State of Wisconsin
Department of Health Services

Release 24-02
August 22, 2024

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4.3.4 Unearned Income

4.3.4.1 Unearned Income Introduction

7 CFR 273.9(b)(2)

Unearned income is income not gained by work or delivery of a service or product. Count all unearned income unless it must be disregarded. Some unearned income is disregarded because of source, type, or the reason for which it is received.

Count unearned income as income in the month that it is received, except when:

  1. It is not available to the food unit;
  2. Specific instructions in this handbook state otherwise; or
  3. When two payments from the same income source are received the same month due to mailing cycle adjustments. Count each payment only for the month it is intended. Income sources commonly affected by such mailing cycle fluctuations include general assistance, other public assistance programs, SSISupplemental Security Income, and SSASocial Security Administration benefits.
Note

Occasionally, a regular periodic payment (for example, Title II or VAVeterans Affairs benefits) is received in a month other than the month of normal receipt. As long as there is no intent to interrupt the regular payment schedule, consider the funds to be income in the normal month of receipt.

4.3.4.2 Counted Unearned Income

Count the following as unearned income:

  1. Tribal TANFTemporary Assistance for Needy Families payments.
  2. Interest income (interest, dividends, royalty payments) if available to a food unit member. Members may reinvest interest income from an investment or receive it directly as income. Count interest income directly received as unearned income in the month it becomes available to the food unit member. Count reinvested interest income as an asset because it is not available to the member. Any reinvested interest income becomes a part of the net value of the investment. Do not count exemptions listed under Section 4.3.4.3. Disregarded Unearned Income.
  3. Annually paid annuities and lottery winnings. Average these payments over 12 months. Do not count the entire amount in the month received.
  4. Individual Retirement Account (IRA) payments. Budget IRA withdrawal payments based on frequency received (annually, quarterly, or monthly).
  5. Net Supplemental Security Income (SSI) payments.
  6. Gross Social Security payments less any repayments withheld due to previous overpayments of Social Security benefits. Include any Child Support payments withheld from Social Security payments. This will ensure that Child Support payments are correctly included in the total gross unearned income and correctly budgeted as a Child Support payment deduction.
  7. Unemployment Insurance (Unemployment Compensation) payments.
  8. Worker's Compensation benefits.
  9. VAVeterans Affairs disability and pension benefits, including Cost of Living Adjustment (COLA) and other adjustments made to the payments. "Aid and Attendant Allowances” referenced in Section 4.3.4.3. Disregarded Unearned Income are excluded.
  10. Pensions and retirement payments.
    1. Annual withdrawals from 401k plans are to be annualized or counted for the period of time the withdrawal is intended to cover.

  11. Private disability payments.
  12. Foster care payments.
  13. Caretaker Supplement (CTS) payments.
  14. Child Support and maintenance payments made directly to the food unit or passed through to the food unit by a child support agency, whether court-ordered or voluntary.
    • Child support paid to a custodial parentA person's biological, step, or adoptive mother or father regardless of age. Parenthood doesn't have to be verified who resides with the non-custodial parent and the childA person's biological, step, or adopted son or daughter, regardless of age. If a child is adopted, the adoption severs the biological tie to the parent.(ren) for whom the child support is paid is not counted as income.
    • Disregard child support payments received directly from an absent parent by a food unit if the money is turned over to the child support agency.
    • Disregard child support payments retained by a child support agency.
    • Child support arrears paid through the child support agency on behalf of an adult child are counted as income to the individual it is sent or paid to. If the payment is sent directly to the parent, it is the parent’s income. If the payment is sent directly to the adult child from the child support agency, it is the adult child’s counted income.
  15. Child Support and Family Support must be prorated among the members covered by the court order.
    • If a Family Support order includes the custodial parent, the income proration would also include that parent.
    • Child support is prorated for only the children covered by the court order.
    • Maintenance is budgeted for the person actually receiving it.
    • The most up-to-date information about Child Support and Maintenance is auto populated on the CARESClient Assistance for Reemployment and Economic Support Worker Web Child Support screen.
  16. W-2Wisconsin Works payments received under Wisconsin Works Transitions (W-2T), Community Service Job (CSJ) full and prorated placements, Case Management Follow Up (CMF+), At Risk Pregnancy (ARP), or as the custodial parent of an infant (CMC). CMF+ is an incentive payment for job retention services and is not considered a paid placement for Transitional FoodShare (TFS) eligibility (see Section 8.1.6 System Generated Payments and Section 7.1.1.8 Deny Benefit Increases Due to Penalties in Other Programs).

