Any determination or investigation into an applicant's eligibility
will be conducted in a manner that will not violate the applicant's
privacy or personal dignity or violate his or her individual rights.
The Administrator will make an individual, factual determination
of eligibility each time a person applies or reapplies for GA. The
Administrator will make a redetermination of eligibility at least
monthly but may do so as often as necessary to administer the program
efficiently and meet the needs of the applicants. Upon any application,
the Administrator will determine the applicant's eligibility on the
basis of a thirty-day prospective analysis, but may elect to disburse
that applicant's assistance periodically, e.g., weekly, throughout
a thirty-day period of eligibility pursuant to that initial eligibility
determination.
The Administrator may redetermine a person's eligibility at any time
during the period he or she is receiving assistance if the Administrator
is notified of any change in the recipient's circumstances that may
alter the amount of assistance the recipient may receive. Once a recipient
has been granted assistance, the Administrator may not reduce or rescind
the grant without giving prior written notice to the recipient explaining
the reasons for the decision and offering the recipient an opportunity
to appeal the decision to the fair hearing authority (22 M.R.S.A.
§ 4309).
Eligibility of applicant; duration of eligibility. The overseer shall
determine eligibility each time a person applies or reapplies for
GA. The period of eligibility will not exceed one month. At the expiration
of this period applicants/recipients may reapply for assistance, and
the person's eligibility will be redetermined.
Applicants and recipients for GA are responsible for providing to
the Administrator all information necessary to determine eligibility.
If further information or documentation is necessary to demonstrate
eligibility, the applicant must have the first opportunity to provide
the specific information or documentation required by the Administrator.
When such information is unavailable, the Administrator must accept
alternative available information, which is subject to verification.
Each applicant and recipient has the responsibility at the time of
application and continuing thereafter to provide complete, accurate
and current information and documentation concerning his/her:
Initial applicants. Persons who have not applied for assistance in
this or any other municipality are considered initial applicants and
must have their eligibility determined solely on the basis of need.
Initial applicants are not subject to eligibility conditions placed
on repeat applicants. (See below.) However, such applicants must still
provide the GA Administrator with reasonably obtainable documentation
adequate to verify that there is a need for assistance. In addition,
initial applicants must also comply with both lump sum and relevant
work rules (i.e., job quit).
All applicants for GA who are not initial applicants are repeat applicants.
The eligibility of repeat applicants must be determined on the basis
of need and all other conditions of eligibility established by law
and this municipal ordinance.
The Administrator will require documentation of a repeat applicant's
income, use of income, assets and resources plus actual bills and
receipts for rent, utilities, fuel, telephone, medical services and
other basic necessities. In addition, repeat applicants instructed
to seek employment shall verify their work search results, (e.g.,
provide a list of the employers contacted, the date and time of the
application contact, and the name of the employer representative contacted)
as required by the Administrator.
Repeat applicants must provide updates to information reported on
previous applications, including changes in his/her household or income
that may affect his/her eligibility.
Unforeseen repeat applicants. Unforeseen repeat applicants are applicants
who have not applied for assistance within the last 12 months and
who have been regularly employed or receiving support from a public
benefit or private source but who have unexpectedly become unemployed
through no fault of their own or whose income and/or benefits (e.g.,
through an available resource) have ceased through no fault of their
own. Such unforeseen repeat applicants may be considered initial applicants
for purposes of verification requirements and misspent income if the
Administrator finds that imposing the general verification requirements
and misspent income rules imposed on repeat applicants would be unreasonable
or inappropriate.
In order to determine an applicant's eligibility for GA, the Administrator
first must seek information and documentation from the applicant.
Once the applicant has presented the necessary information, the Administrator
must determine eligibility. The Administrator will seek verification
necessary to determine eligibility, and may contact sources other
than the applicant for verification only with the specific knowledge
and consent of the applicant, except that the Administrator may examine
public records without the applicant's knowledge and consent.
Assistance will be denied or terminated if the applicant is unwilling
to supply necessary information, documentation, or permission to make
collateral contacts, or if the Administrator cannot determine that
eligibility exists based on information supplied by the applicant
or others.
Redetermination of eligibility. The Administrator may redetermine
a person's eligibility at any time during the period that person is
receiving assistance if the Administrator is informed of any change
in the recipient's circumstances that may affect the amount of assistance
to which the recipient is entitled, or that may make the recipient
ineligible, provided that once a determination of eligibility has
been made for a specific time period, a reduction in assistance for
that time period may not be made without prior written notice to the
recipient stating the reasons for the action and an opportunity for
the recipient to receive a fair hearing upon the proposed change.
Penalty for refusing to release information. Any person governed
by 22 M.R.S.A. § 4314 who refuses to provide necessary information
to the Administrator after it has been requested must state in writing
the reasons for the refusal within three days of receiving the request.
Any such person who refuses to provide the information, without just
cause, commits a civil violation and may be subject to a fine of not
less than $25 nor more than $100 which may be adjudged in any court
of competent jurisdiction. Any person who willfully renders false
information to the Administrator is guilty of a Class E crime [22
M.R.S.A. §§ 4314(5) and (6) and 4315].
It is unlawful for a person to knowingly and willfully make a false
representation of a material fact to the Administrator in order to
receive GA or cause someone else to receive GA (22 M.R.S.A. § 4315).
A person who commits fraud in an effort to receive GA benefits may
be prosecuted for this offense.
Makes a false statement to the Administrator, either orally
or in writing, in order to obtain assistance to which the applicant
or the applicant's household is not entitled;
When the Administrator finds that a person has knowingly and willfully
misrepresented material facts for the purpose of making himself or
herself eligible for GA, the Administrator shall notify that applicant
in writing that he or she must reimburse the municipality for the
assistance he or she was not entitled to receive and that he/she is
ineligible for assistance for the longer of: a) a period of 120 days;
b) until he or she reimburses the municipality for the assistance;
or c) until he or she enters a reasonable written agreement to reimburse
the municipality (22 M.R.S.A. § 4315). For the purpose of
this section, a "material misrepresentation" is a false statement
about eligibility factors in the absence of which some or all of the
assistance would not be or would not have been granted.
