General Assistance
Ordinance
of the Town of
Chebeague Island
Maine
|
|
The
Town of Chebeague Island enacts the following General Assistance
Ordinance. This Ordinance is
on file with the State of Maine Department of Health & Human Services pursuant
to 22 M.R.S. § 4305(4).
Adopted by the Town
Meeting: July 1, 2007
Effective: July 1, 2007
Attest:
Town
Clerk
Seal:
TABLE OF CONTENTS
GENERAL ASSISTANCE
ORDINANCE
Section
1 – Statement of Policy....................................................................................................... 1
Section
2.1 – Common Meaning of Words.................................................................................. 1
Section
2.2 – Special Definitions.................................................................................................. 2
Applicant................................................................................................................................ 2
Application
Form................................................................................................................... 2
Basic
Necessities.................................................................................................................... 2
Case
Record........................................................................................................................... 2
Categorical
Assistance............................................................................................................ 3
Claimant................................................................................................................................. 3
Deficit..................................................................................................................................... 3
Disabled
Person..................................................................................................................... 3
Dwelling
Unit......................................................................................................................... 3
Eligible
Person....................................................................................................................... 3
Emergency.............................................................................................................................. 3
General
Assistance Program.................................................................................................. 3
General
Assistance Administrator.......................................................................................... 3
Household.............................................................................................................................. 3
Income.................................................................................................................................... 4
Initial
Applicants.................................................................................................................... 5
Just
Cause.............................................................................................................................. 5
Lump
Sum Payment............................................................................................................... 5
Material
Fact........................................................................................................................... 5
Maximum
Levels of Assistance............................................................................................. 5
Misconduct............................................................................................................................. 5
Municipality........................................................................................................................... 6
Municipality
of Responsibility............................................................................................... 6
Need....................................................................................................................................... 6
Net
General Assistance Costs................................................................................................ 6
Period
of Eligibility................................................................................................................ 6
Pooling
of Income.................................................................................................................. 6
Real
Estate.............................................................................................................................. 6
Recipient................................................................................................................................. 6
Repeat
Applicants................................................................................................................... 6
Resident.................................................................................................................................. 6
Resources............................................................................................................................... 6
30-Day
Need.......................................................................................................................... 7
Unforeseen
Repeat Applicants............................................................................................... 7
Unmet
Need........................................................................................................................... 7
Work
Requirements................................................................................................................ 7
Section
3 – Administrative Rules and Regulations....................................................................... 9
Section
3.1 – Confidentiality of Information................................................................................ 9
Release
of Information........................................................................................................... 9
Information
from Other Sources; Penalty............................................................................... 9
Misuse
of Information............................................................................................................ 9
Section
3.2 – Maintenance of Records......................................................................................... 9
Case
Records........................................................................................................................ 10
Retention
of Records............................................................................................................ 10
Section
4 – Application Procedure................................................................................................ 11
Section
4.1 – Right to Apply...................................................................................................... 11
Who
May Apply.................................................................................................................. 11
Application
Via Telephone................................................................................................... 11
Written
Application Upon Each Request.............................................................................. 11
Applications
Accepted; Posted Notice.................................................................................. 11
Section
4.2 – Application Interview........................................................................................... 11
Section
4.3 – Contents of the Application.................................................................................. 12
Section
4.4 – General Assistance Administrator’s Responsibilities at the Time
of the Application.................................................................................................................... 12
Application
Requirements.................................................................................................... 12
Eligibility
Requirements....................................................................................................... 13
Applicant
Rights................................................................................................................... 13
Reimbursement/Recovery..................................................................................................... 13
Section
4.5 – Responsibilities of the Applicant at the Time of Application................................ 13
Section
4.6 – Action on Applications......................................................................................... 14
Written
Decision...................................................................................................................... 14
Content.................................................................................................................................... 14
Section
4.7 – Withdrawal of an Application............................................................................... 15
Section
4.8 – Temporary Refusal to Accept Application............................................................ 15
Section
4.9 – Emergencies.......................................................................................................... 15
Disqualification....................................................................................................................... 16
Assistance
Prior to Verification............................................................................................... 16
Telephone
Applications........................................................................................................... 16
Limitation
on Emergency Assistance....................................................................................... 17
Section
4.10 – Residence ........................................................................................................... 18
Moving/Relocating
................................................................................................................. 18
Institutions
.............................................................................................................................. 18
Temporary
Housing ............................................................................................................... 18
Disputes.................................................................................................................................. 19
Section
5 – Eligibility Factors ....................................................................................................... 20
Section
5.1 – Initial Application................................................................................................. 20
Initial
Application.................................................................................................................... 20
Subsequent
Applicants............................................................................................................ 20
Section
5.2 – Eligibility for Categorical Assistance.................................................................... 20
Section
5.3 – Personal Property................................................................................................. 21
a)
Liquid Assets...................................................................................................................... 21
b)
Tangible Assets................................................................................................................... 21
c)
Automobile Ownership....................................................................................................... 21
d)
Insurance............................................................................................................................. 22
e)
Transfer of Property............................................................................................................ 22
Section
5.4 – Ownership of Real Estate..................................................................................... 22
a)
Principal Residence............................................................................................................. 22
b)
Other Property.................................................................................................................... 23
Section
5.5 – Work Requirement................................................................................................ 23
Employment;
Rehabilitation..................................................................................................... 23
Verification.............................................................................................................................. 24
Ineligibility.............................................................................................................................. 24
Ineligibility
Due to Job Quit or Discharge for Misconduct..................................................... 25
Just
Cause............................................................................................................................... 25
Applicant’s
Burden of Establishing Just Cause....................................................................... 25
Eligibility
Regained................................................................................................................. 25
Dependents.............................................................................................................................. 26
Exemptions.............................................................................................................................. 26
Section
5.6 – Municipal Work Program..................................................................................... 26
Consent................................................................................................................................... 26
Subtracting
Value of Workfare Performed from Client’s GA Debt........................................ 27
Limitations............................................................................................................................... 27
“Workfare First” Policy.......................................................................................................... 28
Work-Related
Expenses.......................................................................................................... 29
Disqualification....................................................................................................................... 29
Eligibility
Regained................................................................................................................. 29
Reports.................................................................................................................................... 30
Section
5.7 – Use of Resources.................................................................................................. 30
Minors...................................................................................................................................... 31
Mental
or Physical Disability.................................................................................................. 31
Written
Notice; Disqualification.............................................................................................. 31
Forfeiture
of Benefits.............................................................................................................. 32
Section
5.7 – Period of Ineligibility............................................................................................ 32
Work
Requirement.................................................................................................................. 32
Fraud....................................................................................................................................... 32
Section
6 – Determination of Eligibility........................................................................................ 33
Section
6.1 – Recognition of Dignity and Rights....................................................................... 33
Section
6.2 – Determination; Redetermination............................................................................ 33
Section
6.3 – Verification........................................................................................................... 33
Eligibility
of applicant; duration of eligibility........................................................................... 33
Applicant’s
responsibilities..................................................................................................... 33
Initial
Applicants..................................................................................................................... 34
Repeat
Applicants.................................................................................................................... 34
Unforeseen
Repeat Applicants................................................................................................ 34
Overseer’s
responsibilities...................................................................................................... 34
Redetermination
of eligibility................................................................................................... 35
Penalty
for Refusing to Release Information........................................................................... 35
Section
6.4 – Fraud.................................................................................................................... 35
Period
of Ineligibility............................................................................................................... 36
Right
to a Fair Hearing............................................................................................................ 36
Reimbursement........................................................................................................................ 36
Dependents.............................................................................................................................. 36
Section
6.5 – Period of Eligibility............................................................................................... 37
