page 770]]







------------------------------------------------------------------------



------------------------------------------------------------------------

         (i) You may follow your own cost effectiveness plan and

------------------------------------------------------------------------

opt not to establish any      unless . . .          or . . .

 claim if . . .

you determine that the claim  you do not have a     you already

 referral is not cost          cost-effectiveness    established the

 effective to pursue.          plan approved by us.  claim or discovered

                                                     the overpayment in

                                                     a quality control

                                                     review.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

              (ii) Or you may follow the FNS threshold and

------------------------------------------------------------------------

opt not to establish any      unless . . .          or . . .

 claim if . . .

you determine that the claim  the household is      you already

 referral is $125 or less.     currently             established the

                               participating in      claim or discovered

                               the Program.          the overpayment in

                                                     a quality control

                                                     review.

------------------------------------------------------------------------



    (3) Notification of claim. (i) Each State agency must develop and 

mail or otherwise deliver to the household written notification to begin 

collection action on any claim.

    (ii) The claim will be considered established for tracking purposes 

as of the date of the initial demand letter or written notification.

    (iii) If the claim or the amount of the claim was not established at 

a hearing, the State agency must provide the household with a one-time 

notice of adverse action. The notice of adverse action may either be 

sent separately or as part of the demand letter.



------------------------------------------------------------------------



-------------------------------------------------------------------------

(iv) The initial demand letter or notice of adverse action must include

 language stating:

------------------------------------------------------------------------

(A) The amount of the claim.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

(B) The intent to collect from all adults in the household when the

 overpayment occurred.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

(C) The type (IPV, IHE, AE or similar language) and reason for the

 claim.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

(D) The time period associated with the claim.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

(E) How the claim was calculated.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

(F) The phone number to call for more information about the claim.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

(G) That, if the claim is not paid, it will be sent to other collection

 agencies, who will use various collection methods to collect the claim.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

(H) The opportunity to inspect and copy records related to the claim.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

(I) Unless the amount of the claim was established at a hearing, the

 opportunity for a fair hearing on the decision related to the claim.

 The household will have 90 days to request a fair hearing.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

(J) That, if not paid, the claim will be referred to the Federal

 government for federal collection action.

------------------------------------------------------------------------



[[Page 771]]





(K) That the household can make a written agreement to repay the amount

 of the claim prior to it being referred for Federal collection action.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

(L) That, if the claim becomes delinquent, the household may be subject

 to additional processing charges.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

(M) That the State agency may reduce any part of the claim if the agency

 believes that the household is not able to repay the claim.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

(N) A due date or time frame to either repay or make arrangements to

 repay the claim, unless the State agency is to impose allotment

 reduction.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

(O) If allotment reduction is to be imposed, the percentage to be used

 and the effective date.

------------------------------------------------------------------------



    (v) The due date or time frame for repayment must be not later than 

30 days after the date of the initial written notification or demand 

letter.

    (vi) Subsequent demand letters or notices may be sent at the 

discretion of the State agency. The language to be used and content of 

these letters is left up to the State agency.

    (4) Repayment agreements. (i) Any repayment agreement for any claim 

must contain due dates or time frames for the periodic submission of 

payments.

    (ii) The agreement must specify that the household will be subject 

to involuntary collection action(s) if payment is not received by the 

due date and the claim becomes delinquent.

    (5) Determining Delinquency. (i) Unless specified in paragraph 

(e)(5)(iv) of this section, a claim must be considered delinquent if:

    (A) The claim has not been paid by the due date and a satisfactory 

payment arrangement has not been made; or

    (B) A payment arrangement has been established and a scheduled 

payment has not been made by the due date.

    (ii) The date of delinquency for a claim covered under paragraph 

(e)(5)(i)(A) of this section is the due date on the initial written 

notification/demand letter. The claim will remain delinquent until 

payment is received in full, a satisfactory payment agreement is 

negotiated, or allotment reduction is invoked.