The notification of ineligibility issued by the Administrator shall
inform the applicant of his or her right to appeal the Administrator's
decision to the fair hearing authority (FHA) within five working days
of receipt. The period of ineligibility shall commence on the day
following the end of the period covered by the grant of assistance
fraudulently received or upon the date of notification of ineligibility,
whichever is later.
Right to a fair hearing. Any applicant who is denied assistance for making a false representation will be afforded the opportunity to appeal the decision to the fair hearing authority (FHA) in accordance with Article VII of this chapter. No recipient shall have his or her assistance reduced or revoked during the period of eligibility before being notified and given the opportunity to appeal the decision. Any person who is dissatisfied with the decision of the FHA may appeal that decision to the Superior Court pursuant to Rule 80-B of the Maine Rules of Civil Procedure [22 M.R.S.A. § 4309(3)].
Reimbursement. If a recipient does not appeal the decision or if
the FHA determines that a recipient MADE a false representation, the
recipient will be required to reimburse the municipality for any assistance
received to which he/she was not entitled. The recipient may enter
a reasonable written agreement to reimburse the municipality over
a period of time.
Dependents. In no event will the ineligibility of a person under
this section serve to disqualify any eligible dependent in that household
[22 M.R.S.A. § 4309(3)]. In the event one or more members
of a household are disqualified and assistance is requested for the
remaining dependents, the eligibility of those dependents will be
calculated by dividing the maximum level of assistance available to
the entire household by the total number of household members.
The Administrator will grant assistance to all eligible persons for
a period that is sufficient to meet their need but in no event may
a grant of assistance cover a period in excess of one month (22 M.R.S.A.
§ 4309). Upon receiving a completed and signed application
the Administrator will determine the applicant's eligibility on the
basis of a thirty-day prospective analysis.
When an applicant submits an incomplete or unsigned application,
due to the twenty-four-hour decision requirement placed on the GA
Administrator, the GA Administrator shall render a notice of ineligibility
and advise the applicant that he or she has a right to reapply as
soon as he or she has the necessary information and/or as soon as
is practicable for the applicant.
Although eligibility is determined on a thirty-day basis, for reasons
of administrative efficiency the Administrator may elect to disburse
an applicant's assistance for shorter periods of time, such as weekly,
throughout the thirty-day period of eligibility. When the Administrator
elects to disburse GA for a period of time less than 30 days, subsequent
grants of assistance during that thirty-day period may be issued pursuant
to the initial determination of need unless the applicant's financial
situation changes substantially enough to warrant a redetermination
of eligibility.
The period of time used to calculate need will be the next thirty-day period from the date of application [22 M.R.S.A. § 4301(7)]. The Administrator will calculate applicants' expenses according to the actual expense of the basic necessity or the maximum levels for the specific necessities allowed in § 112-34, whichever is less. The sum of these expenses, as calculated for a prospective thirty-day period, is the applicant's thirty-day need. Applicants will not be considered eligible if their income and other resources exceed this calculation except in an emergency [22 M.R.S.A. § 4308(2)]. (See § 112-13.)
Applicants will also not be considered in need of GA if their income, property, credit, assets or other resources available to provide basic necessities for their household are greater than the applicable overall maximum level of assistance set forth in the beginning of § 112-34 [22 M.R.S.A. §§ 4301(10), 4305(3-B)]. The difference between the applicant's income and the overall maximum levels of assistance established by this chapter is the applicant's deficit.
Once an applicant's deficit has been determined, the specific maximum
levels of assistance for each basic necessity shall guide the Administrator's
distribution of assistance for which the applicant is eligible. (See
Appendixes A through H.[1]) The specific maximum levels of assistance for each basic
necessity are intended to be reasonable and sufficient to help recipients
maintain a standard of health and decency [22 M.R.S.A. § 4305(3-A)].
Income for basic necessities. Applicants are required to use their
income for basic necessities. Except for initial applicants, no applicant
is eligible to receive assistance to replace income that was spent
within the thirty-day period prior to an application for assistance
on goods and services that are not basic necessities. All income spent
on goods and services that are not basic necessities will be considered
available to the applicant and combined with the applicant's prospective
thirty-day income for the purposes of computing eligibility (22 M.R.S.A.
§ 4315-A). Applicants who have sufficient income to provide
their basic necessities but who use that income to purchase goods
or services which are not basic necessities will not be considered
eligible for assistance. Persons who exhaust their income on basic
necessities and who still need assistance with other basic necessities
will be eligible, provided that their income does not exceed the overall
maximum level of assistance.
Use-of-income requirements. The Administrator may require that anyone applying for GA provide documentation of his or her use of income. This documentation can take the form of canceled checks and/or receipts which demonstrate that the applicant has exhausted all household income received over the last thirty-day period. Except as is deemed appropriate by the Administrator for unforeseen repeat applicants (See § 112-29.), repeat applicants may be required to verify that expenditure of income was for basic necessities. Income expended that cannot be verified will generally be considered available and in such case will be added to the thirty-day prospective income.
Allowable expenditures include reasonable shelter costs (rent/mortgage);
the cost of heating fuel, electricity, and food up to the ordinance
maximums; telephone costs at the base rate if the household needs
a telephone for medical reasons, the cost of nonelective medical services
as recommended by a physician which are not otherwise covered by medical
entitlement, Hospital Free Care or insurance; the reasonable cost
of essential clothing and nonprescription drugs, and the costs of
any other commodity or service determined essential by the Administrator.
The municipality reserves the right to apply specific use-of-income
requirements to any applicant, other than an initial applicant, who
fails to use his or her income for basic necessities or fails to reasonably
document his or her use of income (22 M.R.S.A. § 4315-A).