  17. Kinship Care payments are unearned income for the child receiving the payment.
  18. Subsidized guardianship payments.
  19. Any money received for sick or severance pay from an insurance policy, an income continuance policy, or disability payments from an employer that are not paid as accrued sick, vacation, or personal time. Gross income from these sources is budgeted. Whether or not the income is taxed or untaxed does not determine if the pay is counted as unearned or earned income.
  20. Reimbursements for normal household living expenses such as rent, mortgage, personal clothing, and food eaten at home. These are counted because they are a gain or benefit. Include stipends that are part of a financial aid package and are intended as a reimbursement for living expenses.
  21. Count a subsidized adoption payment or adoption assistance payment as unearned income.
  22. Tribal distribution payments, unless excluded (see Tribal / Native American Payments in Section 4.3.4.3 Disregarded Unearned Income). Income from tribal distributions should be prorated over the period it is intended to cover if it is predictable and regularly received. If the FoodShare assistance group becomes ineligible and then reapplies before receiving their next installment, continue to use the same prorated amount as before.
    Example 1

    Dawn receives $500 quarterly from the Potawatomi Tribe. The frequency of the payment is regular, and the amount is predictable. To calculate the monthly amount to be budgeted prospectively, prorate the amount over the time period intended:

    $500/3 = $166.67 per month to be prospectively budgeted.

  23. Money withdrawn or dividends that are received or could be received from an otherwise exempt trust fund.
  24. Monetary gifts over $30 a calendar quarter. Calendar quarters refer to three consecutive month periods beginning with January, April, July, or October.
  25. Income from a land contract. Count any portion of monthly payments received that are considered interest from a land contract as unearned income. Do not count the principal as income, because it is the conversion of one asset form to another. If received less often than monthly, prorate it over the period between payments. Do not count this income until a member actually receives it.
  26. Any money received from an installment contract must be either:
    1. Counted as income in the month received.

    2. Averaged over the number of months between payments. For example, average a quarterly payment received in January over January, February, and March. The food unit must choose one of the above methods. Document the choice in the case record.

  27. If someone receives rental income and the property is managed more than 20 hours per week, see Section 4.3.3.4 Rental Income. However, if someone manages the property for less than 20 hours a week, treat the income as unearned and budget it as listed below.
    • Include gross receipts minus allowable business expenses as earned income. Tax Forms 1040 Schedule C or 1040 Schedule E are used to determine rental income.
    • If using tax form Schedule E, use recorded rental income plus the principal paid to estimate future income.
    • If the applicant or member has not completed a Schedule C or Schedule E tax form, use the following method to calculate earned income.
      1. When the owner is not an occupant, "net rent" is the total rent payment(s) received minus the total mortgage payment (principal and interest) and other verified operational costs such as, but not limited to, hazard insurance, mortgage insurance, and taxes.
      2. When income is received from a multi-unit property and the owner lives in one of the units, compute "net rent" as follows:


        Step 1: Add the total mortgage payment (principal and interest) and other verified operational costs such as, but not limited to, hazard insurance, mortgage insurance, and taxes common to the entire operation.

        Step 2: Multiply the number of rental units by the total in Step 1.

        Step 3: Divide the result in Step 2 by the total number of units, to get the proportionate share.

        Step 4: Add the proportionate share in Step 3 to any operating costs paid that are unique to the rental unit. This equals total expenses.

        Step 5: Subtract total expenses in Step 4 from gross rent payments to get net rent.

    • CARES will budget self-employment income from rental property as earned income if the property is self-managed 80 or more hours per month. If the monthly hours entered are less than 80, the income will be treated as unearned income even if the self-managed switch is "Y."
    • Verify unearned rental income using available documentation. It is not necessary to collect Self-Employment Income Report Forms (SEIRF) for unearned income.
  28. Refugee Assistance Program payments.