    (iii) The date of delinquency for a claim covered under paragraph 

(e)(5)(i)(B) of this section is the due date of the missed installment 

payment. The claim will remain delinquent until payment is received in 

full, allotment reduction is invoked, or if the State agency determines 

to either resume or re-negotiate the repayment schedule.

    (iv) A claim will not be considered delinquent if another claim for 

the same household is currently being paid either through an installment 

agreement or allotment reduction and you, as a State agency, expect to 

begin collection on the claim once the prior claim(s) is settled.

    (v) A claim is not subject to the requirements for delinquent debts 

if the State agency is unable to determine delinquency status because 

collection is coordinated through the court system.

    (6) Fair hearings and claims. (i) A claim awaiting a fair hearing 

decision must not be considered delinquent.

    (ii) If the hearing official determines that a claim does, in fact, 

exist against the household, the household must be re-notified of the 

claim. The language to be used in this notice is left up to the State 

agency. The demand for payment may be combined with the notice of the 

hearing decision. Delinquency must be based on the due date of this 

subsequent notice and not on the initial pre-hearing demand letter sent 

to the household.

    (iii) If the hearing official determines that a claim does not 

exist, the claim is disposed of in accordance with paragraph (e)(8) of 

this section.

    (7) Compromising claims. (i) As a State agency, you may compromise a 

claim or any portion of a claim if it can be reasonably determined that 

a household's economic circumstances dictate that the claim will not be 

paid in three years.



[[Page 772]]



    (ii) You may use the full amount of the claim (including any amount 

compromised) to offset benefits in accordance with Sec. 273.17.

    (iii) You may reinstate any compromised portion of a claim if the 

claim becomes delinquent.

    (8) Terminating and writing-off claims-(i) A terminated claim is a 

claim in which all collection action has ceased. A written-off claim is 

no longer considered a receivable subject to continued Federal and State 

agency collection and reporting requirements.

    (ii) The following is our claim termination policy:



------------------------------------------------------------------------

 As a State agency, if . . .     Then you . . .         Unless . . .

------------------------------------------------------------------------

(A) you find that the claim   must discharge the    it is appropriate to

 is invalid.                   claim and reflect     pursue the

                               the event as a        overpayment as a

                               balance adjustment    different type of

                               rather than a         claim (e.g., as an

                               termination.          IHE rather than an

                                                     IPV claim).

(B) all adult household       must terminate and    you plan to pursue

 members die.                  write-off the claim.  the claim against

                                                     the estate.

(C) the claim balance is $25  must terminate and    other claims exist

 or less and the claim has     write-off the claim.  against this

 been delinquent for 90 days                         household resulting

 or more.                                            in an aggregate

                                                     claim total of

                                                     greater than $25.

(D) you determine it is not   must terminate and    we have not approved

 cost effective to pursue      write-off the claim.  your overall cost-

 the claim any further.                              effectiveness

                                                     criteria.

(E) the claim is delinquent   must terminate and    you plan to continue

 for three years or more.      write-off the claim.  to pursue the claim

                                                     through Treasury's

                                                     Offset Program.

(F) you cannot locate the     may terminate and

 household.                    write-off the claim.

(G) a new collection method   may reinstate a       you decide not to

 or a specific event (such     terminated and        pursue this option.

 as winning the lottery)       written-off claim.

 substantially increases the

 likelihood of further

 collections.

------------------------------------------------------------------------



    (f) Acceptable forms of payment.



------------------------------------------------------------------------

      You may collect a claim by:                 However . . .

------------------------------------------------------------------------

(1) Reducing benefits prior to           You must follow the

 issuance. This includes allotment        instructions and limits found

 reduction and offsets to restored        in paragraphs (g)(1) and

 benefits.                                (g)(3) of this section.

(2) Reducing benefits after issuance.    You must follow the

 These are benefits from electronic       instructions and limits found

 benefit transfer (EBT) accounts.         in paragraph (g)(2) of this

                                          section.

(3) Accepting cash or any of its         You do not have to accept

 generally accepted equivalents. These    credit or debit cards if you

 equivalents include check, money         do not have the capability to

 order, and credit or debit cards.        accept these payments.