Section
6.6 – Determination of Need.......................................................................................... 37
Income
for Basic Necessities................................................................................................... 38
Use-of-Income
Requirements.................................................................................................. 38
Calculation
of Income and Expenses....................................................................................... 39
Consolidation
of Deficit.......................................................................................................... 39
Section
6.7 – Income.................................................................................................................. 40
Income
Standards.................................................................................................................... 40
Calculation
of Income.............................................................................................................. 40
Types
of Income...................................................................................................................... 40
a)
Earned income............................................................................................................... 40
b)
Income from Other Assistance or Social Services Programs........................................ 40
c)
Court-Ordered Support Payments................................................................................. 41
d)
Income from Other Sources.......................................................................................... 41
e)
Earnings of a Son or Daughter...................................................................................... 41
f)
Income from Household Members................................................................................ 42
g)
The Pooling or Non-Pooling of Income........................................................................ 42
h)
Lump Sum Income........................................................................................................ 42
Section
6.8 – Basic Necessities; Maximum Levels of Assistance.............................................. 43
Overall
Maximum Levels of Assistance.................................................................................. 43
Maximum
Levels of Assistance for Specific Basic Necessities............................................... 44
A) Food............................................................................................................................ 44
B) Housing....................................................................................................................... 45
Rental
Payments to Relatives....................................................................................... 45
Rental
Payments to Non-Relatives.............................................................................. 45
Mortgage
Payments..................................................................................................... 46
Liens............................................................................................................................ 47
Property
Taxes............................................................................................................ 47
Housing
Maximums.................................................................................................... 48
C) Utilities........................................................................................................................ 48
Electricity
Maximums for Households Without Electric Hot Water............................ 49
Electricity
Maximums for Households that Use Electrically Heated
Hot Water............................................................................................................... 49
Non-Electric
Utilities................................................................................................... 49
D) Fuel............................................................................................................................. 49
E) Personal Care and Household Supplies....................................................................... 49
F) Other Basic Necessities............................................................................................... 49
1)
Clothing.................................................................................................................. 50
2)
Medical................................................................................................................... 50
3)
Hospital Bills.......................................................................................................... 50
4)
Dental...................................................................................................................... 51
5)
Eye Care.................................................................................................................. 51
6)
Telephone Charge................................................................................................... 51
7)
Work-Related Expenses.......................................................................................... 52
8)
Travel Expenses...................................................................................................... 52
9)
Burials, Cremations................................................................................................. 52
10) Capital Improvements............................................................................................. 52
Section
6.9 – Burials; Cremations.............................................................................................. 53
Funeral
Director Must Give Timely Notice.......................................................................... 53
Application
for Assistance Shall be Calculated on Behalf of the Deceased.......................... 53
The
Financial Responsibility of Certain Family Members.................................................... 53
Consideration
of the Financial Responsibility of Family Members...................................... 53
Proration
of Familial Responsibility..................................................................................... 54
Ten
Days to Determine Eligibility........................................................................................ 54
The
Municipal Obligation to Pay When Legally Liable Relatives or Others
Can Contribute............................................................................................................... 54
Burial
Expenses.................................................................................................................... 55
Cremation
Expenses............................................................................................................. 55
Section
6.10 – Notice of Decision.............................................................................................. 55
Written
Decision................................................................................................................... 55
Contents............................................................................................................................... 55
Disbursement
of General Assistance.................................................................................... 55
Section
7 – The Fair Hearing......................................................................................................... 56
Section
7.1 – Right to a Fair Hearing......................................................................................... 56
Section
7.2 – Method of Obtaining a Fair Hearing..................................................................... 56
Written
Request.................................................................................................................... 56
Scheduling
the Fair Hearing................................................................................................. 56
Section
7.3 – The Fair Hearing Authority.................................................................................. 57
Section
7.4 – Fair Hearing Procedure......................................................................................... 57
Claimant’s
Failure to Appear................................................................................................ 58
Section
7.5 – The Fair Hearing Decision.................................................................................... 59
Section
8 – Recovery of Expenses ................................................................................................ 60
Recipients................................................................................................................................... 60
Recipients
Anticipating Workers’ Compensation Benefits......................................................... 60
Recipients
of SSI........................................................................................................................ 60
Relatives..................................................................................................................................... 60
Section
9 – Severability.................................................................................................................. 62
Appendixes
Appendix
A – GA Overall Maximums ............................................................................... A-1
Appendix
B – Food Maximums............................................................................................ B-1
Appendix
C – GA Housing Maximums.............................................................................. C-1
Appendix
D – Electric Utility Maximums........................................................................... D-1
Appendix
E – Heating Fuel................................................................................................... E-1
Appendix
F – Household & Personal Items........................................................................ F-1
Appendix
G –2005-2006 Mileage Rate................................................................................. G-1
Appendix
H – Funeral Maximums...................................................................................... H-1
Appendix
I – Definition of Misconduct (26 M.R.S. § 1043(23))......................................... I-1
SECTION
1. STATEMENT OF POLICY
The
Town of Chebeague Island administers a program of general assistance (GA)
available to all persons who are eligible to receive assistance in accordance
with the standards of eligibility as provided within this ordinance, State of
Maine Department of Health and Human Services (“DHHS”) GA policy and in 22
M.R.S. §§ 4301 et seq.
Every effort will be made to recognize the dignity of the
applicant while encouraging self-reliance. The program will strive to help eligible persons achieve
self-maintenance by promoting the work incentive. When possible, it will seek to alleviate needs other than
financial through rehabilitative, preventive and protective services. The general assistance program will
place no unreasonable restrictions on the personal rights of the applicant or
recipient, nor will there be any unlawful discrimination based on sex, age,
race, nationality, religion, sexual orientation or disability. The municipality is committed to
including qualified individuals with disabilities, in municipal services,
programs, and activities. As a
result, the municipality will promote a GA program that when viewed in its
entirety, is readily accessible to and usable by individuals with
disabilities. GA applicants with
physical or mental disabilities that require a reasonable accommodation in
order to access and/or utilize the municipal GA program are encouraged to
provide the municipality with advance notice regarding the accommodation
request.
The general assistance administrator will act promptly on
all applications for assistance and requests for fair hearings. GA
applicants will be provided information regarding their rights and
responsibilities under the GA program.
Within 24 hours of receiving an application, the administrator will
provide the applicant a written decision, whether or not assistance is granted,
that will state the specific reasons for the decision. The administrator will also provide the
applicant written notice that the applicant may appeal to the municipal fair
hearing authority if dissatisfied with the decision. When an applicant is
determined to be eligible, assistance appropriate to the need will be furnished
within 24 hours after the completed application is submitted except when the
administrator issues non-emergency assistance conditionally on the successful
completion of a workfare assignment (see section 5.6 of this ordinance).
The
administrator will maintain complete and accurate records pertaining to each
applicant and recipient. These records are confidential as a matter of
law (see 22 M.R.S. §4306).
The
administrator will post notice stating the day(s) and hours the administrator
will be available. The administrator, or other designated person/entity,
will be available to take applications in the event of an emergency at all
other times. A copy of this ordinance and Maine General Assistance law
will be readily available to any member of the public upon request.
Notice to this effect will be posted.
SECTION
2. DEFINITIONS
Section
2.1—Common Meaning of Words
Unless
otherwise apparent or defined, all words in this ordinance will have their
common meaning.
Section
2.2—Special Definitions
Applicant. A person who has submitted, either
directly or through an authorized representative, an application for general
assistance or who has, in an emergency, requested assistance without first
completing an application. In addition, all persons on whose behalf an
authorized application has been submitted or on whose behalf benefits have been
granted shall be considered applicants.
Application
Form. A standardized
form used by the general assistance administrator for the purpose of allowing a
person to apply for general assistance and confirming the fact that a person
has made application. The application form must be signed by the
applicant to be considered complete.
Basic
Necessities. Food,
clothing, shelter, fuel, electricity, non-elective essential medical services
as prescribed by a physician, nonprescription drugs, basic telephone service
where it is necessary for medical reasons, property taxes when a tax lien
placed on the property threatens the loss of the applicant’s place of
residence, and any other commodity or service determined essential by the
municipality.
“Basic
necessities” do not include:
· Phone bills
·
Cable or
satellite dish television
· Mail orders
· Vehicle payments
· Credit card debt
· Furniture
· Loan re-payments
· Cigarettes
· Alcohol
· Pet care costs
· Vacation costs
· Legal fees
· Late fees
· Key deposits
·
Security
deposits for rental property (except for those situations where no other
permanent lodging is available unless a security deposit is paid, and a waiver,
deferral or installment arrangement cannot be made between the landlord and
tenant to satisfy the need for the immediate payment of the security deposit or
payment in full) (22 M.R.S. § 4301(1)).
Case
Record. An
official file containing application forms; correspondence; narrative records
and all other communications pertaining to an applicant or recipient; written
decisions regarding eligibility including reasons for those decisions as well
as the types and amounts of assistance provided; and all records concerning an
applicant’s request for fair hearing and those fair hearing decisions.
Categorical
Assistance. All
state and federal income maintenance programs.
Claimant. A person who has requested a fair
hearing.
Deficit. An applicant’s deficit is the
appropriate overall maximum level of assistance for the household as provided
in section 6.8 of this ordinance less the household income as calculated
pursuant to section 6.7 of this ordinance, provided such a calculation yields a
positive number. If the household income is greater than the appropriate
overall maximum level of assistance, the household has no deficit.
Disabled
Person. A person
who is presently unable to work or maintain a home due to a physical or mental
disability that is verified by a physician or qualified mental health provider.
Dwelling
Unit. A building
or part thereof used for separate living quarters for one or more persons
living as a single housekeeping unit (22 M.R.S. § 4301(2)).
Eligible
Person. A person
who is qualified to receive general assistance from the municipality according
to the standards of eligibility set forth in this ordinance (22 M.R.S. §
4301(3)).
Emergency.
Any life
threatening situation or a situation beyond the control of the individual
which, if not alleviated immediately, could reasonably be expected to pose a
threat to the health or safety of a person. At the municipality’s option, a situation which is imminent
and which may result in undue hardship or unnecessary cost to the individual or
municipality if not resolved immediately. (22 M.R.S. §§ 4301(4), 4308(2),
4310).
General
Assistance Program.
A service administered by a municipality for the immediate aid of persons who
are unable to provide the basic necessities essential to maintain themselves or
their families. A general assistance program provides a specific amount
and type of aid for defined needs during a limited period of time and is not
intended to be a continuing “grant-in-aid” or “categorical” welfare
program. This definition shall not in any way lessen the responsibility
of each municipality to provide general assistance to a person each time that
the person is in need and is found to be otherwise eligible to receive general
assistance (22 M.R.S. § 4301(5)).
General
Assistance Administrator.
A municipal official designated to receive applications, make decisions
concerning an applicant’s right to receive assistance, and prepare records and
communications concerning assistance. He or she may be an elected
overseer or an authorized agent such as the town administrator, welfare
director, caseworker, or third-party administrator (see 22 M.R.S. § 4301(12)).