COVID-19 Pandemic Assistance: Refer to the Process Help COVID-19 Main Page for specific policies and process related to COVID-19 pandemic income.

4.3.4.3 Disregarded Unearned Income

Disregardmeans do not count, exempt, or exclude means do not count. When you are calculating the total amount of unearned income a person has received, you should exempt or exclude any of the following kinds of unearned income:

Housing and related income

  1. Disregard rent paid by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUDU.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development) and Farmer's Home Administration (FMHAFarmer's Home Administration) directly to a landlord as income. Do not include these payments as a deduction. Only include as a rent expense what the food unit owes to the landlord after the HUD or FMHA payments.

  2. Disregard rent paid by HUD to residents in the experimental housing program in Green Bay.

  3. Disregard HUD or FMHA utility reimbursement payments made directly to a food unit or utility provider as income.

  4. Disregard HUD utility reimbursement payments diverted by a Native American housing authority directly to the utility provider without permission, consent, or agreement of the food unit.

  5. Under the Family Investment Centers program, HUD provides grant money to public housing agencies and Indian housing authorities. In turn, they provide access to education and job opportunities to public housing residents. Disregard as income services provided to these residents. Services include:

    1. Child care
    2. Employment and training counseling
    3. Literacy training
    4. Computer skills training
    5. Assistance in attaining certificates of high school equivalency
    6. Other similar services
  6. Disregard free rent, no income is counted, and no rent deduction is allowed.

  7. A tenant may be billed utility expenses for common electrical devices, for the benefit of any number of tenants, but wired through their meter. A notice from the landlord identifies that cost and the tenant's reimbursement. Disregard the reimbursement.

  8. Income received as a result of participation in the Fresh Start Program.

Employment Training and Education

  1. Educational aid for students is not counted as income.

  2. Disregard educational expense reimbursements.

  3. Disregard income produced by an educational trust.

  4. Disregard W-2 TSP (stipends for non-custodial parents) received for W-2 education and training activities.

Loans

Disregard as income any loan to the food unit. This includes loans from private individuals and commercial institutions. A legally executed document is not required to verify that income is a loan. A statement signed by both parties is enough to verify the income is a loan, if it contains: the amount of the loan, that the payment is a loan, and that repayment is required.

Medical and Dependent Care

  1. Disregard reimbursements for medical or dependent care. Some examples of medical or dependent care reimbursements that should be disregarded are:
    1. Reimbursements from the Medical Assistance (MA), also known as Medicaid or Title 19 Community Integration Program (CIP).
    2. Reimbursements from the Alzheimer’s Family Caregiver Support Program (AFCSP) and National Family Caregiver Support Program (NFCSP).
  2. Disregard dependent care payments as income for a food unit member's care when a county agency:
    1. Pays a dependent care provider directly,
    2. Reimburses the food unit after the food unit has incurred or paid a dependent care expense.
  3. Disregard payments from the Wisconsin Family Support Program, which assists families by covering medical, dependent and other allowable expenses for in-home support for children with severe disabilities. Payments may be issued in several ways, including by voucher or direct payment to the vendor, or direct payment to the family as a reimbursement for allowable expenses. Do not confuse this program with "family support", a court-ordered obligation that combines child support and maintenance.

SSA programs

  1. Disregard reimbursements for services provided by the Social Services Block Grant Program.

  2. Disregard retroactive SSI payments which are paid in installments.

    1. Retroactive SSI benefits which total 12 months or more of the Federal Benefit Rate (monthly SSI amount) will be paid in three or fewer installments at six-month intervals. Each installment payment should be counted as an asset. Retroactive SSI benefits which equal or exceed 12 months of benefits, but which are owed to the following categories of recipients, will continue to be received in one lump sum:
      1. A person who has a medical impairment which is expected to cause death within 12 months.
      2. A person who is ineligible for benefits and is likely to remain ineligible for the next 12 months.
  3. Disregard income of an SSI recipient necessary to fulfill a Plan to Achieve Self-Support (PASS) regardless of the source. This income may be spent in accordance with an approved PASS or deposited into a PASS account. The SSA must approve the individual's PASS in writing, identifying the amount of income that must be set aside each month to fulfill the PASS. It is the member's responsibility to report and verify that such income is necessary to fulfill its PASS in order for the income to be disregarded.