Those additional requirements will be applied in the following manner:
The Administrator may require the applicant to use some or all
of his or her income, at the time it becomes available, toward specific
basic necessities. The Administrator may prioritize such required
expenditures so that most or all of the applicant's income is applied
to housing (i.e., rent/mortgage), energy (i.e., heating fuel, electricity),
or other specified basic necessities;
If upon subsequent application it cannot be determined how the
applicant's income was spent, or it is determined that some or all
of the applicant's income was not spent as directed and was also not
spent on basic necessities, the applicant will not be eligible to
receive either regular or emergency general assistance to replace
that income; and
If the applicant does not spend his or her income as directed,
but can show with verifiable documentation that all income was spent
on basic necessities up to allowed amounts, the applicant will remain
eligible to the extent of the applicant's eligibility and need.
When determining eligibility, the Administrator will subtract the applicant's net income from the overall maximum level of assistance found at the beginning of § 112-34. If income is greater than the overall maximum level of assistance, the applicant will not be eligible except in an emergency. (See § 112-13.) If income is less than the overall maximum level of assistance, the applicant has a deficit.
The municipality will provide assistance in an amount up to the deficit to the extent the applicant also has an unmet need and is in need of basic necessities. The municipality will not grant assistance in excess of the maximum amounts allowed in § 112-34 for specific basic necessities except in an emergency or when the Administrator elects to consolidate the applicant's deficit, as provided immediately below.
Consolidation of deficit. As a general rule, and to the extent of
their deficit, applicants will be eligible for assistance for any
basic necessity up to, but not exceeding, the maximum amount allowed
for that necessity in this chapter or the actual thirty-day cost of
the necessity, whichever is less. Under certain circumstances, however,
and in accordance with the following conditions, the Administrator
may consolidate the applicant's deficit and apply it toward a basic
necessity in an amount greater than the ordinance maximum for that
necessity.
The practice of consolidating the deficit and applying it toward
a basic necessity in amounts greater than the ordinance maximum shall
be the exception rather than the rule;
The need for the application of the recipient's consolidated deficit
toward a basic necessity was not created by the recipient misspending
his or her income or resources in violation of the use-of-income requirements
of this chapter.
Income standards. Applicants whose income exceeds the overall maximum level of assistance provided in § 112-34 shall not be eligible for GA except in an emergency. Each time an applicant applies, the Administrator will conduct an individual factual inquiry into the applicant's income and expenses.
To determine whether applicants are in need, the Administrator will calculate the income they will receive during the next thirty-day period commencing on the date of application, and identify any assets or resources that would alleviate their need. For all applicants other than initial applicants, the Administrator will also consider as available income any income that was not spent during the previous thirty-day period on basic necessities, as well as any income that was spent on basic necessities in unreasonable excess of the ordinance maximums for specific basic necessities. If a household's income exceeds the amount of the household's need for basic necessities, up to the maximum levels contained in § 112-34, applicants will not be considered in need.
Exceptions will be made in emergency situations, which may necessitate that the maximum levels be exceeded (22 M.R.S.A. § 4308). (See § 112-13.) To calculate weekly income and expenses, the Administrator will use actual income received or actual anticipated income.
Earned income. Income in cash or in kind earned by the applicant
through wages, salary, commissions, or profit, whether self-employed
or as an employee, is considered earned income. If a person is self-employed,
total income will be computed by subtracting reasonable and actual
business expenses from gross income. When income consists of wages,
the amount computed will be the income available after taxes, social
security and other payroll deductions required by state, federal,
and local law. Rental income and profit from produce that is sold
is considered earned income. Income that is held in trust and unavailable
to the applicant or the applicant's dependents will not be considered
as earned income. Note: Actual work-related expenses such as union
dues, transportation to and from work, special equipment or work clothes,
and child care costs will be deducted from an applicant's income [22
M.R.S.A. § 4301(7)].
State/federal categorical assistance benefits, SSI payments, social
security payments, VA benefits, unemployment insurance benefits, and
payments from other government sources will be considered as income,
unless expressly prohibited by federal law or regulation. Federal
law prohibits food stamps and fuel assistance payments made by the
Home Energy Assistance Program (HEAP and EPIC) from being considered
income. The value of the food stamps or fuel assistance will not be
used to reduce the amount of GA the applicant is eligible to receive.
Although applicants may have only a limited or reduced need for GA
for heating fuel or electricity if a recently received HEAP/ECIP benefit
has sufficiently credited their account or otherwise prevented the
fuel-related costs for the prospective thirty-day period, the Administrator's
obligation is to always compute the heating needs of an applicant
who has received HEAP or ECIP as if that applicant paid for his or
her total fuel costs. Accordingly, in such cases, the Administrator
will budget for the household's heating energy needs according to
actual usage, up to the ordinance maximums, but the Administrator
may, with written notice to the applicant, hold in reserve the heating
energy portion of the applicant's deficit until such a time during
the period of eligibility that the applicant has a demonstrable need
for the disbursement of heating energy assistance; that is, the applicant's
fuel tank can accept a minimum fuel delivery or the applicant no longer
has a positive credit balance with his or her utility company. The
municipality is not obligated to divert any recipient's heating energy
allowance toward nonheating purposes solely on the basis of the recipient's
receipt of HEAP/ECIP.
Property tax rebates issued under the Maine Property Tax Fairness
Credit program, only so long as the money is spent on basic necessities
[22 M.R.S.A. § 4301(7)].
Court-ordered support payments. Alimony and child support payments
will be considered income only if actually received by the applicant.
The Administrator will refer cases in which support payments were
not actually received to the Maine DHHS Child Support Enforcement
Unit. In order to be eligible for future GA benefits, applicants referred
to DHHS for support enforcement assistance shall be required to follow-through
with such services. Because child support payments are considered
a resource, applicants must make a good-faith effort to secure such
payments.
