WAC 388-470-0055 How do my resources count toward the resource limit for basic food?
- For Basic Food, if your assistance unit (AU) is not categorically eligible (CE) under WAC 388-414-0001, we count the following resources toward your AU's resource limit to decide if you are eligible for benefits under WAC 388-470-0005:
- Liquid resources. These are resources that are easily changed into cash. Some examples of liquid resources are:
- Cash on hand;
- Money in checking or savings accounts;
- Money market accounts or certificates of deposit (CDs) less any withdrawal penalty;
- Stocks, bonds, annuities, or mutual funds less any early withdrawal penalty;
- Available trusts or trust accounts; or
- Lump sum payments. A lump sum payment is money owed to you from a past period of time that you get but do not expect to get on a continuing basis.
- Nonliquid resources, personal property, and real property not specifically excluded in subsection (2) below.
- Vehicles as described in WAC 388-470-0075.
- The resources of a sponsor as described in WAC 388-470-0060.
- The following resources do not count toward your resource limit:
- Your home and the surrounding property that you, your spouse, or your dependents live in;
- A house you do not live in, if you plan on returning to the home and you are out of the home because of:
- Employment;
- Training for future employment;
- Illness; or
- Natural disaster or casualty.
- Property that:
- You are making a good faith effort to sell;
- You intend to build a home on, if you do not already own a home;
- Produces income consistent with its fair market value, even if used only on a seasonal basis;
- Is essential to the employment or self-employment of a household member. Property excluded under this section and used by a self-employed farmer or fisher retains its exclusion for one year after the household member stops farming or fishing; or
- Is essential for the maintenance or use of an income-producing vehicle; or
- Has an equity value equal to or less than half of the resource limit as described in WAC 388-470-0005.
- Household goods
- Personal effects;
- Life insurance policies, including policies with cash surrender value (CSV);
- One burial plot per household member;
- One funeral agreement per household member, up to fifteen hundred dollars;
- Pension plans or retirement funds not specifically counted in subsection (1) above;
- Sales contracts, if the contract is producing income consistent with its fair market value;
- Government payments issued for the restoration of a home damaged in a disaster;
- Indian lands held jointly with the Tribe, or land that can be sold only with the approval of the Bureau of Indian Affairs;
- Nonliquid resources that have a lien placed against them;
- Earned Income Tax Credits (EITC):
- For twelve months, if you were a basic food recipient when you got the EITC and you remain on basic food for all twelve months; or
- The month you get it and the month after, if you were not getting basic food when you got the EITC.
- Energy assistance payments or allowances;
- The resources of a household member who gets SSI, TANF/SFA, ABD assistance or PWA benefits;
- Retirement funds or accounts that are tax exempt under the Internal Revenue Code;
- Education funds or accounts in a tuition program under section 529 or 530 of the Internal Revenue Code;
- Resources specifically excluded by federal law [Ed. Note: See Appendix] ; and
- Federal income tax refunds for twelve months whether or not you were receiving Basic Food assistance at the time you got the refund.
- If you deposit excluded liquid resources into a bank account with countable liquid resources, we do not count the excluded liquid resources for six months from the date of deposit. Exception: Federal tax refunds are not counted for twelve months even when mixed with countable resources.
- If you sell your home, you have ninety days to reinvest the proceeds from the sale of a home into an exempt resource.
- If you do not reinvest within ninety days, we will determine whether there is good cause to allow more time. Some examples of good cause are:
- Closing on your new home is taking longer than anticipated;
- You are unable to find a new home that you can afford;
- Someone in your household is receiving emergent medical care; or
- Your children are in school and moving would require them to change schools.
- If you have good cause, we will give you more time based on your circumstances.
- If you do not have good cause, we count the money you got from the sale as a resource.
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