 |
Eliminated the purchase requirement. |
 |
Benefits continued to be based on the Thrifty Food Plan
(TFP). Households received only the bonus allotment of
coupons instead of the total allotment. Bonus determined
by taking 30 percent of the household's net income after
deductions and subtracting that amount from the TFP
allotment for that household size. Separate TFPs for the
contiguous U.S., Alaska, Hawaii, Guam, Puerto Rico and
the Virgin Islands. TFPs for all areas to be adjusted
twice a year, to the nearest dollar increase, to reflect
changes in the cost of food. USDA not to raise or lower
benefits by switching from TFP to a different food plan. |
 |
In order to be eligible for benefits, a household's
income after deductions must fall below the poverty line
for the non-farm U.S. ($5,850 a year for a family of
four). This limit to apply to all food stamp households
including pure PA and SSI households. Different income
limits to be set for Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, the
Virgin Islands and Guam. |
 |
All household income except the following to be counted
when determining whether a household is eligible for
food stamps and the amount of its benefits: |
|
|
|
-- |
Vendor
payments - money which is not payable directly
to a household; |
|
-- |
Irregular
income -income received too infrequently or
irregularly to be reasonably anticipated, but
which does not exceed $30 in a three-month
period; |
|
-- |
Educational income - that part of educational
loans, grants, scholarships, fellowships,
veterans' benefits, and the like that is spent
on tuition or required school fees at an
institution of higher education or school for
the handicapped (portions of educational income
remaining after these expenses to be counted as
income); |
|
-- |
Loans -
no loan to be counted as income except for that
part of a deferred educational loan which is not
used for tuition and fees; |
|
-- |
Reimbursements - money paid to a household for
an expense the household has already incurred -
as long as the payment is not more than the
household actually paid for the expense; |
|
-- |
Third-party care funds - money received by a
household, but used for the care and maintenance
of a person who is not a household member; |
|
-- |
Earnings
of a child - income earned by a household member
who is less than 18 years old and who attends
school; |
|
-- |
Nonrecurring lump-sum payments - payments such
as income tax refunds or rebates, retroactive
lump sum social security or railroad retirement
pension payments, and insurance settlements.
These payments will be counted as resources
unless specifically excluded by other laws. |
|
-- |
Cost of
producing self-employment income; and |
|
-- |
Income
that other laws specifically exclude from
consideration for food stamp purposes such as
benefits provided by WIC, Alaskan Native Claims
Settlements, etc. |
|
 |
Number of allowable deductions from income reduced to
the following four only. All households given the
advantage of a basic standard deduction which did not
previously exist: |
|
|
|
-- |
Standard
deduction - all households in the 48 States and
D.C. allowed a basic standard deduction of $60 a
month regardless of the household's size or
income. Separate standards to be set for Alaska,
Hawaii, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin
Islands. Standards for these areas to be
determined by comparing expenses in those areas
to expenses in the contiguous U.S. Deduction to
be adjusted twice each year, beginning July 1,
1978, to the nearest $5 to reflect changes in
the cost of living as measured by the CPI for
items other than food. |
|
-- |
Earned
income deduction - households with earned income
allowed a deduction of 20 percent of all their gross
earned income to compensate for taxes, other
mandatory deductions from salary, and general
work expenses such as transportation to work, or
the cost of uniforms. Deduction not allowed for
any earned income which is excluded for food
stamp purposes, such as the earnings of a child
or irregular income. |
|
-- |
Deductions for dependent care costs and excess
shelter costs:- households that must pay for
child care or the care of an incapacitated
person, and households with high shelter costs,
allowed an additional deduction to cover any one
of the following three areas; |
|
|
|
1) |
dependent
care costs - households will receive a
deduction, up to a maximum of $75 a month, for
the cost of paying someone to care for a
dependent when such care enables a household
member to work or to accept or continue training
or education that is preparatory for work.