Income from other sources. Payments from pensions and trust funds
will be considered income. Payments from boarders or lodgers will
be considered income as will cash or in-kind contributions provided
to the household from any other source, including relatives [22 M.R.S.A.
§ 4301(7)].
Earnings of a son or daughter. Earned income received by sons and
daughters below the age of 18 who are full-time students and who are
not working full-time will not be considered income. The unearned
income of a minor in the household will be considered available to
the household.
Income from household members. Income from household members will
be considered available to the applicant, whether or not the household
member is legally obligated for the support of the applicant, if the
household members pool or share their income and expenses as a family
or intermingle their funds so as to provide support to one another.
The pooling or nonpooling of income. When two or more individuals
share the same dwelling unit but not all members of the household
are applying for GA, the Administrator shall make a finding under
a rebuttable presumption that the entire household is pooling income
[22 M.R.S.A. § 4301(12-A)].
One or more applicants for assistance can successfully rebut
the presumption that all household income is being pooled by providing
the Administrator with verifiable documentation affirmatively demonstrating
a pattern of nonpooling during the duration of the shared living arrangement.
Such documentation would include evidence of the entire household's
expense, bank statements, canceled checks, receipts, landlord statements
or other vendor accounts clearly supporting a claim that the applicant
has been and is presently solely and entirely responsible for his
or her pro rata share of household costs.
If the applicant is unable to successfully rebut the municipality's
presumption that all household income is being pooled, eligibility
of the entire household will be determined based on total household
income. If the applicant successfully rebuts the municipality's presumption
that all household income is being pooled, the applicant's eligibility
will be determined on the basis of his or her income and his or her
pro rata share of actual household expenses.
A lump sum payment received by any GA applicant or recipient
prior or subsequent to the date of application for GA will be considered
as income available to the household. However, verified required payments
(i.e., any third party payment which is required as a condition of
receiving the lump sum payment, or any payments of bills earmarked
for the purpose for which the lump sum payment was made) and any amount
of the lump sum payment which the applicant can document was spent
on basic necessities, as described below, will not be considered available
income.
Where a household receives a lump sum payment at any time prior
or subsequent to the date of application for GA, the Administrator
will assess the need for prorating an applicant's eligibility for
GA according to the following criteria [22 M.R.S.A. § 4301(7)
and (8-A)]:
Subtract from the lump sum any amount the applicant can demonstrate
was spent on basic necessities, including all basic necessities as
defined by the GA program such as: reasonable payment of funeral or
burial expenses for a family member; any reasonable travel costs related
to the illness or death of a family member; repair or replacement
of essentials lost due to fire, flood or other natural disaster; repair
or purchase of a motor vehicle essential for employment, education,
training or other day-to-day living necessities. Repayments of loans
or credit, the proceeds of which can be verified as having been spent
on basic necessities; and payment of bills earmarked for the purpose
for which the lump sum is paid must also be subtracted [22 M.R.S.A.
§ 4301(7) and (8-A)];
Divide the sum created in Subsection C(8)(b)[4] by the verified actual monthly amounts for all of the household's basic necessities [22 M.R.S.A. § 4305(3-B)].
This dividend represents the period of proration determined
by the Administrator to commence on the date of receipt of the lump
sum payment. The prorated sum for each month must be considered available
to the household for 12 months from the date of application or during
the period of proration, whichever is less.
The household of an initial applicant that is otherwise eligible
for emergency assistance may not be denied emergency assistance to
meet an immediate need solely on the basis of the proration of a lump
sum payment (22 M.R.S.A. § 4308).
Notwithstanding any of the maximum levels of assistance for specific
basic necessities listed in Appendices B through H,[1] an applicant's eligibility for GA will be first determined
by subtracting his or her income from the overall maximum level of
assistance designated in Appendix A[2] for the applicable household size [22 M.R.S.A. § 4305(3-B)].
The difference yielded by this calculation shall be the applicant's
deficit.
Applicants will be eligible for GA up to the calculated deficit to the extent the applicant is unable to otherwise provide the basic necessities essential to maintain themselves or their families. Applicants with no deficit shall be found ineligible for GA unless they are in an emergency, in which case eligibility for emergency GA will be determined according to § 112-13.
The municipality will grant assistance to eligible applicants
for basic necessities according to the maximum levels for specific
types of assistance set forth below. The Administrator, in consultation
with the applicant, may apply the amount of the applicant's deficit
toward assistance with any one or combination of necessities not to
exceed the total deficit. These maximum levels will be strictly adhered
to unless the Administrator determines that there are exceptional
circumstances and an emergency is shown to exist, in which case these
absolute levels will be waived in order to meet immediate needs. In
all cases either the actual expenses the applicant incurs for basic
necessities or the maximum amount allowed in each category, whichever
is less, will be used in determining need.
In roommate situations, the applicant's need for common living
expenses for rent, fuel, electricity, etc., will be presumed to be
reduced by an amount equal to the other household members' proportionate
fair share of the common living expenses. No applicant will be allowed
to claim a need for any expense which has been or will be paid by
another person. In addition, as a general rule the municipality will
not provide a benefit toward a basic need by paying a bill that is
issued to a person not living with the applicant's household or that
has otherwise been incurred by a person who has not been found eligible
to receive assistance.
A recent, unplanned separation has occurred in the household
resulting in the sustained or permanent absence of a former household
member in whose name the bill was customarily issued;
The applicant and members of the applicant's household were
or will be the sole recipients of the commodities or services covered
by any bill to be paid or partially paid with GA; and
The applicant will make a good-faith effort to direct the vendor
to issue future bills in the name of the applicant or other responsible
person residing in the household.
The Administrator will provide food assistance to eligible persons
up to the allowed maximum amounts designated by the U.S.D.A. Thrifty
Food Plan for the appropriate household size. For this purpose, the
municipality hereby incorporates by reference the U.S.D.A. Thrifty
Food Plan, as distributed by the Maine DHHS on or about October of
each year. See Appendix B for the current year's food maximums.[3]
In determining need for food the Administrator will not consider
the value of the food stamps an applicant receives as income [22 M.R.S.A.