  4. A qualified organizationA qualified organization must be a community -based nonprofit social service agency which is bonded or licensed in each State in which it serves as representative payee. A qualified organization may not collect a total fee for expenses of more than the lesser of 10% of the monthly benefit amount or $25 per month. may collect a fee for acting as the representative payee for an SSI or OASDIOld Age, Survivor and Disability Insurance recipient. Disregard the amount withheld from the SSI or OASDI payment as income to the recipient. Reduce the SSI or OASDI amount by the amount withheld instead.

SSI-E

Disregard SSI-E income for FoodShare. It is not necessary to determine if a SSI-E payment is being used for its intended purpose in order to disregard the income.

Energy Assistance Program

Disregard all payments provided by the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) or Wisconsin Home Energy Assistance Program (WHEAP).

Community Options Program

Disregard Community Options Program (COP) reimbursement for long-term care services. If a food unit member is receiving COP payments for providing services, count the money as earned income.

Tribal / Native American Payments

Disregard any Tribal General Welfare Assistance (GWA) and Tribal General Welfare Exclusion (GWE) payments (26 USC § 139E).

Disregard payments to individual tribal members of the following tribes or from the following federal settlements:

  1. Seminole Indians of Florida (PL 84-736).
  2. Pueblos of Zia and Jemez of New Mexico (PL 84-926).
  3. Red Lake Band of Chippewa Indians (PL 85-794).
  4. Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (PL 92-203).
  5. Stockbridge Munsee Indian Community of Wisconsin (PL 92-480).
  6. Burns Indian Community of Oregon (PL 92-488).
  7. Pueblo of Santa Ana (PL 95-498).
  8. Pueblo of Zia of New Mexico (PL 95-499).
  9. Bois Forte Band of the Chippewa Tribe or the Grand Portage Bank of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians under 25 USC 1407 (PL 93-134, 97-458, 106-568, 113-290).
  10. Navajo and Hopi Tribe relocation payments (PL 93-531).
  11. Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma (PL 94-114).
  12. Cheyenne River Sioux, Crow Creek Sioux, Lower Brule Sioux, Oglala Sioux, and Rosebud Sioux Tribes of South Dakota (PL 94-114).
  13. Devils Lake Sioux and Standing Rock Sioux Tribes of North Dakota (PL 94-114).
  14. Shoshone-Bannock Tribes of Idaho (PL 94-114).
  15. Sac and Fox Indian claims agreement (PL 94-189).
  16. Grand River Band of Ottawa Indians (PL 94-540).
  17. Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakima Indian Nation or the Apache Tribe of the Mescalero Reservation (PL 95-433).
  18. Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 (PL 95-608).
  19. Delaware Tribe of Indians and the Delaware Tribe of Western Oklahoma (PL 96-318).
  20. Passamaquoddy Tribe, Penobscot Nation, and Houlton Band of Maliseet Indians under the Maine Indian Claims Settlement Act of 1980 (PL 96-420).
  21. Wyandot Tribe of Indians of Oklahoma (97-371).
  22. Absentee Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma, Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma, and Cherokee Band of Shawnee descendants (PL 97-372).
  23. Miami Tribe of Oklahoma and Miami Indians of Indiana (PL 97-376).
  24. Clallam Tribe of Indians, including Port Gamble Indian Community, Lower Elwha Tribal Community, and Jamestown Band of Clallam Indians, of Washington (PL 97-402).
  25. Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewas of Arizona (PL 97-403).
  26. Blackfeet, Gros Ventre Tribes, and Assiniboine Tribes of Montana (PL 97-408).
  27. Papago Tribe of Arizona (PL 97-408).
  28. Red Lake Band of Chippewas (PL 98-123).
  29. Assiniboine Tribes of Fort Belknap Indian Community and Fort Peck Indian Reservation of Montana (PL 98-124).
  30. Chippewas of Lake Superior including the Bad River Band, Lac du Flambeau Reservation, Lac Courte Oreilles Band, Sokaogon Chippewa Community, Red Cliff Reservation, and St. Croix Reservation of Wisconsin; disregard any per capita payment issued under this judgement in its entirety (PL 99-146).
  31. Keweenaw Bay Indian Community of Michigan (PL 99-146).
  32. Fond du Lac, Grand Portage, Nett Lake, and White Earth Reservations of Minnesota (PL 99-146).
  33. White Earth Band of Chippewas in Minnesota (PL 99-264).
  34. Saginaw Chippewa Indian Tribe of Michigan (PL 99-346).
  35. Chippewas of the Mississippi including Mille Lac, White Earth, and Leech Lake of Minnesota (PL 99-377).
  36. Band of Potawatomi, including Hannahville Indian Community and Forest County Potawatomi, of Wisconsin; if issued as a per capita payment, disregard the first $2,000 of each payment made from this judgement (PL 100-581).
  37. Puyallup Tribes under the Puyallup Tribe of Indians Settlement Act of 1989 (PL 101-41).
  38. Seneca Nation of New York under the Seneca Nation Settlement Act of 1990 (PL 101-503).
  39. Catawba Indian Tribe of South Carolina (PL 103-116).
  40. Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation (PL 103-436).