Household. “Household” means an individual or
a group of individuals who share a dwelling unit. When an applicant
shares a dwelling unit with one or more individuals, even when a
landlord-tenant relationship may exist between individuals residing in the
dwelling unit, eligible applicants may receive assistance for no more than their
pro rata share of the actual costs of the shared basic needs of that household
according to the maximum levels of assistance established in the municipal
ordinance. The income of household members not legally liable shall be
considered as available to the applicant only when there is a pooling of income
(22 M.R.S. § 4301(6)).
Income. “Income” means any form of income in
cash or in kind received by the household including:
· Net remuneration for services performed
· Cash received on either secured or
unsecured credit
· Payments received as an annuity,
retirement or disability benefits
· Veterans’ pensions and/or benefits
· Retirement accounts or benefits
· Workers’ compensation
· Unemployment benefits
· Federal and/or state tax returns
· Benefits under any state or federal categorical
assistance program such as, TANF, Supplemental Security Income, Social Security
and any other payments from governmental sources (unless specifically
prohibited by any law or regulation)
· Court ordered support payments, e.g.,
child support
· Income from pension or trust funds
· Household income from any other source,
including relatives or unrelated household members
· Student loans
·
Rental
income
The
following items shall not be considered as income or assets that must be
liquidated for the purposes of deriving income:
1) Real or personal
income-producing property, tools of trade, governmental entitlement
specifically treated as exempt assets by state or federal law;
2) Actual
work-related expenses, whether itemized or by standard deduction, such as taxes,
retirement fund contributions, union dues, transportation costs to and from
work, special equipment costs and child care expenses; or
3) Earned income of
children below the age of 18 years who are full-time students and who are not
working full time.
In
determining need, the period of time used as a basis for the calculation shall
be a 30-day period commencing on the date of the application. This
prospective calculation shall not disqualify an applicant who has exhausted
income to purchase basic necessities, provided that the income does not exceed
the income standards established by the municipality (22 M.R.S. § 4301(7)).
4) Certain public
benefit programs are specifically exempt from being counted as income for
purposes of GA. These programs
include:
·
Food Stamps
(7 U.S.C. § 2017(b))
·
Li-Heap (42
U.S.C. § 8624)
·
Family Development Accounts (22 M.R.S. § 3762)
·
Americorp VISTA program benefits (42 U.S.C. § 5044 (f))
·
Property tax rebates issued under the Maine Residents
Property Tax Program (AKA “Circuit breaker” Program) (36 M.R.S. § 6216)
·
Aspire Support Service Payments (10-144 CMR Chapter
323)
Initial
Applicants. A person who has not applied for
assistance in this or any other municipality are considered initial
applicants.
Just
Cause. A valid,
verifiable reason that hinders an individual from complying with one or more
conditions of eligibility or from attending a scheduled fair hearing (22 M.R.S.
§ 4301(8), 4316-A(5)).
Lump
Sum Payment. A one-time or typically nonrecurring sum
of money issued to an applicant or recipient. Lump sum payment includes, but is not limited to, retroactive
or settlement portions of social security benefits, workers' compensation
payments, unemployment benefits, disability income, veterans' benefits, severance
pay benefits, or money received from inheritances, lottery winnings, personal
injury awards, property damage claims or divorce settlements. A lump sum
payment includes only the amount of money available to the applicant after
payment of required deductions has been made from the gross lump sum payment. A
lump sum payment does not include conversion of a nonliquid resource to a
liquid resource if the liquid resource has been used or is intended to be used
to replace the converted resource or for other necessary expenses. (22 M.R.S. §
4301 (8-A)).
Material
Fact. A material
fact is a fact that necessarily has some bearing on the determination of an
applicant’s general assistance eligibility, and which would, if disclosed to
the administrator, have some determinable effect on the calculation of
eligibility or the issuance of a grant of assistance.
Maximum
Levels of Assistance.
The amount of financial assistance for a commodity or service as
established in section 6.8 of this ordinance or the actual cost of any such
basic necessity, whichever is less.
Misconduct. For purposes of the GA work
requirement (see 22 M.R.S.
§4316-A) misconduct shall have the same meaning as misconduct defined in 26 M.R.S.
§1043 (23). (See Appendix I of
this ordinance for the official definition of misconduct.)
Generally, employees are guilty of misconduct when the employee violates
his or her duties or obligations to the employer. Employees who engage in a pattern of irresponsible behavior
to the detriment of the employer’s interest may also be found guilty of
misconduct.
Municipality. Any city, town or plantation
administering a general assistance program.
Municipality
of Responsibility.
The municipality which is financially liable for the support of an
eligible person at the time of application (22 M.R.S. § 4301(9), 4307).
Need. The condition whereby a person’s
income, money, property, credit, assets or other resources available to provide
basic necessities for the individual and the individual’s family are less than
the maximum levels of assistance (22 M.R.S. §§ 4301(10), 4308).
Net
General Assistance Costs. Those
direct costs incurred by a municipality in providing assistance to eligible
persons according to standards established by the municipal officers.
These do not include the administrative expenses of the general assistance
program (22 M.R.S.§§ 4301(11), 4311).
Period
of Eligibility.
The time for which a person has been granted assistance. The period
of eligibility may vary depending on the type of assistance provided, however,
in no event shall this period extend beyond one month (22 M.R.S. § 4309(1)).
Pooling
of Income.
“Pooling of income” means the financial relationship among household
members who are not legally liable for mutual support in which there occurs any
commingling of funds or sharing of income or expenses. Municipalities may
by ordinance establish as a rebutable presumption that persons sharing the same
dwelling unit are pooling their income. Applicants who are requesting
that the determination of eligibility be calculated as though one or more
household members are not pooling their income have the burden of rebutting the
presumed pooling of income.
Real
Estate. Any land,
buildings, homes, mobile homes and any other things affixed to the land (22 M.R.S.
§ 4301(13)).
Recipient. A person who has applied for and
is currently receiving general assistance.
Repeat
Applicants. All applicants for general assistance
that are not initial applicants are repeat applicants. For purposes of this ordinance repeat and
subsequent shall have the same meaning.
Resident. A person who is physically present
in a municipality with the intention of remaining in that municipality in order
to maintain or establish a home and who has no other residence. A person
who applies for assistance in a municipality who is not a resident of that
municipality or any other municipality is the responsibility of the
municipality where the person first applies. That municipality must take an
application and grant assistance to the applicant if he/she is eligible, until
he/she establishes a new residence in another municipality (22 M.R.S. § 4307).
Resources. Resources include any program,
service, or other sources of support which are an alternative to or supplement
for general assistance. There are two kinds of resources: “available” and
“potential”. Potential resources are programs, services, non‑liquid
assets, or trusts that typically require people to apply in writing and/or wait
a period of time before eligibility is determined or the potential income is
released.
Potential
resources include but are not limited to any state or federal assistance
program, employment benefits, governmental or private pension program,
available trust funds, support from legally liable relatives, child support
payments, and jointly held resources where the applicant or recipient share may
be available to the individual (22 M.R.S. § 4317). Potential
resources include the TANF (previously known as AFDC) program, Food Stamps,
fuel assistance (HEAP), subsidized housing, and similar programs.
Available
resources include resources which are immediately available to the applicant or
which can be conveniently secured by the applicant without delay, such as cash
on hand or in bank accounts, assets for which there is an immediate and
available market, or support from relatives which is being made available at
the time of application and for which the applicant does not have to take any
unreasonable steps to secure (e.g., relocation beyond the immediate region). At the discretion of the GA
administrator a necessary minimum balance required by a financial institution
in order to obtain free checking or in order to maintain the account shall not
be considered an available resource.
The
municipal GA administrator reserves the right to inform GA clients of services,
commodities or facilities made available by private organizations or
charities. Although GA
applicants/recipients may be informed of the existence of a charitable resource
and/or organization, GA eligibility shall not be based or conditioned on the
use of a private charitable resource(s).
30-Day
Need. An
applicant’s 30-day need is the sum of the household’s prospective 30-day costs,
from the date of application, for the various basic necessities. For the
purpose of this calculation, the 30-day cost for any basic need shall be the
household’s actual 30-day cost for the basic necessity or the maximum 30-day
cost for the basic necessity as established by this ordinance, whichever is
less.
Unforeseen
Repeat Applicants. Are repeat applicants who have not
applied for assistance within the last twelve months and who have been
regularly employed or receiving support from a public benefit or private source
and who have unexpectedly become unemployed through no fault of their own or
whose benefits (e.g., through an available resource) have ceased through no
fault of their own.
Unmet
Need. An
applicant’s unmet need is the household’s 30-day need as established by section
6.6 of the ordinance less the household income as calculated pursuant to
section 6.7 of this ordinance, provided such a calculation yields a positive
number. If the household income is greater than the household’s 30-day need,
the household does not have an unmet need.
Work
Requirements. Work
requirements are those obligations the municipal administrator places on
applicants for general assistance as directed and/or authorized by 22 M.R.S. §
4316-A to the extent such obligations ensure a continuing potential eligibility
for general assistance when complied with, result in ineligibility when
violated, and are not merely optional, discretionary, or advisory. Work
requirements include registering for work, looking for work in good faith,
accepting all suitable job offers, maintaining employment, performing workfare,
and participating in training, educational, or rehabilitation programs that
will assist the participant in securing employment.
SECTION
3. ADMINISTRATIVE RULES AND REGULATIONS
The
following are rules and regulations for the administration of general
assistance.