§ 4301.7(A); 7 U.S.C. § 2017(b)]. The municipality
will authorize vouchers to be used solely for approved food products.
The Administrator will exceed the maximums when necessary for
households having members with special dietary needs. The Administrator
may require a doctor's statement verifying there is a special dietary
need requiring an expenditure for food that is greater than the ordinance
maximums.
Housing. The Administrator will provide assistance with rent or mortgage
payments that are reasonable and/or within the allowed maximum levels.
See Appendix C for the current year's housing maximums.[4] It is the applicant's responsibility to find suitable
housing, although the Administrator may help the applicant find housing
when appropriate. The Administrator will inform the applicant of the
allowed housing maximums to assist the applicant in his or her search
for housing. The allowed maximum for any applicant will be the categorical
housing maximum representing the minimum dwelling unit space necessary
to adequately shelter the applicant household. Applicants requesting
assistance for housing that contains more bedrooms than are necessary
for the number of household members will be provided assistance according
to the maximum level for the number of rooms actually needed.
Rental payments to relatives. The municipality may elect not
to issue any rental payment to an applicant's relatives unless the
rental relationship has existed for at least three months and the
applicant's relative(s) rely on the rental payment for their basic
needs. For the purpose of this section, a "relative" is defined as
the applicant's parents, grandparents, children, grandchildren, siblings,
parent's siblings, or any of those relative's children [22 M.R.S.A.
§ 4319(2)].
When applicants are living in private homes with the owner or
sharing dwelling units with people who are not pooling income or who
are not legally liable relatives, the amount allowed as the applicant's
shelter expense will be the applicant's pro rata share of the actual,
total shelter cost, up to the ordinance maximum [22 M.R.S.A. § 4301(6)].
Any housing assistance issued to a recipient in such a circumstance
will be issued, whenever reasonably possible, to the landlord or property
owner with the most superior interest in the property; i.e., to a
landlord before a tenant, or to a mortgagee before a mortgagor.
When the municipality issues in aggregate more than $600 in
rental payments to any landlord in any calendar year, a 1099 form
declaring the total amount of rental payments issued during the calendar
year will be forwarded to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) pursuant
to IRS regulation. [See § 6041(a) of Internal Revenue Code.]
Any landlord wishing to regularly receive rental payments from
the municipality on behalf of applicants renting rooms from the landlord's
own residence must, at a minimum, make a good-faith effort to obtain
a lodging license from the DHHS Division of Health Engineering, pursuant
to 10-144A CMR, Ch. 201, as a condition of that landlord receiving
future GA payments on behalf of his or her tenants.
In the case of a request for assistance with a mortgage payment,
the Administrator will make an individual factual determination of
whether the applicant has an immediate need for such aid. In making
this determination, the Administrator will consider the extent and
liquidity of the applicant's proprietary interest in the housing.
Factors to consider in making this determination include:
The availability of the equity interest in the
shelter to provide the applicant an opportunity to secure a short-term
loan in order to meet immediate needs;
A comparison between the amount of mortgage obligations
and the anticipated rental charges the applicant would be responsible
for if he/she were to be dislocated to rental housing;
These factors shall be considered when determining whether the
equity in the shelter is an available asset which may be substituted
for the assistance the municipality would otherwise be required to
provide.
The Administrator shall consider issuing a benefit in response
to the applicant's request for mortgage assistance to the extent the
applicant is otherwise eligible for GA if after review of the criteria
above the Administrator determines that:
The monthly mortgage obligation is in accordance
with the maximum levels of assistance available for housing appropriate
to the applicant's household size;
There is no capacity in the accumulated equity
in the property, when considered in the context of the applicant's
borrowing capacity with the mortgagee or the general lending community,
to suspend the mortgage obligation temporarily or reamortize the mortgage
in such a way as to suspend or reduce the mortgage obligation; and
If a mortgage payment is necessary, the Administrator will pay
the actual amount due, up to the amount allowed according to the maximum
levels listed below. After an initial application, assistance with
such payments will be given only after the applicant has made all
reasonable efforts to borrow against the equity of his or her home.
If there is not sufficient equity in the home with which to secure
a loan, and if the monthly mortgage payments are not realistically
in line with the rental rates for similar housing in the area that
could meet the applicant's needs, the Administrator will inform the
applicant that he/she is responsible for finding alternative housing
within his or her ability to pay and will be obligated to make all
reasonable efforts to secure such housing.
The municipality may place a lien on the property in order to
recover its costs of granting assistance with mortgage payments. In
addition, a municipality may claim a lien against the owner of real
estate for the amount of money spent by it to make capital improvements
to the real estate (22 M.R.S.A. § 4320). No lien may be
enforced against a recipient except upon his or her death or the transfer
of the property. Further, no lien may be enforced against a person
who is currently receiving any form of public assistance, or who would
again become eligible for GA if the lien were enforced.
If the municipality determines that it is appropriate to place
a lien on a person's property to recover its costs of providing GA
for a mortgage payment or capital improvement it must file a notice
of the lien with the County Registry of Deeds where the property is
located within 30 days of making the mortgage payment. That filing
shall secure the municipality's or the state's interest in an amount
equal to the sum of that mortgage or capital improvement payment and
all subsequent mortgage or capital improvement payments made on behalf
of the same eligible person, plus interest and costs.
Not less than 10 days prior to filing the lien in the registry,
the municipal officers must send notice to the owner of the real estate,
the GA recipient, and any record holder of the mortgage by certified
mail, return receipt requested, that a lien on the property is going
to be filed with the registry. This notice must clearly inform the
recipient of the limitations upon enforcement plus the name, title,
address and telephone number of the person who granted the assistance.