Exclude as income any lump sum or periodic payments received under the Cobell v. Salazar Class Action Trust Case during the one-year period beginning on the date of receipt (PL 111-291).

Disregard up to $2,000 per calendar year held by an individual Native American which is derived from restricted land or land held in trust by the Department of Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs (PL 103-66, 92-203, and 100-241).

Disregard the first $2,000 of individual shares for the following:

  1. Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Reservation (PL 97-436).
  2. Old Age Assistance Claims Settlement Act (PL 98-500).
  3. Seminole Nation of Oklahoma (PL 101-277).
  4. Seminole Tribe, Miccosukee Tribe of Indians, and the independent Seminole Indians of Florida (PL 101-277).
  5. Rincon Band of Mission Indians (Docket 80-A).
  6. Walker Paiute Tribe (Docket 87-A).
  7. Ak-Chin, Salt River Pima-Maricopa, and Gila River Pima-Maricopa Indian Communities (Docket 228).
  8. Maricopa Ak-Chin Indian Community (Docket 235).
  9. Peoria Tribe of Oklahoma (Dockets 313, 314-A, and 314-B).
  10. Yankton Sioux Tribe (Dockets 342-70 and 343-70).
  11. Wichita and Affiliated Tribe (Keechi, Waco & Tawakonie) of Oklahoma (Dockets 371 and 372).

Child Nutrition Act of 1966 and the National School Lunch Act

Disregard the value of assistance received from programs under the Child Nutrition Act of 1966 and the National School Lunch Act. These are the:

  1. Special Milk Program.
  2. School Breakfast Program.
  3. Special Supplemental Food Program for Women, Infants and Children (WICWomen, Infant's, and Children Supplemental Food Program).
  4. School Lunch Program.
  5. Summer Food Service Program for Children.
  6. Commodity Supplemental Food Program.
  7. Child and AdultA person who is 18 years old or older Care Food Program.

Disaster and Emergency Assistance Payments

  1. Disregard major disaster and emergency assistance payments made by federal, state, county, and local agencies, and other disaster assistance organizations, including National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP).

  2. Disregard Emergency Assistance or emergency General Assistance when either is given to a migrantany person who temporarily leaves a principal place of residence outside of his state and comes to this state for not more than 10 months in a year to accept seasonal employment in the planting, cultivating, raising, harvesting, handling, drying, packing, packaging, processing, freezing, grading, or storing of any agricultural or horticultural commodity in its unmanufactured state or seasonal farm worker food unit if:

    1. The payment is provided to a third party (vendored) on behalf of the migrant or seasonal farm worker; and,

    1. The food unit was in the job stream when (for example, working) it was provided.

  3. Disregard disaster unemployment benefits to any individual who is unemployed as a result of a major disaster. Individuals cannot be eligible for any other unemployment compensation and also receive disaster unemployment benefits. Payments are limited to 26 weeks.  