Section
3.1—Confidentiality of Information
Case
records and all other information relating to an applicant or recipient of
general assistance are confidential and will not be disclosed to the general
public, unless the applicant or recipient states in writing what information is
to be released (22 M.R.S. § 4306).
Release
of Information.
Applicants, recipients and their legal representatives have the right to
review their case records. No record will be released to a third party, however,
unless the administrator receives a consent form signed by the applicant
expressly authorizing the release of his or her records to the specified
parties. Whenever the administrator releases any information, he/she will
make a notation in the applicant’s file stating to whom the record was released
and the date. The administrator may charge a reasonable fee for the
reproduction of any records when appropriate.
Information
from Other Sources; Penalty.
Information furnished to the municipality by the Department of Health and
Human Services or any other agency or institution pursuant to 22 M.R.S. § 4314,
is confidential. The general assistance administrator will also comply
with laws relating to the confidentiality of vital statistic records such as those
concerning birth, marriage and death. (22 M.R.S. § 2706).
Any
representative of a financial institution (except national banks) or any
employer of a general assistance applicant who refuses to provide necessary
information to the administrator in order to verify an applicant’s eligibility
must state in writing the reason for the refusal. Any such person who
refuses to provide information, without just cause, may be subject to a civil
penalty of not less than $25 nor more than $100. Any person, including
the applicant, who knowingly and willfully makes a false representation of a
material fact to the administrator is committing a Class E crime (22 M.R.S. §§
4314, 4315).
Misuse
of Information.
Misuse of any information relating to an applicant or recipient is a punishable
offense (22 M.R.S. § 42(2)).
Section
3.2—Maintenance of Records
The
general assistance administrator will keep complete and accurate general
assistance records (22 M.R.S. § 4306). These records are necessary
to:
a) provide a valid
basis of accounting for municipal expenditures;
b) document and
support decisions concerning an applicant or recipient; and
c) ensure the
availability of all relevant information in the event of a fair hearing or
judicial review of a decision by the general assistance administrator.
Case
Records. The
administrator will establish and maintain a separate case record, either in
paper format or digital format for each applicant or recipient. Each case
record will include at least:
· household applications
· budget sheets
· information concerning the types and
amounts of assistance provided
· narrative statements describing the
nature of the emergency situation whenever general assistance is granted in
amounts greater than the applicant’s mathematical eligibility (i.e., deficit or
unmet need, whichever is less)
· written decisions
· requests for fair hearings and the fair
hearing authority decisions
· workfare participation records
· repayments to the municipality
· narrative writings documenting the need
for general assistance, the results of home visits, collateral information,
referrals, changes in status
· client authorization(s) for the release
of GA information and/or reason(s) for the release of confidential information
· adjustments in aid, and suspension or termination
of eligibility
· physician’s documentation
· Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
interim assistance reimbursement authorization forms
· vendor forms
Case records will not include information
or material that is irrelevant to either the applicant’s or recipient’s
application or the administrator’s decisions.
Retention
of Records.
General assistance records shall be retained for a minimum of three full
years. The three year period shall coincide with the State’s fiscal year
which begins July 1 and ends on the following June 30. Records may be
destroyed after three years by one of the two preferred methods of destruction
for confidential records, i.e., supervised shredding, burning or appropriate
digital deletion/destruction process.
In the event a client’s records contain SSI reimbursement forms, the
client’s records should be maintained so that the municipality may seek
reimbursement.
SECTION
4. APPLICATION PROCEDURE
Section
4.1—Right to Apply
Who
May Apply. Anyone may apply for
general assistance. The head of the family, any other responsible
household member, or an authorized representative must apply in person, except
in special emergency situations as provided in section 4.9 of this ordinance or
except when the applicant is a resident of an emergency shelter and the
municipality has made an agreement with that emergency shelter to presume
shelter residents to be eligible for general assistance (22 M.R.S.
§4304(3)). In such cases, the administrator may require a representative
to present a signed statement documenting that he/she is in fact authorized to
apply for general assistance on behalf of the named applicant. The
applicant or representative must complete a written application and any other
required forms so that the administrator can determine eligibility (22 M.R.S. §§
4305, 4308). With notice, all members of the household receiving general
assistance may be required to physically present themselves to the
administrator.
Application
Via Telephone.
When a person has an emergency but is unable to apply in person due to illness,
disability, lack of child care, lack of transportation or other good cause, and
he/she cannot send an authorized representative, the administrator will accept
an application by telephone. The telephone application process will
include the administrator receiving written verification by mail and visiting
the applicant’s home with his or her permission (22 M.R.S. § 4304).
Written
Application Upon Each Request.
Each request for assistance will be administered in accordance with these
guidelines. The administrator will make an independent determination of
eligibility for general assistance each time a person applies (22 M.R.S. §§
4308, 4309).
Applications
Accepted; Posted Notice.
Application forms will be available during regular business hours at the
municipal office and when the general assistance administrator is conducting
interviews with applicants. Notice will be posted stating when and where
people may apply for assistance and the name of the administrator available to
take emergency applications at all other times. In addition, the posted
notice shall include the fact that the municipality must issue a written
decision on all applications within 24 hours, and the DHHS toll-free
telephone numbers for reporting alleged violations or complaints.
Completed applications will be accepted and interviews given only during the
regular hours established and posted by the administrator. In an
emergency, however, the administrator or his or her designee will be available
to accept applications for assistance whenever necessary (22 M.R.S. § 4304).
Section
4.2—Application Interview
Except
when it is impractical, the general assistance administrator will interview
each applicant personally before making a decision. The interview will be
conducted in private, although the applicant may be accompanied by a legal
representative, friend or family member.
Section
4.3—Contents of the Application
At
a minimum, the application will contain the following mandatory information:
a) applicant’s name, address, date of birth,
Social Security number or appropriate United States Customs and Immigration
Services (USCIS) documentation, and phone number;
b) names, date(s) of birth, and Social
Security number(s) or appropriate USCIS documentation of other household
members for whom the applicant is seeking assistance;
c) total number of individuals living with
the applicant;
d) employment and employability information;
e) all household income, resources, assets,
and property;
f) household expenses;
g) types of assistance being requested;
h) penalty for false representation;
i) applicant’s permission to verify
information;
j) signature of applicant and date.
In
the event an initial applicant is unable to provide identification records
(e.g., Social Security card/number) because the record may have been lost,
stolen or misplaced, the initial applicant may be provided a reasonable amount
of time, e.g., five working days, in order to obtain copies of identification
records. Provided the initial
applicant makes a good faith effort to obtain the item/record sought, GA
required to cure an immediate and/or emergency need shall not be withheld. In such cases the municipality may
elect to provide only a prorated amount of GA, e.g., five day’s worth, while
the applicant proceeds to obtain the required information.
Section
4.4—General Assistance Administrator’s Responsibilities at the Time
of the Application
The
administrator will make every effort to inform all applicants of their rights
and responsibilities as well as the general program requirements associated
with applying for and receiving general assistance, including application
requirements, eligibility guidelines, applicant rights, and applicant
reimbursement obligations.
Application
Requirements. The administrator will help the
applicant fill out the application form as described in the preceding section.
The administrator will inform the applicant of any other information or
documentation that the applicant will have to provide in order for the
administrator to evaluate the applicant’s eligibility for assistance. The
administrator will fully explain the purpose of any release of information form
or reimbursement agreement before seeking to obtain the applicant’s signature
or written authorization.
Eligibility
Requirements. The
administrator will inform, either verbally or in writing, the applicant of the
eligibility requirements of the program, including:
·
the income
standard of need;
·
the
applicant’s ongoing use-of-income, work-related, and resource-related
responsibilities, as described in the section immediately below;
·
the
financial reduction in assistance that is the consequence of spending household
income on non-basic necessities; and
·
the
disqualification penalties associated with committing fraud, failing to perform
work-related assignments without just cause, or failing to make a good faith
effort to secure potential resources when the requirement to attempt to obtain
those resources has been explained to the applicant in writing.
Applicant Rights. The administrator will inform all
applicants of their rights to:
·
review the
municipal General Assistance ordinance and Maine General Assistance law;
·
apply for
assistance;
·
receive a
written decision concerning eligibility within 24 hours of applying for
assistance;
·
confidentiality;
·
contact the
DHHS;
·
challenge
the administrator’s decision by requesting a fair hearing.
Reimbursement/Recovery. The administrator will inform the
applicant that he/she must reimburse the municipality for the amount of general
assistance he/she has been granted in the event of a subsequent ability to
pay. The municipality may also, as appropriate, contact the client’s
legal representative to inform him or her of the client’s obligation to repay the
municipality under the GA program.
In addition to seeking repayment from a recipient, the municipality also
may recover the amount of assistance granted to a recipient during the previous
12 months from any relative legally liable for the applicant’s support
(spouses, parents of persons under the age of 25, see Article VIII, “Recovery
of Expenses”) (22 M.R.S. §§ 4318, 4319). Whenever applicable, the
administrator will explain the various liens a municipality may place against a
recipient’s real or personal property, such as the mortgage or capital
improvement lien, the Workers’ Compensation lump sum payment lien, or the SSI
“interim assistance agreement” lien, as these liens are described in Article
VIII, “Recovery of Expenses”.
Section
4.5—Responsibilities of the Applicant at the Time of Application
The
applicant has the responsibility at the time of each application to provide
accurate, complete and current household information and verifiable
documentation concerning:
·
Income
·
Resources
·
Assets
·
Employment
·
Use of
income
·
Names and
addresses of any relatives legally liable for the applicant’s support
·
Any change
in this information from a previous application that would affect household
eligibility (22 M.R.S. §4309).
