WAC 388-484-0005
There is a five-year (sixty-month) time
limit for TANF, SFA and GA-S cash assistance. (1) What is the
sixty-month time limit?
(a) You can receive cash assistance for temporary
assistance for needy families (TANF), state family assistance
(SFA), and general assistance for pregnant women (GA-S) for a
lifetime limit of sixty months. The time limit applies to
cash assistance provided by any combination of these programs,
and whether or not it was received in consecutive months.
(b) If you receive cash assistance for part of the month,
it counts as a whole month against the time limit.
(c) If you have received cash assistance from another
state on or after August 1, 1997, and it was paid for with
federal TANF funds, those months will count against your time
limit.
(d) The time limit does not apply to diversion cash
assistance, support services, food assistance or medicaid.
(2) When did the sixty-month time limit go into effect?
The sixty-month time limit applies to cash assistance
received on or after August 1, 1997 for TANF and SFA. Although the GA-S program no longer exists, the time limit
applies to GA-S cash assistance received from May 1, 1999
through July 31, 1999.
(3) Does the time limit apply to me?
The sixty-month time limit applies to you for any month
in which you are a parent or other relative as defined in WAC 388-454-0010, or a minor parent emancipated through court
order or marriage.
(4) Do any exceptions to the time limits apply to me?
The department does not count months of assistance
towards the sixty-month time limit if you are:
(a) An adult caretaker, as described in WAC 388-454-0005
through 388-454-0010, who is not a member of the assistance
unit and you are receiving cash assistance on behalf of a
child;
(b) An unemancipated pregnant or parenting minor living
in a department approved living arrangement as defined by WAC 388-486-0005; or
(c) An American Indian or Native Alaskan adult and you
are living in Indian country, as defined under 18 U.S.C. 1151,
or an Alaskan Native village and you are receiving TANF, SFA,
or GA-S cash assistance during a period when at least fifty
percent of the adults living in Indian country or in the
village were not employed. See WAC 388-484-0010.
(5) What happens if a member of my assistance unit has
received sixty months of TANF, SFA, and GA-S cash benefits?
Once any adult or emancipated minor in the assistance
unit has received sixty months of cash assistance, the entire
assistance unit becomes ineligible for TANF or SFA cash
assistance, unless you are eligible for an extended period of
cash assistance called a TANF/SFA time limit extension under
WAC 388-484-0006.
(6) What can I do if I disagree with how the department
has counted my months of cash assistance?
(a) If you disagree with how we counted your months of
cash assistance, you may ask for a hearing within ninety days
of the date we sent you a letter telling you how many months
we are counting.
(b) You will get continued benefits (the amount you were
getting before the change) if:
(i) You have used all sixty months of benefits according
to our records; and
(ii) You ask for a hearing within the ten-day notice
period, as described in chapter 388-458 WAC.
(c) If you get continued benefits and the administrative
law judge (ALJ) agrees with our decision, you may have to pay
back the continued benefits after the hearing, as described in
chapter 388-410 WAC.
(7) Does the department ever change the number of months
that count against my time limit?
We change the number of months we count in the following
situations:
(a) You repay an overpayment for a month where you
received benefits but were not eligible for any of the
benefits you received. We subtract one month for each month
that you completely repay. If you were eligible for some of
the benefits you received, we still count that month against
your time limit.
(b) We did not close your grant on time when the division
of child support (DCS) collected money for you that was over
your grant amount two months in a row, as described in WAC 388-422-0030.
(c) An ALJ decides at a fair hearing that we should
change the number of months we count.
(d) You start getting worker's compensation payments from
the department of labor and industries (L&I) and your L&I
benefits have been reduced by the payments we made to you.
(e) You participated in the excess real property (ERP)
program in order to get assistance and we collected the funds
when your property sold.
(f) Another state gave us incorrect information about the
number of months you got cash assistance from them.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 74.04.050, 74.04.055, 74.04.057,
74.08.090, and chapter 74.08A RCW. 06-10-034, § 388-484-0005,
filed 4/27/06, effective 6/1/06. Statutory Authority: RCW 74.04.050, 74.04.055, 74.04.057. 04-05-010, § 388-484-0005,
filed 2/6/04, effective 3/8/04. Statutory Authority: RCW 74.08.090, 74.04.050, and 78.08A.340. 03-06-046, §
388-484-0005, filed 2/28/03, effective 3/31/03. Statutory
Authority: RCW 74.08A.010(4), 74.08A.340, 74.08.090,74.04.050
. 02-12-068, § 388-484-0005, filed 5/31/02,
effective 6/1/02. Statutory Authority: RCW 74.04.005,
74.04.050, 74.04.055, 74.04.057, 74.08.090, 74.08A.010, and 42
U.S.C. 608 (a)(7). 01-04-016, § 388-484-0005, filed 1/26/01,
effective 2/1/01. Statutory Authority: RCW 74.04.005,
74.04.050, 74.04.055, 74.04.057 and 74.08.090. 99-08-050, §
388-484-0005, filed 4/1/99, effective 5/2/99. Statutory
Authority: RCW 74.04.050, 74.04.055, 74.04.057 and 74.08.090.
98-16-044, § 388-484-0005, filed 7/31/98, effective 9/1/98.]