Deduction may be applied to child care costs as
well as to care for an incapacitated adult when
an attendant is necessary; |
|
2) |
excess
shelter costs - households will receive a
deduction, up to a maximum of $75, to cover the
amount by which their monthly shelter costs
exceed 50% of the household's income after all
other deductions are subtracted. Shelter costs
continue to include rent or mortgage payments,
utility payments, property taxes and insurance
costs; |
|
3) |
combined
deduction - households can receive a deduction
to cover both dependent care costs and excess
shelter costs, but the combined deduction may
not exceed $75 a month. $75 ceiling on all three
parts of this deduction applies in the 48 States
and D.C. This $75 maximum will be adjusted
annually, starting July 1, 1978, to reflect
changes in the shelter, fuel, and utility
components of CPI. A separate maximum amount to
be set for Alaska, Hawaii, Guam, Puerto Rico,
and the Virgin Islands by comparing shelter
costs in each area to shelter costs in the 48
States and D.C., and adjusting the $75 ceiling
accordingly. Maximum amount for each of these
States or outlying areas to be changed annually
to reflect changes in shelter costs. |
|
|
 |
Household income for the past 30 days to be used as a
guide in determining the household's eligibility and
benefits, unless the household has experienced or
expects a change in income. In such an event, the past
30 days' income to be disregarded and the anticipated
level of income to be used to determine eligibility and
benefits. Exceptions to this method to remain for
teachers, students with annual grants, and self-employed
persons who earn their annual income in a period of time
shorter than a year. These households will continue to
have their income averaged over the year. |
 |
Resource limits to remain the same, except for the
following changes, until USDA studied the issue and
prepared a report to the Committees on Agriculture in
both the House and Senate by June 1, 1978: |
|
|
|
-- |
Resource
limits to apply to all households including
those in which all members receive PA and/or SSI; |
|
-- |
Resource
limit to be raised to $1,750 per household,
including households made up of only one person.
Resource limit to remain at $3,000 for
households of two or more people when at least
one person is over 60 years old; |
|
-- |
Value of
a car or licensed vehicle over $4,500 to be
counted, except in the case of vehicles used to
produce earned income such as taxicabs or
business trucks; |
|
-- |
Cars used
for transportation to employment to be counted
at their Blue Book value. All other resources to
continue to be counted at equity value; |
|
-- |
A
provision to be added to prevent households from
transferring assets for the purpose of
qualifying or attempting to qualify for food
stamp benefits. Households which put their
money, possessions or property in someone else's
name in order to qualify for food stamps to be
ineligible for a period of up to one year. |
|
 |
Household defined as: |
|
|
|
1) |
an
individual who lives alone or who, while living
with others, customarily purchases food and
prepares meals to eat at home separate and apart
from the others, or else pays the others for
such meals; or |
|
2) |
a group
of individuals who live together and customarily
purchase food and prepare meals together to eat
at home, or else live with others and pay the
others for such meals. In neither event shall
any individual or group of individuals be
considered a household if they reside in an
institution or boarding house except if they are
residents of federally subsidized housing for
the elderly or residents of an alcohol or drug
treatment program. |
|
 |
Any person who is otherwise eligible for the FSP, who is
physically and mentally fit, and who is between the ages
of 18 and 60 (previously 18 to 65) must: |
|
|
|
-- |
Register
for employment in a manner determined by USDA; |
|
-- |
Fulfill
whatever reasonable job search requirements are
prescribed by USDA; |
|
-- |
Not quit
any job without good cause. If the head of the
household quits, the household is ineligible for
food stamps for 60 days starting from the date
of the quit. This rule does not apply if the
household was certified for food stamps just
before the head of the household quit the job. |
|
-- |
Not
refuse (without good cause) to accept a job
paying either the State or Federal minimum wage,
whichever is higher. This requirement does not
compel anyone to accept employment at a site or
plant subject to a strike or lockout. |
|
 |
Persons exempt from work registration requirements are
as follows: |
|
|
|
-- |
Currently
subject to and complying with work registration
requirements under the WIN or the Federal-State
unemployment compensation system; |
|
-- |
Parents
or other members of households responsible for
the care of dependent children under 12 or of
incapacitated persons; |
|
-- |
Parents
or other caretakers of children in households
where there are other able-bodied parents who
are subject to employment requirements; |
|
-- |
Bona fide
students enrolled at least half-time in any
recognized school, training program, or
institution of higher education. These students
are subject to employment requirements when on
any vacation or recess of more than 30 days. |
|
-- |
Regular
participants in drug addiction or alcoholic
treatment and rehabilitation programs; or |
|
-- |
Persons
employed a minimum of 30 hours per week or
receiving weekly earnings that equal the minimum
hourly rate under the Fair Labor Standards Act
of 1938, as amended, multiplied by 30 hours. |
|
 |
USDA to implement two work pilot projects in each of the
seven geographic Regions of the FNS, these locations to
be divided among selected urban and rural locations.