In
addition, the applicant must accurately report and provide verifiable
documentation that shows the applicant:
a) has remained
employed, if previously employed, and not quit work without just cause or been
discharged from employment for misconduct;
b) has been
seeking employment, if previously unemployed or employed on a part-time basis,
has accepted any suitable offer of employment, and has satisfactorily performed
all workfare assignments or had just cause not to perform those assignments;
c) has made use
of all available and potential resources when directed in writing to such a
program by the administrator, including, but not limited to, other government
benefit programs or the assistance of liable relatives of sufficient means; and
d) has
participated in any training, retraining, educational or rehabilitative program
when appropriate and when directed in writing to such a program by the
administrator, in order to diminish the applicant’s need for general assistance
(22 M.R.S. § §4316-A, 4317).
Section
4.6—Action on Applications
Written
Decision. The
general assistance administrator will give a written decision to the applicant
concerning his or her eligibility within 24 hours after the applicant
submits a written application. Assistance will be furnished to eligible applicants
within that period except when the municipality is permitted by law (and
pursuant to section 5.6 of this ordinance) to issue assistance conditionally on
the successful completion of a workfare assignment (22 M.R.S. §§ 4305, 4316-A,
4321). A written decision will be given each time a person
applies, whether assistance is granted, denied, reduced or terminated.
Content. The written decision will contain
the following information:
a) the type and amount of aid the applicant
is being granted or the applicant’s ineligibility;
b) the period of eligibility if the
applicant is eligible for assistance;
c) the specific reasons for the decision;
d) the applicant’s right to a fair hearing;
and
e) the applicant’s right to notify the DHHS
if he/she believes the municipality has acted illegally (22 M.R.S. §
4321).
Section
4.7—Withdrawal of an Application
An
application is considered withdrawn if:
a) the applicant requests in writing that
his or her application be withdrawn; or
b) the applicant refuses to complete
or sign the application or any other form needed by the general assistance
administrator.
Section
4.8—Temporary Refusal to Accept Application
Under
special circumstances, the general assistance administrator may temporarily
refuse to accept applications. Such circumstances may include, but are not
limited to, the following:
a) When
the applicant’s conduct is abusive, disruptive, or harassing, or when the
applicant is under the influence of drugs or alcohol. In these
situations, the applicant will be asked to leave, and if the applicant refuses
to leave, the police may be summoned. The applicant will be informed that
an application will only be accepted when his or her conduct is under control.
b) If
the administrator believes that an applicant’s behavior presents a threat to
the health or safety of the public or to a municipal employee, or if such
behavior is violent, or if an applicant has engaged in abusive, disruptive or
harassing behavior and has been required to leave on more than one occasion,
then the applicant may be required to designate a third party to apply for
assistance on his or her behalf and the applicant may be prohibited from
entering the municipal building;
c) When
a third person applies for assistance on behalf of the applicant that person
may be required to provide written verification that he/she has been duly
authorized to act as a representative for the applicant (22 M.R.S. § 4308).
Section
4.9—Emergencies
An
emergency is considered to be any life threatening situation or a situation
beyond the control of the applicant which if not alleviated immediately could
reasonably be expected to pose a threat to the health or safety of the
applicant or a member of the household (22 M.R.S. § 4301(4)). Although
they may be considered otherwise ineligible to receive general assistance,
persons who apply for assistance to alleviate an emergency may be granted
assistance, except as provided below, if they do not have sufficient income and
resources to meet an actual emergency need and have not had sufficient income
and resources to avert the emergency (22 M.R.S. § 4308).
A
municipality may provide emergency assistance when the municipality determines
that an emergency is imminent and that failure to provide assistance may result
in undue hardship and unnecessary costs to either the client or the
municipality.
Disqualification. A person who is currently
disqualified from receiving General Assistance due to a violation of sections
5.5, 5.6, 5.7, 5.8 or 6.4 of this ordinance is ineligible to receive emergency
assistance (22 M.R.S. § 4308(2)(A)). However, dependents of a
disqualified person may be eligible for assistance. For the purposes of
this section, “dependents” are defined as: 1) a dependent minor child; 2) an
elderly, ill or disabled person; or 3) a person whose presence is required to
provide care for any child under the age of 6 years or any ill or disabled
member of the household (22 M.R.S. § 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 as though the household is comprised of the dependents only,
except that all household income will be considered available to them.
Assistance
Prior to Verification.
Whenever an applicant informs the administrator that he/she needs assistance
immediately, the administrator will grant, pending verification, the assistance
within 24 hours, provided that:
a) after
interviewing the applicant the administrator has determined that the applicant
will probably be eligible for assistance after a verification of information is
completed; and
b) the
applicant submits documentation when possible, to verify his or her need. The
administrator may contact at least one other person to confirm the applicant’s
statements about needing emergency assistance. No further assistance will
be authorized until the applicant’s eligibility is confirmed (22 M.R.S. §
4310).
Telephone
Applications. If a
person has an emergency need and cannot apply in person due to illness,
disability, lack of transportation, or other good cause, and if there is no
authorized representative who can apply on behalf of the applicant, the
administrator shall accept an application over the telephone (22 M.R.S. § 4304).
The
administrator will not grant any assistance as the result of a telephone
application if the applicant refuses to allow the administrator to verify the
information either by visiting his or her home or by mail and the administrator
cannot determine his or her eligibility through any other means.
Limitation
on Emergency Assistance.
Applicants are not automatically eligible for emergency assistance.
If applicants had income which could have been used to prevent all or part of
an emergency, but they spent that income on items which are not basic
necessities, they will not be eligible to receive general assistance to replace
the misspent money (22 M.R.S. §§ 4308(2) & 4315‑A).
All
applicants have the responsibility to provide the administrator with verifiable
documentation demonstrating that the applicant did not have sufficient income
to avert the emergency situation. According to the following criteria,
the administrator may limit emergency assistance to cover only the difference
between the amount of money necessary for the household to avoid the emergency
and the amount of income available to the household during the applicable time
period.
a) The
applicable time period shall be the 30 days preceding the application for
emergency assistance, except in those cases where the emergency was created by
a negative account balance for a commodity or service (such as rent, mortgage
or utility payments), and the negative account balance was created over a
longer period of time. In such cases, the applicable time period shall be
the consecutive length of time the account balance has been in the negative.
b) The
administrator shall seek from the applicant all information pertinent to the
applicant’s ability to provide for his or her basic necessities for the
applicable time period, including evidence of all income and resources received
over that period of time.
c) The
administrator shall calculate all costs for the household’s basic necessities
during the applicable time period, per month, in accordance with the maximum
levels established by this ordinance for the specific basic necessity or the
actual monthly cost, whichever is less, including all costs associated with
averting the particular emergency situation for which the applicant is seeking
assistance.
d) From
the total household costs for basic necessities during the applicable time
period, the administrator shall subtract the total income and lump sum payments
available to the household for the applicable time period as well as the total
general assistance actually received during the applicable time period.
e) The administrator may restrict the issuance of emergency
assistance to the difference yielded by the computation in subsection (d), even
when such a grant will not totally alleviate the emergency situation.
f) The administrator may waive this limitation on emergency
assistance in life threatening situations or for initial applicants; that is,
persons who have never before applied for general assistance.
g) Nothing in these criteria may be construed as
prohibiting a municipality from electing to alleviate an emergency situation in
the most cost-effective manner available, provided such a determination of
eligibility for emergency assistance is in conformance with general assistance
law.
Section
4.10—Residence
The
administrator shall provide general assistance to all eligible persons applying
for assistance who are residents of this municipality. A resident is a
person who has no other residence and is physically present in this
municipality and who intends to remain here and establish a household.
The
municipality also recognizes its responsibility to provide assistance to
eligible persons who apply here and who are not residents of this municipality
or any other municipality. If a person who is not a resident of any
municipality applies in this municipality first, the administrator will
determine his or her eligibility and, if eligible, will grant assistance until
he/she establishes a residence in another municipality (22 M.R.S. § 4307).
Moving/Relocating. The municipality will not consider
moving or transporting an applicant or recipient into another municipality
unless the person requests assistance to relocate to another
municipality. If the administrator determines the applicant is eligible
and grants financial assistance to help with the requested relocation, this
municipality will be responsible for providing assistance to the applicant for
30 days after he/she moves provided the recipient remains eligible.
Institutions. If a resident of this municipality
enters an institution located in another municipality (such as a group home,
shelter, rehabilitation center, nursing home, or hospital) and requests
assistance while at the institution, he/she will be the responsibility of this
municipality for up to 6 months after he/she enters the institution if the
conditions of 22 M.R.S. § 4307 and §4313 are met. The municipality
thereafter retains responsibility for an applicant in an institution only if
the applicant has maintained a home in this municipality to which he/she
intends to return. The municipality also recognizes its responsibility
for applicants residing in an institution in this municipality if such an
applicant had no residence prior to entering the institution (22 M.R.S. §
4307(4)).
Temporary
Housing.
Hotels/motels and similar places of temporary lodging are considered
institutions (-above)
if the municipality grants financial assistance for, makes arrangements for, or
advises or encourages an applicant to stay in temporary lodging.