(4) Accepting paper food coupons.......  You must destroy any coupons or

                                          coupon books that are not

                                          returned to inventory and

                                          document as appropriate.



[[Page 773]]





(5) Conducting your own offsets and      You must follow any limits that

 intercepts. This includes but is not     may apply in paragraph (g) of

 limited to wage garnishments and         this section.

 intercepts of various State payments.

 These collections are considered

 ``cash'' for FNS claim accounting and

 reporting purposes.

(6) Requiring the household to perform   This form of payment must be

 public service.                          ordered by a court and

                                          specifically be in lieu of

                                          paying any claim.

(7) Participating in the Treasury        You must follow the procedures

 collection programs.                     found in paragraph (n) of this

                                          section.

------------------------------------------------------------------------



    (g) Collection methods--(1) Allotment reduction. The following is 

our allotment reduction policy:



------------------------------------------------------------------------

   As a State agency, you must . . .               Unless . . .

------------------------------------------------------------------------

(i) Automatically collect payments for   the claim is being collected at

 any claim by reducing the amount of      regular intervals at a higher

 monthly benefits that a household        amount or another household is

 receives.                                already having its allotment

                                          reduced for the same claim

                                          (see paragraph (g)(1)(vi) of

                                          this section).

(ii) For an IPV claim, limit the amount  the household agrees to a

 reduced to the greater of $20 per        higher amount.

 month or 20 percent of the household's

 monthly allotment or entitlement.

(iii) For an IHE or AE claim, limit the  the household agrees to a

 amount reduced to the greater of $10     higher amount.

 per month or 10 percent of the

 household's monthly allotment.

(iv) Not reduce the initial allotment    the household agrees to this

 when the household is first certified.   reduction.

(v) Not use additional involuntary       the additional payment is

 collection methods against individuals   voluntary; or the source of

 in a household that is already having    the payment is irregular and

 its benefit reduced.                     unexpected such as a State tax

                                          refund or lottery winnings

                                          offset.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

                              You may . . .

------------------------------------------------------------------------

 (vi) Collect using allotment reduction from two separate households for

      the same claim. However, you are not required to perform this

                         simultaneous reduction.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

(vii) Continue to use any other collection method against any individual

     who is not a current member of the household that is undergoing

                          allotment reduction.

------------------------------------------------------------------------



    (2) Benefits from EBT accounts. (i) As a State agency, you must 

allow a household to pay its claim using benefits from its EBT benefit 

account.

    (ii) You must comply with the following EBT benefit claims 

collection and adjustment requirements:



[[Page 774]]







------------------------------------------------------------------------



------------------------------------------------------------------------

   (A) For collecting from active (or reactivated) EBT benefits . . .

------------------------------------------------------------------------

You . . .                         or . . .            and . . .

need written permission which     oral permission     the retention

 may be obtained in advance and    for one time        rules do apply to

 done in accordance with           reductions with     this collection.

 paragraph (g)(2)(iv) of this      you sending the

 section;.                         household a

                                   receipt of the

                                   transaction

                                   within 10 days.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

            (B) For collecting from stale EBT benefits . . .

------------------------------------------------------------------------

You . . .                         and . . .           and . . .



must mail or otherwise deliver    give the household  the retention

 to the household written          at least 10 days    rules apply to

 notification that you intend to   to notify you       this collection.

 apply the benefits to the         that it doesn't

 outstanding claim.                want to use these

                                   benefits to pay

                                   the claim.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

      (C) For making an adjustment with expunged EBT benefits . . .

------------------------------------------------------------------------

You . . .                         and . . .           and . . .

must adjust the amount of any     this can be done    the retention

 claim by subtracting any          anytime.            rules do not

 expunged amount from the EBT                          apply to this

 benefit account for which you                         adjustment.

 become aware.

------------------------------------------------------------------------



    (iii) A collection from an EBT account must be non-settling against 

the benefit drawdown account.