Under the pilot projects, any person who |
|
|
|
1) |
has been
registered for work for more than 30 days and
has not been offered a job by a private
employer, |
|
2) |
whose
earned income is less than their allotment of
food stamps, will have to accept an offer of
employment from a State or local government, or
an organization serving as a "prime sponsor"
under the CETA. There will be no payment in
wages for work performed, the food stamp
allotment to which the household is otherwise
entitled, will be the payment instead. Three
major conditions governed these work pilot
projects: |
|
|
|
a) |
the
employment not to exceed 40 hours per week; |
|
b) |
regular
employees not to be laid off or fired in order
to create jobs for food stamp recipients; and |
|
c) |
job
openings existing under previously existing CETA provisions must be filled
before additional jobs can be offered to food stamp
recipients. |
|
|
 |
Student continued to be defined as a person who has
reached his/her eighteenth birthday and is enrolled at
least half-time in an institution of higher education.
Student continued to be disqualified if claimed as a tax
dependent by a household which is not eligible for
stamps. Student who could have been properly claimed as
a tax dependent but was not also disqualified. All
students eighteen years of age or older, including those
still in high school, must register for work whenever
school recesses for more than 30 days. College students
must fulfill one of the five following special work
requirements: |
|
|
|
1) |
work at
least 20 hours a week or participate in a
Federally financed work study program; |
|
2) |
work and
receive the minimum wage equivalent of 20 hours
a week ($46 a week then -- $53 a week effective
Jan. 1, 1978); |
|
3) |
register
for work on a 20-hour-per-week minimum basis; |
|
4) |
be the
head of a household containing at least one
other person who depends on the student for more
than one-half of his or her annual support; or |
|
5) |
be exempt
from the work registration requirement for an
allowable reason such as fitness, age, WIN
participation, parental status, or caretaker
status. |
|
 |
To qualify for food stamps each individual must be a
resident of the U.S. and be one of the following: |
|
|
|
-- |
a citizen
of the U.S., Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, or
Guam or a national from American Samoa or
Swain's Island; |
|
-- |
an alien
lawfully admitted for permanent residence as an
immigrant not to include alien visitors,
tourists, diplomats, alien students or temporary
laborers, trainees, or professionals; |
|
-- |
a
permanent resident under color of law who has
maintained continuous residence in the U.S.
since before July 1948; |
|
-- |
an alien
who has qualified for conditional entry because
of persecution or fear of persecution because of
race, religion, or political opinion, or because
of being uprooted by a catastrophic natural
calamity; |
|
-- |
an alien
who is lawfully present for emergent reasons or
for reasons accepted as being strictly in the
public interest; or |
|
-- |
an alien
for whom the Attorney General has withheld
deportation because the alien would otherwise be
subject to persecution on account of race,
religion or political opinion. |
|
 |
Required that there be food stamp eligibility workers
who are bilingual in areas with high percentages of
non-English speaking low-income persons, and that food
stamp literature be printed in the appropriate languages
to assist non-English speaking people in making
application for benefits. Eligibility workers not
required to report illegal aliens to the INS. |
 |
SSI recipients: |
|
|
|
-- |
continue
to be exempted from the work registration
requirement (exemption age lowered from 65 to 60
years)' |
|
-- |
be able
to apply for food stamps at the Social Security
Office at the same time that application is made
for SSI. Information collected as part of the
SSI application would be used to help determine
eligibility for food stamps; |
|
-- |
be
