Katrina Food Stamp Administrative Notices

FNS has put out two notices. AN 05-27 reviews the “expectations” for expedited services for Hurricane evacuees. Of note: 1 day (not 7, not 3) issuance of expedited food stamps, and review of its two new Food Stamp policies: the National Enhanced Policy for the first month of application and the Expanded Disaster Evacuee Policy for additional months. (California has developed a special application, page 5.)

For applications received through October 31, 2005, the National Enhanced Policy allows for a one-month allotment based on household size and evacuee status, no other criteria need be considered. For the Expanded benefits, cases can be certified, with postponed verification, up through December, 2005. The household composition, work registration/program, and ABAWD rules are also suspended through December, 2005.

ACL 05-18 – COLA for the MAP and MBSAC for CalWORKs and Refugee Cash Assistance (RCA) Programs (July 22, 2005)

Silver lining to the budget bad news. Although it suspended the COLA for two years, since the was not approved as of July 1, 2005, the COLA went through for July. CalWORKs and RCA folks will get a one-time corrective underpayment “as soon as administratively possible.” The Food Stamp Program will treat this payment as a resource. [Download]

HUD PIH Notice 2005-16 – Policy Guidance on College Student Admissions (June 15, 2005)

Having become aware that PHAs may be admitting ineligible college students to its public and assisted housing programs, HUD issued this Notice which: (1) outlines policy for determining the eligibility of full-time college students; (2) implements newly-enacted policy (Section 224 of the FY 2005 Appropriations Act) regarding the effect of receipt of athletic scholarships on rent determination; and (3) “identifies tools for better assuring that families in need of assistance are able to participate in HUD’s programs.” The Notice includes two charts – one covering the steps a PHA is required to take to determine a student’s eligibility to participate in a PIH rental assistance program and a second containing suggested steps to make such determination. [Download]

IRS Rev. Proc 2005-37 – Safe harbor for tax credit agencies determining compliance with “good cause” requirement (June 21, 2005)

On July 30, 2004, the IRS issued Revenue Ruling 2004-82, which, among other things, clarified that the Internal Revenue Code Section 42(h)(6)(B)(i) requires “commitments” (regulatory agreements between the state tax credit agency and owners of tax credit properties), to include the prohibition against evictions or terminations of tenancy of existing tenants except for good cause and the prohibition against any rent increases except as permitted under IRC Section 42. In Q & A – 5 of Section 42(h)(6)(B)(i) requires state tax credit agencies to review existing commitments by December 31, 2004 to ensure that each contains the aforementioned prohibition.

Rev. Proc. 2005-37 creates a safe harbor for agencies with respect to the aforementioned review obligations. Specifically, it says that for any commitments entered into before January 1, 2006, the agency may satisfy its compliance review obligation as follows:

(1) that 42(h)(6)(B)(i) is satisfied if the commitment (regulatory agreement) contains catch-all language requiring owners to comply with IRC Section 42;

(2) the agency must notify owners on or before December 31, 2005 that such catch-all language prohibits evictions without good cause or rent increases outside of the requirements of Section 42

(3) owners must certify compliance with the prohibitions in (2) annually;

(4) the agency shall file an IRS Form 8823 re noncompliance if it does not receive an owner certification as described in (3) or the agency learns of a violation or the aforementioned prohibitions.

Bottom line: The IRS’ clarification of the good cause eviction requirement remains intact, but the tax credit agency’s obligation with respect to compliance review and enforcement is significantly lessened. [Download]