Note: Municipalities which illegally deny
housing assistance and, as a result of the denial, the applicant stays in
temporary lodging are responsible for the applicant for up to 6 months and may
be subject to other penalties (22 M.R.S. § 4307(4)).
Disputes. When the administrator believes
that an applicant is a resident of another municipality but that municipality
disputes its responsibility the administrator will notify the DHHS in Augusta
(287‑3654 or 1-800-442-6003). If the applicant applies in this municipality
first, the administrator will determine his or her eligibility and, if
eligible, will grant assistance until the DHHS has concluded which municipality
is responsible for providing assistance. If another municipality was
responsible, the DHHS will recover the amount due from the other municipality. (22 M.R.S. §§ 4307(5),
4307(6)).
SECTION
5. ELIGIBILITY FACTORS
A
person will be eligible for general assistance if he/she is in need and has
complied with the eligibility requirements set forth below.
Section
5.1—Initial Application
Initial
Application. For
initial applicants, except as provided immediately below, need will be the sole
condition of eligibility. The exception to this general rule, as provided
by law, applies to all applicants, including initial applicants, who are
disqualified for a defined period for quitting employment without just cause or
for being discharged from employment for misconduct (22 M.R.S. § 1043 (23)) (see
section 5.5 of this ordinance).
An initial applicant is a person who has never before applied for general
assistance in any municipality in Maine (22 M.R.S. § 4308(1)).
“Need”
means that the applicant’s income (including prorated income, where
applicable), property, credit, assets or other resources are less than the
overall maximum level of assistance contained in section 6.8 of this ordinance
or the applicant’s 30-day need, whichever is less, and he/she does not have
adequate income or other resources available to provide basic necessities.
Subsequent
Applicants. Persons
who are not initial applicants are repeat applicants. Repeat applicants
are people who have applied for general assistance at any time in the past.
Repeat applicants are also people on whose behalf a general assistance
application was made at any time in the past, provided that at such a time the
applicant was not a dependent minor in the household. For repeat
applicants to be eligible for general assistance, they must be in need and
meet all other eligibility requirements. The eligibility of repeat applicants
may also be adversely affected to the extent they have not used their income
and resources to secure basic necessities.
Section
5.2—Eligibility for Categorical Assistance
Receipt
of categorical assistance will not disqualify a person from receiving general
assistance if the applicant is otherwise eligible. Benefits received from
other assistance programs will be considered as income when determining need,
with the exception of Food Stamps, which will not be counted as income or resources
or otherwise taken into consideration when determining need (7 U.S.C. § 2017
(b)).
In
addition, any fuel assistance (HEAP/ECIP) received by an applicant will not be
considered as income; that is, the administrator will always compute the
heating needs of an applicant who has received HEAP or ECIP as if that
applicant paid all costs associated with his or her fuel needs (42 U.S.C.
§8624(f)). The calculation of general assistance for heating energy needs
when an applicant has received HEAP or ECIP shall be accomplished in accordance
with subsection (c) under “Types of Income” at section 6.7 of this ordinance.
Applicants
or recipients must apply for other program benefits within 7 days after being
advised in writing to do so by the general assistance administrator.
Persons who, without just cause, make no good faith effort to obtain a
potential resource will be disqualified from receiving assistance until they
make a good faith effort to obtain the benefit (22 M.R.S. § 4317).
Section
5.3—Personal Property
a) Liquid
Assets. No person
owning assets easily convertible into cash, including but not limited to, bank
deposits, stocks, bonds, certificates of deposit, retirement accounts, life
insurance policies and other marketable security, will be eligible for general
assistance unless and until he or she uses these assets to meet his or her
basic needs, and thereby exhausts them.
At
the discretion of the GA administrator, liquid assets do not mean a reasonable
minimum balance necessary for obtaining free checking. Although one checking account per
household may be allowed, any monies over the minimum required to obtain free
checking are to be considered available liquid assets.
b) Tangible
Assets. No person
owning or possessing personal property, such as but not limited to: a motor
vehicle, or a boat, trailer, recreation vehicle or other assets that are
convertible into cash and are non-essential to the maintenance of the
applicant’s household, will be eligible for general assistance. Exceptions may
be made when a person is making an initial application or is an unforeseeable
repeat applicant as defined in Section 2.2 or when reasonable efforts to
convert assets to cash at fair market value are unsuccessful.
Tools of a
trade, livestock, farm equipment and other equipment used for the production of
income are exempt from the above category and are not considered available
assets.
c) Automobile
Ownership.
Ownership of one automobile per household will not make a person ineligible for
assistance if such vehicle is essential for transportation to employment or for
seeking employment, obtaining medical care, rehabilitation or training
facilities, or for any other reason the GA administrator determines reasonable
for the maintenance of the applicant’s household. Recipients of general
assistance who own an automobile with a market value greater than $8000 may be
required, with written, 7-day notice, to make a good faith effort to trade that
automobile for an automobile with a market value of less than $8000. Any
income received by the applicant by virtue of such a trade down must be used
for his or her basic necessities. Failure to liquidate or trade down the excess
value of any automobile asset can result in disqualification (22 M.R.S. §
4317).
The municipality will neither pay nor
consider as necessary any car payment or vehicle maintenance cost including
insurance for which the applicant is responsible. However, provided the
vehicle value is $8000 or less and the applicant is utilizing the
vehicle for any of the above mentioned “essential” reasons, the municipality in
its discretion may choose to not consider reasonable car payments, reasonable
car insurance and reasonable associated costs of maintenance as “misspent”
income. General assistance for
travel-related needs shall be computed in accordance with section 6.8(F)(7),
(8) “Work Related/Travel Expenses.”
d) Insurance. Insurance that is available to an
applicant on a non-contributory basis or that is required as a condition of
employment will not be a factor in determining eligibility for general
assistance. Life insurance with a cash surrender value may, at the
discretion of the GA administrator, be considered as a tangible asset.
e) Transfer of Property. Applicants who transfer assets for
less than fair market value to someone else solely for the purpose of
establishing eligibility for general assistance will not be granted general
assistance to replace the uncompensated value of the transferred asset.
Assistance will be denied within a 120-day limit up to the uncompensated value
of the asset which was transferred unless the transfer of asset is fraudulently
misrepresented, in which case a 120-day disqualification will issue.
There will be a presumption that the applicant transferred his or her assets in
order to be eligible for general assistance whenever property is sold for less
than the fair market value or when the transfer occurred within 30 days prior
to applying for general assistance unless the applicant can demonstrate the
existence of a good faith transaction.
Section
5.4—Ownership of Real Estate
a) Principal
Residence. For
purposes of General Assistance solely, the applicant’s principal residence,
including any adjoining land, is considered an exempt resource, even if
temporarily unoccupied because of employment, job training, education, illness
or disaster, provided there is demonstrated an intent to return. If the
applicant owns land in excess of the minimum lot size for the zone or district
in which the home is located, then that land may be considered a potential
resource if:
1. The
applicant has received General Assistance for the last 120 consecutive days;
and
2. The
applicant has the legal right to sell the land (e.g., any mortgagee will
release any mortgage, any co-owners agree to the sale, zoning or other land use
laws do not render the sale illegal or impracticable); and
3. The
applicant has the financial capability to put the land into a marketable
condition (e.g., the applicant can pay for any necessary surveys); and
4. The land
is not utilized for the maintenance and/or support of the household; and
5. A
knowledgeable source (e.g., a realtor) indicates that the land in question can
be sold at fair market value, for an amount which will aid the applicant’s
financial rehabilitation; and
6. No other
circumstances exist which cause any sale to be unduly burdensome or
inequitable.
If the above
conditions are met, then the administrator may condition the receipt of future
assistance on the applicant’s good faith efforts to sell, or render saleable,
land which could be used to provide necessary support for the applicant (e.g.,
the applicant owns 100 “excess” acres. Sale of 10 of the acres would
provide for the necessary support and therefore not all the land need be sold
at the present time.) Assistance shall not be denied during the time that
the applicant is making a good faith effort to sell or render saleable the land
in question.
Once the
applicant ceases to receive assistance the obligations under this section shall
also cease.
b) Other
Property. If the
applicant or dependents own real property other than that occupied as the
principal residence, continued eligibility will depend on the applicant making
a reasonable effort to:
1. Dispose
of the property at fair market value in order to convert the property into cash
which can be applied toward meeting present need; or
2. Obtain a
loan against such property which may be used to meet present need.
Applicants who transfer their excess property to a third party in order to
become eligible for general assistance will be ineligible.
If
an applicant is granted assistance in the form of a mortgage payment or capital
improvement payment, the municipality may claim a lien against the property.
The lien shall not be enforceable until the time of sale of the property or
upon the death of the recipient (see also section 6.8 of this ordinance) (22 M.R.S. § 4320).
Section
5.5—Work Requirement
All
general assistance recipients are required to register for work, look for work,
work to the extent of available employment, and otherwise fulfill the work
requirements, unless the applicant is exempt from such requirements as provided
below.
Employment;
Rehabilitation.
All unemployed applicants and members of their households who are 16
years of age or older and who are not attending a full-time primary or
secondary school intended to lead to a high school diploma will be required to
accept any suitable job offer and/or meet with job counselors, attend employment
workshops and rehabilitative services, except as provided below (see
“Exemptions”).
Applicants must demonstrate to the administrator that they are available
for work and are actively seeking employment.
A
“suitable job” means any job, which the applicant is mentally and physically
able to perform. “Available for work” means that applicants must make
themselves available for work during normal business hours prevailing in the
area, and show that no circumstance exists which would prevent them from
complying with the work requirement.