informed by the State of food stamp eligibility
requirements, rules and benefits; |
|
-- |
be
required to satisfy the same eligibility
standards as all other food stamp recipients
(the exemption from the income and resource
limits removed); |
|
-- |
remain
ineligible for food stamps in the two food stamp
"cash-out" States -- California and
Massachusetts. (SSI recipients in these two
States received a larger SSI benefit instead of
food stamps.) |
|
-- |
elderly
persons (60 years of age or older) and their
spouses continue to be able to use stamps to pay
for meals served by private establishments
(including restaurants) which contract to offer
meals for elderly persons at concessional
prices. Also able to use stamps at public or
private non-profit establishments such as senior
citizens' centers and apartment buildings and at
schools that feed senior citizens. Requirement
that meals be served during special hours
removed, and meals may then be served during
regular hours. |
|
 |
All elderly and disabled persons, regardless of age,
able to use stamps to purchase meals from authorized
home meal delivery services. |
 |
An experimental project is authorized to see whether it
would be desirable to provide a check instead of food
stamps to eligible households consisting entirely of
members who are entitled to SSI or are age 65 or older. |
 |
Households no longer required to have cooking facilities
in order to participate in the FSP. |
 |
USDA to prescribe standards for locations of food stamp
certification and issuance points and the hours of
operation of certification and issuance points. |
 |
USDA to prescribe standards under which States are
required to use the mails, telephone interviews, and/or
home visits to certify those persons who because of age,
disability, or transportation problems are unable to
reach a certification office or to apply through an
authorized representative. |
 |
Application forms to be given to interested persons on
the same day requested and, if the applicant wishes to
submit the application form that day, it must be
accepted by the State agency. Within 30 days of receipt,
applications must be processed and applicants must be
provided with an opportunity to receive food stamps. |
 |
Benefits retroactive to the period of application. |
 |
Households in immediate need because of no income after
deductions must be certified and issued stamps very
quickly (the time period for such certifications to be
set by USDA). |
 |
Certification periods assigned as follows: |
|
|
|
-- |
PA
households assigned certification periods which
coincide with the period of their PA grant or a
maximum of one year; |
|
-- |
Households consisting entirely of unemployable,
elderly or self-employed persons may be assigned
12-month certification periods; |
|
-- |
All other
households will be assigned certification
periods of not less than three months, unless
there is a likelihood of frequent changes in
household circumstances, in which case shorter
certification periods may be assigned. |
|
 |
When certification periods assigned, households must be
notified and will be given a reporting form to return to
the agency if they have a change in their income or in
other household circumstances. (USDA to determined
exactly which changes must be reported). |
 |
Households will be notified at the beginning of the last
month of their certification period that they must
reapply for continued food stamp benefits. |
 |
Eligible households that reapply by the 15th day of the
last month in the certification period to receive their
next month's stamps without an interruption in benefits. |
 |
Households which reapply and are found ineligible or
eligible for a smaller food stamp benefit may appeal the
decision, but they will not receive continued benefits
at their original level after their original
certification period. |
 |
For households wrongfully denied food stamps or
terminated from the FSP, lost benefits to be restored by
increasing the amount of their food stamps each month.
