WAC 388-470-0055
How do my resources count toward the
resource limit for Basic Food? (1) For Basic Food, if your
assistance unit (AU) is not categorically eligible (CE) under
WAC 388-414-0001, we count the following resources toward your
AU's resource limit to decide if you are eligible for benefits
under WAC 388-470-0005:
(a) Liquid resources. These are resources that are
easily changed into cash. Some examples of liquid resources
are:
(i) Cash on hand;
(ii) Money in checking or savings accounts;
(iii) Money market accounts or certificates of deposit
(CDs) less any withdrawal penalty;
(iv) Stocks, bonds, annuities, or mutual funds less any
early withdrawal penalty;
(v) Available trusts or trust accounts; or
(vi) Lump sum payments. A lump sum payment is money owed
to you from a past period of time that you get but do not
expect to get on a continuing basis.
(b) Nonliquid resources, personal property, and real
property not specifically excluded in subsection (2) below.
(c) Vehicles as described in WAC 388-470-0075.
(d) The resources of a sponsor as described in WAC 388-470-0060.
(2) The following resources do not count toward your
resource limit:
(a) Your home and the surrounding property that you, your
spouse, or your dependents live in;
(b) A house you do not live in, if you plan on returning
to the home and you are out of the home because of:
(i) Employment;
(ii) Training for future employment;
(iii) Illness; or
(iv) Natural disaster or casualty.
(c) Property that:
(i) You are making a good faith effort to sell;
(ii) You intend to build a home on, if you do not already
own a home;
(iii) Produces income consistent with its fair market
value, even if used only on a seasonal basis;
(iv) Is essential to the employment or self-employment of
a household member. Property excluded under this section and
used by a self-employed farmer or fisher retains its exclusion
for one year after the household member stops farming or
fishing; or
(v) Is essential for the maintenance or use of an
income-producing vehicle; or
(vi) Has an equity value equal to or less than half of
the resource limit as described in WAC 388-470-0005.
(d) Household goods
(e) Personal effects;
(f) Life insurance policies, including policies with cash
surrender value (CSV);
(g) One burial plot per household member;
(h) One funeral agreement per household member, up to
fifteen hundred dollars;
(i) Pension plans or retirement funds not specifically
counted in subsection (1) above;
(j) Sales contracts, if the contract is producing income
consistent with its fair market value;
(k) Government payments issued for the restoration of a
home damaged in a disaster;
(l) Indian lands held jointly with the Tribe, or land
that can be sold only with the approval of the Bureau of
Indian Affairs;
(m) Nonliquid resources that have a lien placed against
them;
(n) Earned Income Tax Credits (EITC):
(i) For twelve months, if you were a Basic Food recipient
when you got the EITC and you remain on Basic Food for all
twelve months; or
(ii) The month you get it and the month after, if you
were not getting Basic Food when you got the EITC.
(o) Energy assistance payments or allowances;
(p) The resources of a household member who gets SSI,
TANF/SFA, or GA benefits;
(q) Retirement funds or accounts that are tax exempt
under the Internal Revenue Code;
(r) Education funds or accounts in a tuition program
under section 529 or 530 of the Internal Revenue Code; and
(s) Resources specifically excluded by federal law.
(3) If you deposit excluded liquid resources into a bank
account with countable liquid resources, we do not count the
excluded liquid resources for six months from the date of
deposit.
(4) If you sell your home, you have ninety days to
reinvest the proceeds from the sale of a home into an exempt
resource.
(a) If you do not reinvest within ninety days, we will
determine whether there is good cause to allow more time.
Some examples of good cause are:
(i) Closing on your new home is taking longer than
anticipated;
(ii) You are unable to find a new home that you can
afford;
(iii) Someone in your household is receiving emergent
medical care; or
(iv) Your children are in school and moving would require
them to change schools.
(b) If you have good cause, we will give you more time
based on your circumstances.
(c) If you do not have good cause, we count the money you
got from the sale as a resource.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 74.04.050, 74.04.055, 74.04.057,
74.08.090, and Public Law 110-234. 08-18-043, § 388-470-0055,
filed 8/29/08, effective 10/1/08. Statutory Authority: RCW 74.08.090 and 74.04.510. 03-05-015, § 388-470-0055, filed
2/7/03, effective 3/1/03; 99-16-024, § 388-470-0055, filed
7/26/99, effective 9/1/99. Statutory Authority: RCW 74.04.050, 74.04.055, 74.04.057 and 74.08.090. 98-16-044, §
388-470-0055, filed 7/31/98, effective 9/1/98.]