The municipal officers must also give written notice to the recipient
each time the amount secured by the lien is increased because of an
additional mortgage payment. This notice must include the same information
that appeared on the original intent-to-file notice sent to the recipient.
The municipality may charge interest on the amount of money
secured by the lien. The municipal officers will establish the interest
rate not to exceed the maximum rate of interest allowed by the State
Treasurer to be charged against delinquent taxes. The interest will
accrue from the date the lien is filed.
Property taxes. In the event an applicant requests assistance
with his or her property taxes, the Administrator will inform the
applicant that there are two procedures on the local level to request
that relief: the poverty abatement process [36 M.R.S.A. § 841(2)]
and GA. If the applicant chooses to seek property tax assistance through
GA, or if the applicant is denied a poverty tax abatement, the Administrator
may consider using GA to meet this need only if:
As a matter of municipal policy or practice, or on the basis
of information obtained from the applicant's mortgagee, if any, it
is reasonably certain that a tax lien foreclosure will result in subsequent
eviction from the residential property; and
The maximum levels of housing assistance contained in this chapter
have been derived either from a locally accomplished fair market rental
survey or the fair market rental values developed by the U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). If the maximum levels of housing
are derived from the HUD values made effective as of every October
1, and adjusted to disregard the current and averaged utility allowances
as developed by the Maine State Housing Authority, those levels are
hereby incorporated by reference. See Appendix C for the current year's
housing maximums.[5]
If and when the maximum levels of housing assistance in this
chapter are derived from a locally developed fair market rental survey,
a record of that survey will be submitted to the DHHS, General Assistance
Unit, and the maximum levels of housing assistance will be incorporated
into this chapter pursuant to the ordinance adoption and amendment
procedures found at 22 M.R.S.A. § 4305.
Expenses for lights, cooking, and hot water will be budgeted
separately if they are not included in the rent. Applicants are responsible
for making arrangements with the utility company regarding service,
including entering into a special payment arrangement if necessary.
Assistance will be granted to eligible applicants on the basis of their most recent bill. The municipality is not obligated to pay back bills or utility security deposits. Exceptions may be made in emergency situations pursuant to § 112-13.
Disconnection of utility service will not be considered an emergency
in all cases. The Administrator will make an individual, factual analysis
to determine if the termination of utility service constitutes an
emergency. The Administrator will consider the household composition,
the time of year, the age and health of the household members, and
other appropriate factors in reaching a decision. Applicants who had
sufficient income, money, assets or other resources to pay their utility
bill when it was received, but who spent all or part of their income
on items which were not basic necessities, will not be eligible to
receive GA to replace those funds.
Applicants have the burden of providing evidence of their income and use of income for the applicable time period [22 M.R.S.A. § 4308(2)]. (See §§ 112-14 and 112-29.) The Administrator will notify applicants in writing that they must give the Administrator prompt notice if their utility service is to be terminated or if their fuel supply is low. It is the applicant's responsibility to attempt to make arrangements with the utility company to maintain their service and to notify the Administrator if assistance is needed with a utility bill prior to service being terminated.
Expenses for home heating will be budgeted according to the
actual need for fuel during the heating season (September through
May), provided that such expenses are reasonable, and at other times
during the year when the Administrator determines the request for
fuel assistance is reasonable and appropriate.
Assistance will be granted to eligible applicants on the basis of their most recent bill. The municipality is not responsible for back bills except in an emergency as provided in § 112-13. Applicants are responsible for monitoring their fuel supply and requesting assistance prior to depleting their fuel supply. When applicants who have been informed of this responsibility run out of fuel nonetheless, and can show no just cause for failing to give the Administrator timely notice of their need for fuel, the Administrator shall find that the emergency was not beyond the applicants' control, and process the emergency request accordingly, pursuant to § 112-13.
Personal care and household supplies. Expenses for ordinary personal
and household supplies will be budgeted and allowed according to the
applicant's actual need for these items. Personal and household supplies
include: hand soap, toothpaste, shampoo, shaving cream, deodorant,
dish detergent, laundry supplies and costs, household cleaning supplies,
razors, paper products such as toilet paper, tissues, paper towels,
garbage/trash bags, light bulbs and supplies for children under five
years of age. See Appendix F for the current year's personal care
and household supplies maximums.[9]
Other basic necessities. Expenses falling under this section will
be granted when they are deemed essential to an applicant's or recipient's
health and safety by the Administrator and, in some cases, upon verification
by a physician. Assistance will be granted only when these necessities
cannot be obtained through the utilization of available resources.
Clothing. The municipality may assist a household with the purchase
of adequate clothing. Before assistance will be granted for clothing,
the General Assistance Administrator must be satisfied that the applicant
has utilized all available resources to secure the necessary clothing.
In some circumstances, clothing will be a postponable item. Exceptions
to this would be, for example, if fire, flood or unusually cold weather
makes extra clothing an immediate necessity, special clothing is necessary
for the applicant's employment, or a household member is without adequate
clothing.
The municipality will pay for essential medical expenses, other
than hospital bills (see below), provided that the municipality is
notified and approves the expenses and services prior to their being
made or delivered. Medical expenses include prescriptions, devices,
treatments, or services that are determined to be medically necessary
by a licensed physician. The municipality will grant assistance for
medical services only when assistance cannot be obtained from any
other source and the applicant would not be able to receive necessary
medical care without the municipality's assistance. The applicant
is required to utilize any resource, including any federal or state
program, that will diminish his or her need to seek general assistance
for medical expenses. The municipality will grant assistance for nonemergency
medical services only if a physician verifies that the services are
essential. Provided there is no cost to the applicant, the Administrator
may require a second medical opinion from a physician designated by
the municipality to verify the necessity of the services.
Generally, the municipality will issue GA at the established
Medicaid rates for all medical services, prescriptions, or other medical
commodities. Before authorizing GA for any medical expenses, the Administrator
will inform the pharmacy or medical service provider of the municipality's
intention to pay for the medical service at the Medicaid rate, and
ask to be billed accordingly.