The stamps to be issued over a specified period of time
set by USDA rather than in one lump-sum. |
 |
USDA to set caseload (staffing) standards. |
 |
Eligibility workers to be hired in accordance with
standards prescribed by the U.S. Civil Service
Commission. |
 |
State agencies to be responsible for a continuing
comprehensive training program for certification staff. |
 |
Bilingual eligibility workers to be hired in localities
where significant percentages of the population speak a
language other than English. |
 |
A simplified, uniform national food stamp application to
be designed by USDA, and only those States with special
approval will use State-designed forms. Special approval
may be given to States with combined PA/food stamp
forms, to States with computer systems which require a
special State form, or where other serious problems
warrant use of a State-designed form. |
 |
USDA and HEW to jointly develop a system whereby a
single interview to be conducted to determine
eligibility for food stamps and AFDC. |
 |
Combined food stamp/PA application forms to be developed
so that the food stamp form will be a part of the PA
form and even applicants who are denied PA benefits can
be certified as eligible for food stamps if adequate
information is contained in the combined form. |
 |
Food stamp applications to be provided and accepted at
Social Security Offices from SSI applicants. |
 |
Individuals found by an administrative hearing to have
defrauded the program to be disqualified from the
program for a period of three months; if such
individuals are found by a court to have criminally or
civilly defrauded the program, the disqualification to
be extended for not less than six or more than 24
additional months. |
 |
Penalty for a misdemeanor related to the program to be
reduced from $5,000 to $1,000 to make prosecution of
fraud easier and more timely; however, the penalty of
imprisonment for up to one year remained, as did the
felony penalties of up to $10,000 fine and/or
imprisonment for up to 5 years. |
 |
Households transferring assets in order to qualify for
food stamp benefits to be disqualified for food stamps
for a period of up to one year from the date of
discovery of the transfer. |
 |
State agencies to be paid 75 percent of the costs of State food
stamp investigations and prosecutions. |
 |
State agencies which reduced their error rates to below
5 percent had an additional 10 percent of their administrative costs
paid by the Federal Government and were not required to
submit corrective action plans relating to error rates. |
 |
States failing to meet program standards without good
cause penalized by having Federal funds for
administrative costs withheld in an amount that USDA
determined appropriate. States entitled to an
administrative review if they disagree with the
determination. |
 |
States which do not comply with program requirements may
be referred to the Attorney General who may issue the
appropriate injunctive relief. |
 |
States which have been determined to have committed
negligence or fraud in the certification of applicant
households may be required to pay for coupons improperly
issued. USDA no longer had to establish that gross
negligence occurred before billing a State. |
 |
Coupon issuers convicted of failing to report inventory
levels or operations as required to be fined up to
$1,000 and/or imprisoned for up to one year. |
 |
Coupon issuers convicted of knowingly providing false
information in a report to be fined up to $10,000 and/or
imprisoned for up to 5 years. |
 |
When a household makes a purchase with food stamps and
is due change, cash change up to 99 cents to be given to
the household instead of credit slips as formerly. |
 |
Hot foods or hot food products ready for immediate
consumption not eligible for purchase with food stamps,
except through nonprofit meal delivery services,
communal dining facilities, and institutions that serve
meals to drug addicts and alcoholics. |
 |
Food stamp recipients who live in remote areas of Alaska
no longer able to use food stamps to buy clothing or
equipment for transportation or shelter. Still able to
use food stamps to buy hunting and fishing equipment. |
 |
Only those stores at least half of whose food sales are
staple foods -- such as meat, poultry, fish, bread,
cereals, vegetables, fruits, dairy products and the
like, but not including accessory food items, such as
coffee, tea, cocoa, carbonated and uncarbonated drinks,
candy, condiments and spices -- to be authorized to
accept food stamps. Stores selling hunting and fishing
equipment to residents of remote areas of Alaska may
also be authorized. |
 |
Authorized nonprofit food-buying organizations to be
able to accept payment for food orders prior to
delivering the food orders. |
 |
USDA to authorize only those wholesalers needed for the
effective and efficient operation of the FSP. No firm to
be authorized as both a retailer and a wholesaler at the
same time. |
 |
Organizations authorized to accept food stamps to serve
meals to drug addicts and alcoholics not allowed to
redeem food stamps through banks. |
 |
USDA may, in lieu of a period of disqualification, levy
a fine of up to $5,000 for each violation against a firm
that has violated the regulations if USDA determines
that disqualifying the firm would cause a hardship to
food stamp households. |
 |
State government agencies responsible for conducting
food programs on the Indian reservations within their
boundaries. These agencies must consult with the tribal
organizations on the reservations and in general must be
responsive to the needs of the Indians. However, if it
is demonstrated that the agencies cannot run the
reservations' FSP properly, USDA may determine whether
or not a tribal organization is capable of effectively
and efficiently administering that program. |
 |
Provided for the operation of the Food Distribution
Program -- either jointly with the FSP or separately --
whichever is requested by a tribal organization. Where a
reservation has both a FSP and a Food Distribution
Program, there must be safeguards to prevent
simultaneous participation in both programs. Food
distribution to be administered by the State government,
except when USDA determines that the tribal organization
is capable of effective and efficient administration in
which cases the tribe could administer the program.