COVID-19 Pandemic Assistance: Refer to the Process Help COVID-19 Main Page for specific policies and process related to COVID-19 pandemic income.

Veterans Benefits

Exclude VA aid and attendance and homebound allowances if the payment is:

  1. For a past or future expense.

  2. Not in excess of the actual expense.

  3. Not for a normal household living expense.

  4. Used for the intended purpose.

Disregard aid and attendance and housebound allowances received by veterans, spouses of disabled veterans, and surviving spouses.

GI Bill

All military personnel fund the GI Bill through mandatory payroll deductions in their first year of service. Disregard these deductions when counting income.

Example 2 During Joe’s first year of military service, his gross pay is $1,000 per month. One hundred dollars is deducted from his paycheck each month for the GI Bill. The IM worker disregards the $100 deduction and budgets his pay as $900 per month.

Combat Pay

IM workers are required to determine if a military allotment made available to a food unit by an absent member deployed to a combat zone should be excluded when determining eligibility. Disregard any amount of combat zone pay that goes to the food unit that is in excess of the military person's pre-deployment pay. The exclusion lasts while the military person is deployed to the combat area.

If the amount of military pay from the deployed absent family member is equal to or less than the amount the food unit was receiving prior to deployment, all of the allotment would be counted as income to the food unit. Any portion of the military pay that exceeds the amount the food unit was receiving prior to deployment to a designated combat zone should be excluded when determining the food unit's income for FoodShare purposes.

Follow these steps in determining how to budget combat zone pay:

  1. Ask if the service member is deployed to a combat zone.  
    1. If the answer is no, verify military pay using a bank record or Leave and Earnings Statements (LES) and clearly document in case comments how income to the food unit was determined and verified.
    2. If the answer is yes, verify the service member’s pay before deployment to a combat zone and the amount they receive due to being assigned to a combat zone.  Leave and Earnings Statements (LES) or bank records can be used to verify this amount.
  2. Any portion that is more than the amount the food unit was receiving immediately before deployment to a combat zone is exempt as combat pay.
  3. Clearly document in case comments the combat pay source of verification and method used to determine amount to be disregarded and budgeted.

Deployment to a combat zone can be established through a variety of methods including:

  1. The deployed person’s military pay record, the Leave and Earnings statement (LES).
  2. Orders issued to the military person in which the place of deployment is public record.  
  3. Contacting the Call Center which has a listing of designated combat zones, as well as a listing of pay items which may or may not be the result of deployment to a designated combat zone
Example 3

John, his wife Bonnie, and their daughter have an open FoodShare case. John is in the military stationed overseas; his monthly income is $1,000. John sends his wife $1,000 every month.  

When John is deployed to a combat zone his pay is increased to $1,300 a month, which is deposited into a joint account. Because the $300 is combat pay, it is exempt income and not counted in the determination. The pre-combat pay of $1,000 is budgeted as unearned income for FoodShare.

 

Example 4 Dori is in the military and receives $1,000 per month in wages. Dori’s husband Louie and their son Joe have an open FoodShare case. Dori has her military pay directly deposited into a bank account in her name only; Louie has no access to the funds or to the account. Do not count any of Dori’s income in the eligibility determination for Louie and Joe.

 

Example 5 Ben is in the military. His paycheck is $1,000 a month. He has $500 directly deposited into his account and $500 directly deposited into a joint account with his wife, Andrea. The $500 directly deposited into the joint account is budgeted as unearned income in Andrea’s FoodShare determination. Since Andrea does not have access to Ben’s account, only the amount deposited in their joint account is counted.

 

Example 6 Tim is in the military making $1,200 a month. An allotment check of $1,000 is paid directly to his wife Karla and $200 to himself. The $1,000 is budgeted as Karla’s unearned income for her FoodShare determination.

Dottie Moore

Disregard as income any penalty payment paid as a result of the Dottie Moore lawsuit by DHSWisconsin's Department of Health Services. Until July 1, 2008, it was known as the Department of Health and Family Services. (formerly DHSS) to any Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) applicant or member. These $50 to $200 penalty payments have been ordered by the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin in Civil Action No. 80-C-118.

Income Tax Refunds, Credits, and Rebates

Disregard income tax refunds, credits, and rebates as income.