Ordinary medical supplies/nonprescription drugs will be budgeted
at the actual amount when the applicant can demonstrate a need for
such items. Allowable supplies include bandages, aspirin, cough syrup,
and other generic brand, nonprescription medicines. In addition, the
basic monthly rate for telephone service will be budgeted when a telephone
is essential to the health and safety of the household. In order for
telephone service to be considered an allowable expense the applicant
must provide a written statement from a physician certifying that
the telephone is essential.
In the event of an emergency admission to the hospital, the
hospital must notify the Administrator within five business days of
the admission. Notification must be by telephone, confirmed by certified
mail, or by certified mail only. If a hospital fails to give timely
notice to the Administrator, the municipality will have no obligation
to pay the bill.
Any person who cannot pay his or her hospital bill must apply
to the hospital for consideration under the Hospital's Free Care Program
as provided in 22 M.R.S.A. § 1716. Anyone who is not eligible
for the hospital's free care program may apply for GA. Applicants
must apply for assistance within 30 days of being discharged from
the hospital and provide a notice from the hospital certifying that
he or she is not eligible for the hospital's free care program.
Before the Administrator will consider whether to allow a hospital bill as a necessary expense, the applicant must enter into a reasonable payment arrangement with the hospital. The payment arrangement will be based upon the Medicaid rate. In determining an applicant's eligibility, the municipality will budget the monthly payment to the hospital the applicant has agreed to pay. The applicant's need for assistance with a hospital bill will be considered each time he/she applies by including the amount of the bill in the applicant's monthly budget, but the recipient will be responsible for making any necessary payments to the hospital pursuant to the use-of-income requirements found at § 112-32.
Dental. The municipality will pay for medically necessary dental
services only. As is the case with medical services generally, the
municipality will issue GA for dental services at the established
Medicaid rates for those services, and before authorizing the GA benefit
for dental services, the Administrator will inform the dentist or
dental surgeon of the municipality's intention to pay at the Medicaid
rate. If full mouth extractions are necessary, the municipality will
pay for dentures, provided that the applicant has no other resources
to pay for the dentures. The applicant will be referred to a dental
clinic in the area whenever possible. The Administrator will expect
the applicant to bear a reasonable part of the cost for dental services,
including extractions and dentures, taking into account the applicant's
ability to pay.
Eye care. In order to be eligible to receive GA for eyeglasses,
an applicant must have his or her medical need certified by a person
licensed to practice optometry. The Administrator will provide assistance
for eyeglasses to eligible persons only after the applicant has exhausted
all other available resources and generally only at the Medicaid rate.
Telephone charge. A payment for basic telephone will only be
allowed if a telephone is necessary for medical reasons as verified
by a physician. At the discretion of the GA Administrator, minimum/basic
telephone services may be allowed for households with children, for
households where job search or work-related reasons exist and/or for
any other reasons the Administrator deems necessary.
Work-related expenses. In determining need, reasonable and actual
work-related expenses will be deducted from earned income. These expenses
include child-care costs, work clothes, supplies and transportation
at the actual costs not to exceed the ordinance maximum. (See Appendix
G for the current maximum mileage allotment.[10]) The applicant is required to provide documentation substantiating
the costs and that the expenses were necessary.
Travel expenses. In determining need, necessary travel which
is not work-related will be budgeted if the applicant can satisfy
the Administrator that the prospective need for travel is necessary.
For applicants in rural areas, weekly transportation to a supermarket
will be considered, as will any medically necessary travel. See Appendix
G for the current rate at which such necessary travel will be budgeted.[11] This rate shall be construed to subsidize all costs associated
with automobile ownership and operation, including gas/oil, tires,
maintenance, insurance, financing, licensing/registration, excise
tax, etc.
Burials, cremations. Under the circumstances and in accordance with the procedures and limitations described below (See § 112-35.), the municipality recognizes its responsibility to pay for the burial or cremation of eligible persons. See Appendix H for the current maximums.[12]
The costs associated with capital improvements/repairs (e.g.,
heating/water/septic system repair) will generally not be budgeted
as a basic necessity. Exceptions can be made only when the capital
improvement/repair has been preapproved by the Administrator as a
necessary expense and the monthly cost of the capital improvement/repair
has been reduced as far as reasonably possible; for example, by means
of the applicant entering into an installment payment arrangement
with the contractor. The Administrator may grant GA for capital improvements
when:
In some cases, the entire immediate cost of the capital improvement can be mitigated by the applicant entering into an installment payment arrangement with a contractor. The municipality reserves the right to place a lien on any property pursuant to 22 M.R.S.A. § 4320 when GA has been used to effect a capital improvement. The lien process shall be accomplished in the same manner as for mortgage payments, as described in Subsection B(3)(d), Liens, above.
Funeral director must give timely notice. In order for the municipality
to be liable for a burial or cremation expense, the funeral director
must notify the Administrator prior to the burial or cremation or
by the end of three business days following the funeral director'
receipt of the body, whichever is earlier [22 M.R.S.A. § 4313(2)].
This contact by the funeral director shall begin the process of developing
an application for burial/cremation assistance on behalf of the deceased.
It is the funeral director's responsibility to make a good-faith effort
to determine if the family or any other persons are going to pay all
or part of the burial expenses. If family members or others are unable
to pay the expenses, and the funeral director wants the municipality
to pay all or part of the expenses, the funeral director must make
timely contact to the Administrator. In addition, the funeral director
may refer legally liable relatives to the Administrator so that a
timely determination of financial capacity may be accomplished.
Application for assistance shall be calculated on behalf of the deceased.
For the purposes of determining residency, calculating eligibility
and issuing GA for burial or cremation purposes, an application for
assistance shall be completed by the Administrator on behalf of the
deceased.