Tribes wishing to administer the Food Distribution
Program, as well as the FSP on reservations where the
State is not running the program(s) properly, may
request and receive training and assistance from USDA to
enable them to administer the program(s). USDA
authorized to pay the agency running a food stamp or
Food Distribution Program on an Indian reservation for
such portion of the administrative costs for running
these programs as USDA determines to be necessary for
effective program operations. USDA could pay either a
State or a tribe for more than 50% of the costs of
administering the program on an Indian reservation, if
USDA determined this to be necessary. |
 |
State agencies obligated to inform low-income households
about the availability, eligibility requirements, and
benefits of the FSP including but no limited to a)
notification of recipients of 1) AFDC payments, 2) SSI,
and 3) unemployment compensation; b) distribution of
application forms; and c) associated instructions in
filling out such forms and on the documentation required
to verify household income. States must use appropriate
bilingual personnel and printed material where there are
a substantial number of low-income persons who speak a
language other than English. States not allowed to
conduct any other outreach activities of a
noninformational nature in areas where a Federally
funded community action program is conducting food stamp
outreach. |
 |
States must prominently display in all food stamp and PA
offices posters supplied by USDA which list: |
|
|
|
-- |
foods
that contain substantial amounts of recommended
daily allowances of vitamins, minerals, and
protein for children and adults; |
|
-- |
menus
that combine such foods into meals; |
|
-- |
details
on eligibility for other programs administered
by USDA that provide nutrition benefits; and |
|
-- |
general
information on the relationship between health
and diet. |
|
 |
Pamphlets with nutritional information for home use to
be developed or obtained by USDA and made available in
food stamp and PA offices. |
 |
USDA to extend the Expanded Food and Nutrition Education
Program (EFNEP) to the greatest extent possible to reach
FSP participants. |
 |
USDA to develop printed materials specifically designed
for persons with low reading comprehension levels on how
to buy and prepare more nutritious and economic meals
and on the relationship between food and good health. |
 |
Deleted provision allowing an emergency program for
areas struck by mechanical disasters (computer
breakdowns). |
 |
Allowed the income and resources of victims of a
disaster to be considered for program purposes (these
were previously disregarded). |
 |
State agencies required to develop a plan for providing
food stamps to disaster victims. |
 |
USDA to establish a Food Stamp Disaster Task Force to
assist States in conducting the disaster program. |
 |
USDA authorized to undertake research that will help
improve the administration and effectiveness of the FSP
in delivering nutrition-related benefits. These projects
to be supported by contracts with or grants to public or
private organizations or agencies. |
 |
USDA authorized to conduct pilot projects to test
changes in the FSP. Several possible projects
specifically authorized by law as follows: |
|
|
|
-- |
the
payment of benefits in the form of cash rather
than food stamps to eligible households whose
members are either 1) all over age 65 or 2) all
entitled to SSI benefits; |
|
-- |
the
payment of benefits in the form of cash rather
than food stamps to eligible households whose
members are either 1) all over age 65 or 2) all
entitled to SSI benefits; |
|
-- |
the
payment of benefits in the form of cash rather
than food stamps to eligible households whose
members are either 1) all over age 65 or 2) all
entitled to SSI benefits; |
|
-- |
the
payment of benefits in the form of cash rather
than food stamps to eligible households whose
members are either 1) all over age 65 or 2) all
entitled to SSI benefits; |
|
-- |
the
payment of benefits in the form of cash rather
than food stamps to eligible households whose
members are either 1) all over age 65 or 2) all
entitled to SSI benefits; |
|
-- |
the use
of countersigned food coupons or similar
identification mechanisms that do not invade a
household's privacy; |
|
-- |
the use
of food checks or other voucher-type forms in
place of food coupons; and |
|
-- |
the
performance of work in exchange for food stamp
benefits (the law requires USDA to conduct this
pilot project). |
|
 |
USDA to issue reports to the appropriate Congressional
committees on the progress of the pilot projects (for
the work projects, the reports must be submitted jointly
by USDA and DOL. A final report on this project is due
no later than 18 months following enactment of this
law). |