Victims of Nazi Persecution

Disregard as income payments under PL 103-286 to victims of Nazi persecution.

Payments to Crime Victims

Disregard any payments received from a state established fund to aid victims of a crime.

Agent Orange Settlement Fund

Disregard payments received from the Agent Orange Settlement Fund or any other fund established in settling "In Re Agent Orange Product Liability Settlement Fund litigation M.D.L. No. 381 (E.D.N.Y.)." Continue to disregard the payments for as long as they are identified separately. Apply this disregard retroactively to January 1, 1989.

Wartime Relocation of Civilians

Disregard payments under PL 100-383 to U.S. citizens of Japanese ancestry and permanent resident Japanese immigrants or their survivors and Aleut residents of the Pribilof Islands and the Aleutian Islands West of Unimak Island.

Radiation Exposure Act

Disregard payments from any program under the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act (PL 101-426) paid to compensate injury or death resulting from exposure to radiation from nuclear testing ($50,000) and uranium mining ($100,000). Apply this disregard retroactively to October 15, 1990. When the affected person is deceased, payments are made to the surviving spouseA person recognized by Wisconsin law as another person's legal husband or wife. Wisconsin does not recognize common law marriage., children, parents, or grandparents of the deceased. The federal DOJ makes the payments. Continue to disregard the payments for as long as they are identified separately. Apply this disregard retroactively to October 15, 1990.

Children of Vietnam Veterans Who Are Born With Spina Bifida

Disregard payments received under the provision of the Benefits for Children of Vietnam Veterans Who Are Born With Spina Bifida (PL 104-204). These payments are made to any child of a Vietnam veteran for any disability they experience resulting from the spina bifida. Apply this disregard retroactively to September 26, 1996. Continue this disregard as long as payments are identified separately.

Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property Acquisition Policy Act of 1970

Disregard reimbursements from the Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property Acquisition Policy Act of 1970 (PL 91-646, Section 216).

Capital Gains

Disregard capital gains from the sale of a personal asset as income. Profits gained from the sale of an asset continue to be counted as an asset (see Section 4.3.3.3 Capital and Ordinary Gains for policy related to self-employment).

Reverse Mortgage

Disregard reverse mortgage payments made to homeowners. Reverse mortgage payments are loans against the borrower's home and are considered an asset these payments are not considered income.   

Payments to Filipino World War II Veterans

Disregard payments from the Filipino Veterans Equity Compensation Fund. The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) of 2009 created the fund for certain veterans and the spouses of veterans who served in the military of the Government of the Commonwealth of the Philippines during World War II. The compensation fund offers one-time payments that may be up to $15,000 to eligible persons.

Living Independently through Financial Empowerment (LIFE)

The LIFE program provides short-term, monthly cash payments to families, including tribal members, experiencing crises resulting from a domestic violence situation. LIFE payments are designed to meet urgent financial needs such as but not limited to housing, utility payments, and groceries. The LIFE program is only available for a limited time until August 31, 2022. Approved applicants receive $3,500 over three consecutive months: $1,500 in month one, $1,000 in month two, and $1,000 in month three.

Universal Basic Income (UBI)

Universal Basic Income (UBI) and guaranteed income program payments are disregarded for FoodShare purposes if:

  1. Excluded by TANF or Medicaid.
  2. The payments are sourced solely from private funds or a mix of private and public funds.

Examples

  1. Madison Forward Fund Universal Basic Income (UBI) Program Payments
  2. The Bridge Project Guaranteed Income for pregnant individuals.

Priority Health Medicare Over-the-counter (OTC) Allowance

Dual Eligible Special Needs Plans (D-SNP); Over-the-counter (OTC) program; healthy foods/utility credits income are all disregarded for FoodShare.

Mobility management vouchers

Mobility management vouchers are disregarded as income.

 

This page last updated in Release Number: 24-02
Release Date: 08/22/2024
Effective Date: 08/22/2024


Notice: The content within this manual is the sole responsibility of the State of Wisconsin's Department of Health Services (DHS). This site will link to sites outside of DHS where appropriate. DHS is in no way responsible for the content of sites outside of DHS.

Publication Number: P-16001