With regard to residency, the municipality of responsibility for burial expenses shall be the municipality in which the eligible deceased person was a resident at the time of death as residency is determined under § 112-14.
Although legally liable relatives may be asked to provide information
regarding their income, assets, and basic living expenses, that information
will not be construed as an application for GA inasmuch as living
persons are not eligible for burial assistance. To clarify this point
of law, although legally liable relatives have a financial responsibility
to pay for the burial or cremation of their relatives, that financial
responsibility only exists to the extent the legally liable relatives
have a financial capacity to do so. Therefore, legally liable relatives
who are themselves eligible for GA have no legal obligation to pay
for the burial or cremation of their relatives. For these reasons,
all GA issued for burial or cremation purposes shall be issued on
behalf of, and in the name of, the deceased.
The financial responsibility of certain family members. Grandparents,
parents, children and grandchildren of the deceased, whether or not
living in or owning property in Maine, and the spouse or registered
domestic partner of the deceased, are financially responsible for
the burial or cremation of the deceased to the extent those relatives,
individually or as a group, have a financial capacity to pay for the
burial or cremation either in lump sum or by means of a budgeted payment
arrangement with the funeral home. Accordingly, at the request of
the Administrator, all legally liable relatives must provide the Administrator
with any reasonably requested information regarding their income,
assets, and basic living expenses. The Administrator may also seek
information from financial institutions holding assets of the deceased.
Maine law requires a financial institution to disclose the amount
deposited in the corporation or association when the municipality
or its agents are acting in accordance with 22 M.R.S.A. § 4313(2)
and provide a written request and a notarized affidavit signed by
the Administrator of the municipality or its agents stating that the
named depositor is deceased.
Consideration of the financial responsibility of family members.
Generally, when the Administrator can make a finding that one or more
of the deceased's legally liable relatives have an obvious and demonstrable
financial capacity to pay for the burial or cremation, by lump sum
payment or by means of a reasonable payment arrangement, the municipality
will not grant the requested burial or cremation assistance. When
the Administrator is unable to make such a finding, the following
proration of familial responsibility will be implemented.
Proration of familial responsibility. A proration of familial financial
responsibility will be used when no legally liable relative possesses
an obvious and demonstrable capacity to pay for the burial or cremation,
but one or more of the financially liable relatives is found to have
a financial capacity to make a partial financial contribution, or
the Administrator is unable to determine the financial capacity of
one or more of said relatives. Under these circumstances, each legally
liable relative is considered to be responsible for his or her pro
rata share of the total municipal contribution that would exist if
no legally liable relatives had a financial capacity to contribute.
Furthermore, and as long as all other eligibility factors have been
satisfied, the municipality will provide as a burial or cremation
benefit the aggregate of all pro rata shares less the share of any
legally liable relative who refuses to cooperate with the Administrator
by providing information or documentation reasonably necessary to
determine that relative's financial capacity, and less any share or
part of a share attributable to a legally liable relative who can
financially contribute or partially contribute toward the burial or
cremation to the extent of that relative's share.
Eight days to determine eligibility. The Administrator may take up
to eight days from the date of an application for burial/cremation
assistance to issue a written decision regarding the amount of the
municipal contribution toward the burial or cremation. The eight-day
eligibility determination period from the date of application shall
be used as necessary to make third-party collateral contacts, verify
the listing of legally liable family members and determine their respective
financial capacities to contribute to the burial or cremation, contact
the personal representative of the deceased's estate, if any, and
other related administrative tasks. The Administrator shall not use
this eight-day period allowed by law to unreasonably delay the municipality's
decision.
The municipal obligation to pay when legally liable relatives or
others can contribute. The figures provided in this section are the
maximum benefits provided by the municipality when no contributions
toward the burial or cremation are available from any other source.
To the extent any legally liable relatives of the deceased have a
financial capacity to pay for the burial or cremation, that financial
capacity shall be deducted from the maximum burial costs allowed by
this section. In addition, any other benefits or resources that are
available, such as Social Security burial benefits, veterans' burial
benefits, or contributions from other persons, will be deducted from
the maximum amount the municipality will pay, except there will be
no deduction from the municipal benefit level with respect to any
contribution provided for the purpose of publishing an obituary notice
up to an aggregate contribution limit for this purpose of $75 when
a paid receipt demonstrating the purchase of an obituary notice is
provided to the Administrator.
Burial expenses. The Administrator will respect the wishes of family
members concerning whether the deceased is interred by means of burial
or cremated. See Appendix H for the maximum levels of burial assistance.[1]
Cremation expenses. In the absence of any objection by any family
members of the deceased, or when neither the Administrator nor the
funeral director can locate any family members, the Administrator
may issue GA for cremation services. See Appendix H for the maximum
assistance levels for cremations.[2]
Each time a person applies, the Administrator will provide a written decision to the applicant after making a determination of eligibility. The decision will be given to the applicant within 24 hours after a completed and signed application is received [22 M.R.S.A. § 4305(3)]. (See Article IV, § 112-10.)
In order to comply with the statutory requirement to issue a decision
within 24 hours, if an applicant submits an incomplete or unsigned
application, the Administrator may decide to issue a notice of ineligibility
and provide the applicant with another application to submit as soon
as is practicable for the applicant.
Contents of decision. After an application has been completed, applicants will be given written notice of any decision concerning their eligibility for assistance. In addition to the items listed in § 112-10, the notice of decision will include a statement that:
The applicant has the right to contact the DHHS if he or she believes
the municipality has violated the law. The decision will include contact
information for the appropriate DHHS office.
Disbursement of general assistance. Except when the Administrator
determines it is impractical, all GA will be provided as a voucher
or purchase order payable to a vendor or through direct municipal
payment to a provider of goods or services. GA will not be issued
in the form of a cash payment to an applicant unless there is no alternative
to the cash payment, in which case the Administrator shall document
the circumstances requiring GA to be issued in the form of cash [22
M.R.S.A. § 4305(6)].