    (iv) At a minimum, any written agreement with the household to 

collect a claim using active EBT benefits must include:

    (A) A statement that this collection activity is strictly voluntary;

    (B) The amount of the payment;

    (C) The frequency of the payments (i.e., whether monthly or one time 

only);

    (D) The length (if any) of the agreement; and

    (E) A statement that the household may revoke this agreement at any 

time.

    (3) Offsets to restored benefits. You must reduce any restored 

benefits owed to a household by the amount of any outstanding claim. 

This may be done at any time during the claim establishment and 

collection process.

    (4) Lump sum payments. You must accept any payment for a claim 

whether it represents full or partial payment. The payment may be in any 

of the acceptable formats.

    (5) Installment payments. (i) You may accept installment payments 

made for a claim as part of a negotiated repayment agreement.

    (ii) As a household, if you fail to submit a payment in accordance 

with the terms of your negotiated repayment schedule, your claim becomes 

delinquent and it will be subject to additional collection actions.

    (6) Intercept of unemployment compensation benefits. (i) As a State 

agency, you may arrange with a liable individual to intercept his or her 

unemployment compensation benefits for the collection of any claim. This 

collection option may be included as part of a repayment agreement.

    (ii) You may also intercept an individual's unemployment 

compensation benefits by obtaining a court order.

    (iii) You must report any intercept of unemployment compensation 

benefits as ``cash'' payments when they are reported to us.

    (7) Public service. If authorized by a court, the value of a claim 

may be paid by the household performing public



[[Page 775]]



service. As a State agency, you will report these amounts in accordance 

with our instructions.

    (8) Other collection actions. You may employ any other collection 

actions to collect claims. These actions include, but are not limited 

to, referrals to collection and/or other similar private and public 

sector agencies, state tax refund and lottery offsets, wage 

garnishments, property liens and small claims court.

    (9) Unspecified joint collections. When an unspecified joint 

collection is received for a combined public assistance/food stamp 

recipient claim, each program must receive its pro rata share of the 

amount collected. An unspecified joint collection is when funds are 

received in response to correspondence or a referral that contained both 

the food stamp and other program claim(s) and the debtor does not 

specify to which claim to apply the collection.

    (h) Refunds for overpaid claims. (1) As a household, if you overpay 

a claim, the State agency must provide a refund for the overpaid amount 

as soon as possible after the State agency finds out about the 

overpayment. You will be paid by whatever method the State agency deems 

appropriate considering the circumstances.

    (2) You are not entitled to a refund if the overpaid amount is 

attributed to an expunged EBT benefit.

    (i) Interstate claims collection. (1) Unless a transfer occurs as 

outlined in paragraph (i)(2) of this section, as a State agency, you are 

responsible for initiating and continuing collection action on any food 

stamp recipient claim regardless of whether the household remains in 

your State.

    (2) You may accept a claim from another State agency if the 

household with the claim moves into your State. Once you accept this 

responsibility, the claim is yours for future collection and reporting. 

You will report interstate transfers to us in accordance with our 

instructions.

    (j) Bankruptcy. A State agency may act on our behalf in any 

bankruptcy proceeding against a bankrupt household with outstanding 

recipient claims.

    (k) Retention rates. (1) The retention rates for State agencies are 

as follows:



------------------------------------------------------------------------

     If you collect an . . .          then the retention rate is . . .

------------------------------------------------------------------------

(i) IPV claim....................  35 percent.

(ii) IHE claim...................  20 percent.

(iii) IHE claim by reducing a      35 percent.

 person's unemployment

 compensation benefit.

(iv) AE claim....................  nothing.

------------------------------------------------------------------------



    (2) These rates do not apply to any reduction in benefits when you 

disqualify someone for an IPV.

    (l) Submission of payments to us. A State agency must send us the 

value of funds collected for IHE, IPV or AE claims according to our 

instructions. We must pay you for claims collection retention by 

electronic funds transfer.