Verification. Unemployed applicants or
applicants employed on a part-time basis will be required to provide verifiable
documentation of their pursuit of employment at the time of each
application. At a minimum, such documentation shall consist of a list of
the employers contacted, the date and time of the application contact, and the
name of the employer representative contacted. “Pursuit of employment”
means actually submitting a written application or applying for a job in person
when reasonable, or submitting a written application or letter of inquiry to
employers.
For
the duration of any repeat applicant’s period of unemployment or partial
employment, the administrator will establish the number of employers per week
to whom each non-exempt applicant shall be required to apply in order to
fulfill his or her work search requirements. The number of weekly employer
contacts required by the administrator shall be reasonably related to the
number of potential employers in the region and the number of hours in the week
the applicant has available for work search activities after considering all
time the applicant must devote to existing employment obligations, workfare
obligations, and required classroom or on-site participation in job training,
educational, or rehabilitation programs. Fulfillment of these requirements will
not be expected at the time of the initial application, but will be a condition
of eligibility for subsequent assistance.
Ineligibility. After being granted assistance at
the time of initial application, applicants will be considered ineligible for
further assistance for 120 days if they, without just cause:
a) refuse to register for employment
with the Maine Job Service;
b) refuse
to search diligently for employment when the search is reasonable and
appropriate; recipients who unreasonably seek work at the same places
repeatedly will not be considered to be performing a diligent work search and
will be disqualified;
c) refuse
to accept a suitable job offer;
d) refuse
to participate in an assigned training, education or rehabilitation program
that would assist the applicant in securing employment;
e) fail
to be available for work; or
f) refuse
to participate or participate in a substandard manner in the municipal work
program (see section 5.6).
Ineligibility
Due to Job Quit or Discharge for Misconduct. No applicant, whether an initial or repeat applicant,
who has quit his or her full-time or part-time job without just cause or who
has been discharged from employment for misconduct (see Appendix I, 26 M.R.S.
§ 1043 (23) for the definition)
will be eligible to receive general assistance of any kind for a 120-day period
from the date of separation from employment (22 M.R.S. § § 4301(8),
4316-A (1-A)).
Just Cause. Applicants will be ineligible for
assistance for 120 days if they refuse to comply with the work requirements of
this section without just cause. With respect to any work requirement,
just cause will be considered to exist when there is reasonable and verifiable
evidence that:
a) the applicant
has a physical or mental illness or disability which prevents him/her from
working;
b) the work assignment pays
below minimum wages;
c) the
applicant was subject to sexual harassment;
d) the
applicant is physically or mentally unable to perform required job tasks, or to
meet piece work standards;
e) the
applicant has no means of transportation to or from work or a training or
rehabilitation program;
f) the
applicant is unable to arrange for necessary child care or care of ill or
disabled family members; or
g) any
reason found to be good cause by the Maine Department of Labor, or any other
verifiable reason the administrator considers reasonable and appropriate will
be accepted as just cause. (22 M.R.S. § 4316-A(5)).
Applicant’s
Burden of Establishing Just Cause.
If the administrator finds that the applicant has violated a work-related
rule without just cause, it shall be the responsibility of the applicant to
establish the presence of just cause (22 M.R.S. § 4316-A).
Eligibility
Regained. Persons
who are disqualified for 120 days because they violated a work requirement may
regain their eligibility if and only when they become employed or otherwise
satisfy the administrator that they are complying with the work requirement by
fulfilling the work requirement or requirements they violated.
For
the purpose of regaining eligibility by becoming employed, “employment” shall
mean employment by an employer as defined in 26 M.R.S. §§ 1043 et seq., or the performance of a service for an
employer who withholds from the employee a social security tax pursuant to
federal law.
The
special provisions regarding the opportunity to regain eligibility after a
disqualification for workfare violations are detailed in section 5.6 of this
ordinance, under “Eligibility Regained”.
Dependents. Failure of an otherwise eligible
person to comply with the work requirements shall not affect the eligibility of
any member of the person’s household who is not capable of working, including:
a) a
dependent minor child;
b) an
elderly, ill, or disabled person; and
c) a
person whose presence is required in order to provide care for any child under
6 years of age or for any ill or disabled member of the household (22 M.R.S. §
4309(3)).
In the event one (or more) member(s) of a
household is disqualified and assistance is requested for those remaining
members of the household who are dependents, the eligibility of those
dependents will be calculated as though the household is composed of the
dependents only, except that all household income will be considered as
available to them.
Exemptions. The above work requirements do not
apply to any person who is elderly, physically or mentally ill or
disabled. Any person whose presence is required to care for any pre-school age
child or for any ill or disabled member of the household is also exempt from
these requirements.
The requirements of this section will not
be imposed so as to interfere with an applicant’s existing employment, ability
to pursue a bona fide job offer, ability to attend an interview for possible
employment, classroom participation in a primary or secondary educational
program intended to lead to a high school diploma, classroom or on site
participation in a training program which is either approved by the Department
of Labor or determined by the Department of Labor to be expected to assist the
applicant in securing employment, or classroom participation in a
degree-granting program operated under the control of the Department of Labor.
Section
5.6—Municipal Work Program
Each applicant and any member of the
household who is capable of working may be required to perform work for the
municipality, including work for a non-profit organization, as a condition of
receiving assistance (22 M.R.S. § 4316-A(2)).
As part of the municipal work program,
the municipality can require recipients to participate in training, education,
or rehabilitative programs that will assist the recipient in securing
employment. The work requirement provisions found in section 5.5 regarding just
cause, dependents, and exemptions also apply to the municipal workfare program.
Consent. Persons assigned to the work
program are required to sign a form stating that they understand the
requirements of general assistance and the work program. Prior to signing
the form, the administrator will read it to the applicants or the applicants
will read it themselves. The form will also state the number of hours the
applicants must work and the hourly rate by means of which the duration of the
work assignment is calculated. In addition, the consent form shall describe the
consequences of failing to adequately perform part or all of the workfare or
workfare-first assignment.
Subtracting Value of Workfare
Performed from Client’s GA Debt. Pursuant to 22 M.R.S. § 4318
individuals owing the municipality funds for general assistance provided to
them are obligated to repay the municipality when and if they become able (see
Article VIII). However, persons performing workfare
shall have the value of the workfare performed deducted from any and all GA
debt including GA liens (e.g., Workers’ Compensation Settlement, SSI
Retroactive Payment, Capital Improvement, Home Mortgage) that might exist
against their settlements, payments or other such property.
Limitations. The work requirement is subject to
the following limitations (22 M.R.S. § 4316-A(3)).
1) No
person shall, as a condition of eligibility, be required to do any amount of
work that exceeds the value of the net general assistance that the person
receives under municipal general assistance standards. Any person
performing work under this subsection shall be provided with net general
assistance, the value of which is calculated at a rate of at least the
prevailing minimum wage under state or federal law at the time the workfare was
performed.
2) No
workfare participant shall be required to work for a nonprofit organization if
that work would violate the participant’s basic religious beliefs.
3) In
no case shall eligible persons performing work under this subsection replace
regular municipal employees.
4) In
no case will work performed under this subsection interfere with an eligible
person’s:
a) existing
employment;
b) ability
to follow up on a bona fide job offer;
c) attendance
at an interview for possible employment;
d) classroom
participation in a primary or secondary educational program intended to lead to
a high school diploma; or
e) classroom
or on site participation in a training program which is approved by the
Department of Labor or determined by the Department of Labor to be reasonably
expected to assist the person in securing employment, or classroom
participation in a degree-granting program administered by the DHHS or the
Department of Labor.
5) In
no case may an eligible person be required to work more than 40 hours per
week. An eligible person who has full or part-time employment shall be
exempt from the work requirement to the extent that the work requirement in
combination with his or her regular employment would result in the person
working more than 40 hours per week.
6) In
no case will an eligible person be required to perform work beyond his or her
capabilities. However, when an illness or disability is claimed, an
eligible person may be required as a condition of receiving assistance to
present a doctor’s statement detailing the extent of the disability or illness
(22 M.R.S. § 4309).
If the administrator requires a doctor’s
statement to verify an applicant’s illness or disability and the applicant is
not currently under the care of a provider, the municipality may pay for the
doctor’s evaluation if the applicant has no means to pay for the exam. However
in such a case the administrator will choose the doctor. If there is a no-cost or low-cost
health care option, the municipality may elect to refer the client to such a
resource. The administrator will not require verification of medical conditions
which are apparent or which are of such short duration that a reasonable person
would not ordinarily seek medical attention (22 M.R.S. § 4316(5)).
7) In
no case may an eligible person with an immediate need (i.e., a person in an
emergency situation who has not been disqualified from receiving assistance for
committing a program violation) be required to perform work under this
subsection prior to receiving general assistance. The administrator shall
meet immediate needs upon receiving written assurance from the eligible person
that he/she is willing to work to maintain eligibility for general assistance.
When the recipient has no immediate need, workfare participation may be
required prior to receiving general assistance in accordance with the following
“workfare first” policy.
“Workfare First” Policy. Under the authority of 22 M.R.S. §
4316-A(2)(D), the administrator may, in accordance with the following
guidelines, require a recipient of general assistance to perform a workfare
assignment prior to the actual issuance of the general assistance benefit
conditionally granted.