    (m) Accounting procedures. (1) As a State agency, you must maintain 

an accounting system for monitoring recipient claims against households. 

This accounting system shall consist of both the system of records 

maintained for individual debtors and the accounts receivable summary 

data maintained for these debts.

    (2) At a minimum, the accounting system must document the following 

for each claim:

    (i) The date of discovery;

    (ii) The reason for the claim;

    (iii) The calculation of the claim;

    (iv) The date you established the claim;

    (v) The methods used to collect the claim;

    (vi) The amount and incidence of any claim processing charges;

    (vii) The reason for the final disposition of the claim;

    (viii) Any collections made on the claim;



[[Page 776]]



    (ix) Any correspondence, including follow-up letters, sent to the 

household.

    (3) At a minimum, your accounting or certification system must also 

identify the following for each claim:

    (i) Those households whose claims have become delinquent;

    (ii) Those situations in which an amount not yet restored to a 

household can be used to offset a claim owed by the household; and

    (iii) Those households with outstanding claims that are applying for 

benefits.

    (4) When requested and at intervals determined by us, your 

accounting system must also produce:

    (i) Accurate and supported outstanding balances and collections for 

established claims; and

    (ii) Summary reports of the funds collected, the amount submitted to 

FNS, the claims established and terminated, any delinquent claims 

processing charges, the uncollected balance and the delinquency of the 

unpaid debt.

    (5) On a quarterly basis, unless otherwise directed by us, your 

accounting system must reconcile summary balances reported to individual 

supporting records.

    (n) Treasury's Offset Programs (TOP)--(1) Referring debts to TOP. 

(i) As a State agency, you must refer to TOP all recipient claims that 

are delinquent for 180 or more days.

    (ii) You must certify that all of these claims to be referred to TOP 

are 180 days delinquent and legally enforceable.

    (iii) You must refer these claims in accordance with our and the 

Department of the Treasury's (Treasury) instructions.

    (iv) You must not refer claims to TOP that:

    (A) You become aware that the debtor is a member of a participating 

household that is having its allotment reduced to collect the claim; or

    (B) Fall into any other category designated by us as non-referable 

to TOP.

    (2) Notifying debtors of referral to TOP. (i) As a State agency, you 

must notify the debtor of the impending referral to TOP according to our 

instructions relating to:

    (A) What constitutes an adequate address to send the notice;

    (B) What specific language will be included in the TOP referral 

notice;

    (C) What will be the appropriate time frames and appeal rights; and

    (D) Any other information that we determine necessary to fulfill all 

due process and other legal requirements as well as to adequately inform 

the debtor of the impending action.

    (ii) You must also follow our instructions regarding procedures 

connected with responding to inquiries, subsequent reviews and hearings, 

and any other procedures determined by us as necessary in the debtor 

notification process.

    (3) Effect on debtors. (i) If you, as a debtor, have your claim 

referred to TOP, any eligible Federal payment that you are owed may be 

intercepted through TOP.

    (ii) You may also be responsible for paying any collection or 

processing fees charged by the Federal government to intercept your 

payment.

    (4) Procedures when a claim is in TOP. (i) As a State agency, you 

must follow FNS and Treasury procedures when the claim is in TOP.

    (ii) You must remove a claim from TOP if:

    (A) FNS or Treasury instruct you to remove the debt; or

    (B) You discover that:

    (1) The debtor is a member of a food stamp household undergoing 

allotment reduction;

    (2) The claim is paid up;

    (3) The claim is disposed of through a hearing, termination, 

compromise or any other means;

    (4) The claim was referred to TOP in error; or

    (5) You make an arrangement with the debtor to resume payments.

    (5) Receiving and reporting. As a State agency, you must follow our 

procedures on receiving and reporting TOP payments.

    (6) Security or confidentiality agreements. As a State agency, you 

must follow our procedures regarding any security or confidentiality 

agreements or processes necessary for TOP participation.



[Amdt. 389, 66 FR 41775, July 6, 2000; 65 FR 47587, Aug. 2, 2000]



[[Page 777]]