1) In no
circumstance will emergency general assistance for which an applicant is
eligible be withheld pending the satisfactory performance of workfare.
2) All workfare participants
under this policy will be provided a written decision, as otherwise required by
law, within 24 hours of submitting an application for general assistance and
prior to performing any workfare for the municipality associated with that
request for assistance. That written decision must include:
a) a specific description of the
amount of general assistance being conditionally granted to the household, and
for which basic needs;
b) the period of eligibility for which
the general assistance grant is being issued (in days or weeks, but not to
exceed 30 days);
c) the rate, at a dollar-per-hour
basis (but not less than the prevailing minimum wage), upon which the duration
of the workfare assignment is calculated;
d) the actual duration of the workfare
assignment that must be performed, in hours, before the general assistance
grant will be actually issued;
e) the specifics of the workfare
assignment(s), including the general nature of the type of work being assigned,
location(s) of work-site, date(s) and time(s) of assigned workfare, workfare
supervisors’ names and contact telephone numbers; and
f) any other pertinent information
related to the workfare assignment(s) the recipient will be expected to
perform.
3) As
previously provided in this section, all workfare participants under this
policy must sign a consent form that informs the participant of his or her
workfare-related rights and responsibilities, including the consequences of
failing to perform all or part of the workfare assigned without just cause.
4) If
a portion of the workfare-first assignment is satisfactorily performed but
there has been a failure to perform the remainder of the assignment, without
just cause, the administrator shall issue a grant of general assistance in the
amount of the number of workfare hours satisfactorily performed times the
hourly rate used to calculate the duration of the workfare assignment. In
addition to any disqualification penalty that may apply, the remaining value of
the conditionally issued general assistance grant shall be terminated, and
notice of the partial termination, and the reasons therefore, will be issued to
the workfare participant in accordance with section 6.10 of this ordinance.
5) Any
amount of the workfare assignment that is not performed because the workfare
participant was temporarily unable to perform the assignment for just cause
reasons shall be reassigned or excused at the discretion of the GA
administrator.
Work-Related Expenses. A participant’s expenses related
to work performed under this section will be added to the amount of net general
assistance to be provided to the person (22 M.R.S. § 4316.2(E)). The
municipality will provide any special clothes or equipment the recipient needs
to perform his or her work assignment.
Disqualification. Any person who either willfully
fails to perform or willfully performs below average standards the work assigned
by the municipality, will be ineligible for assistance for 120 days (22 M.R.S.
§ 4316-A(1)). As soon as the administrator knows that a recipient failed
to fulfill the work assignment, the administrator will notify the recipient in
writing that he/she is disqualified for 120 days starting from the last date of
authorized assistance unless the recipient can show just cause. The
burden of demonstrating a just cause failure to perform a workfare assignment
falls on the workfare participant.
Eligibility Regained. Recipients who are disqualified
from receiving assistance because they have violated the requirements of the
municipal work program may regain their eligibility under the following
conditions.
Recipients who fail to complete the first
municipal work assignment they have been given will be disqualified from
receiving assistance during the next 120 days, although dependents in the
household may be eligible (see section. 5.5, “Dependents”).
If during the 120-day disqualification
period the recipient requests an opportunity to perform the work assignment
which he or she, without just cause failed to perform, the disqualified
recipient will be given one opportunity to regain eligibility. The
administrator will give the recipient a work assignment as soon as possible.
If under such a set of circumstances the
recipient has an emergency need and the administrator is unable to schedule a
work assignment in time to alleviate the emergency, the administrator will
provide sufficient assistance to the recipient to avert the emergency. However, the provision of such
emergency assistance will not bar the administrator from subsequently enforcing
the previously issued 120-day disqualification if the recipient fails to regain
eligibility by satisfactorily performing the work assignment. The amount
of emergency assistance granted will be considered in the computation of the
total number of hours the recipient must work.
Recipients who have asked for the
opportunity to regain their eligibility during a 120 day disqualification
period and who agreed to fulfill the assignment which they previously failed to
perform and who, without just cause, fail to fulfill their municipal work
assignment will be considered to have acted in bad faith. In such a
circumstance, the administrator will enforce the 120-day disqualification for
the term of its initial duration.
If a workfare participant regains
eligibility under this section but is subsequently disqualified within the
initial 120-day period of ineligibility for failing to comply with the
municipal work program, that participant will be ineligible for a new 120-day
period beginning with the new disqualification date, but will be provided no
opportunity to re-qualify.
Any recipient who intentionally causes
damage to property, harasses or harms other employees or who otherwise conducts
themselves in a disruptive manner and is discharged by the work supervisor will
not be entitled to regain eligibility by returning to the work program.
Eligibility may be regained by otherwise becoming employed and meeting the
definition of need.
Reports. The administrator will itemize the
assistance that has been provided to persons who work for the municipality in
reports to the DHHS (22 M.R.S. § 4316-A(2)).
Section
5.7—Use of Resources
Each applicant has the responsibility to
make a good faith effort to utilize every available or potential resource that
may reduce his or her need for general assistance (see section 2.2 for
definition of “Resources”).
People who refuse or fail to make a good faith effort to secure a potential
resource after receiving written notice to do so are disqualified from
receiving assistance until they make an effort to secure the resource.
Applicants are required to prove that they have made a good faith effort to
secure the resource (22 M.R.S. § 4317).
Minors. A minor under the age of 18 who
has never married and is applying independently for general assistance and who
is pregnant or has a dependent child or children will be eligible to receive
general assistance only if the minor is residing in the home of his or her
parent, legal guardian or other adult relative, in which case the entire
household will be evaluated for eligibility. Exceptions to this
limitation on eligibility will be made when:
1) the
minor is residing in a foster home, maternity home, or other adult-supervised
supportive living arrangement; or
2) the
minor has no living parent or the whereabouts of the both parents are unknown;
or
3) no
parent will permit the minor to live in the parent’s home; or
4) the
minor has lived apart from both parents for at least one year before the birth
of any dependent child; or
5) the
DHHS determines that the physical or emotional health or safety of the minor or
the minor’s dependent child or children would be jeopardized if the minor and
his or her child or children lived with a parent; or
6) the
DHHS determines, in accordance with its regulation, that there is good cause to
waive this limitation on eligibility (22 M.R.S. § 4309(4)).
Any person under the age of 25 who is
applying independently from his or her parents for general assistance will be
informed that until he or she reaches the age of 25, the applicant’s parents
are still legally liable for his or her support and the municipality has the
right to seek recovery from the parents of the cost of all assistance granted
to such a recipient to the extent his or her parents are financially capable of
repaying the municipality (22 M.R.S. § 4319).
With regard to such application, the
municipality may seek verification of the applicant’s need for general
assistance by contacting his or her parents. If the applicant’s parents
declare a willingness to provide the applicant with his or her basic needs
directly, and there is no convincing evidence that the applicant would be
jeopardized by relying on his or her parents for basic needs, the administrator
may find the applicant not to be in need of general assistance for the reason
that his or her needs can be provided by a legally liable relative.
Mental or Physical Disability. Any applicant who has a mental or
physical disability must make a good faith effort to utilize any medical or
rehabilitative services which have been recommended by a physician,
psychologist or other professional retraining or rehabilitation specialist when
the services are available to the applicant and would not constitute a
financial burden or create a physical risk to the individual.
Written Notice; Disqualification.
The administrator
will give each applicant written notice whenever the applicant is required to
utilize any specific potential resource(s). Any applicant who refuses to
utilize potential resources, without just cause, after receiving written 7-day
notice will be ineligible for further assistance until he/she has made a good faith
effort to utilize or obtain the resources. General assistance will not be withheld from the applicant
pending receipt of a resource if the applicant has made, or is in the process
of making, a good faith effort to obtain the resource.
Forfeiture of Benefits. Any applicant who forfeits receipt
of or causes a reduction in benefits from another public assistance program due
to fraud, misrepresentation, a knowing or intentional violation of program
rules or a refusal to comply with that program’s rules without just cause will
be ineligible to receive general assistance to replace the forfeited
benefits. To the extent the forfeited benefits can be considered income
under general assistance law, the worth of the forfeited benefits will be
considered income that is available to the applicant for the duration of the
forfeiture.
To the extent the forfeited benefits were
provided not in the form of income but, rather, in the form of a specific,
regularly issued resource of a calculable value, that resource, up to its
forfeited value, need not be replaced with general assistance for a period of
120 days from the date of the forfeiture—unless the municipality is
prohibited by federal or state law from considering the forfeited resource as
available with respect to local public assistance programs (22 M.R.S. § 4317).
Section
5.7—Period of Ineligibility
No one will have his or her assistance
terminated, reduced, or suspended prior to being given written notice and an
opportunity for a fair hearing (22 M.R.S. §§ 4321-4322). Each person
will be notified in writing of the reasons for his or her ineligibility, and
any person disqualified for not complying with the ordinance will be informed
in writing of the period of ineligibility.
Work Requirement. Applicants/recipients who do not
comply with a work requirement are disqualified from receiving assistance for a
period of 120 days (unless they regain their eligibility) (see sections 5.5,
5.6). If an
applicant/recipient is provided assistance and does not comply with the work
requirement, the applicant/recipient shall be disqualified for 120 days
following the end of the period covered by the grant of assistance. The
administrator shall give recipients written notice that they are disqualified
as soon as the administrator has sufficient knowledge and information to render
a decision of ineligibility.
Fraud. People who commit fraud are
disqualified from receiving assistance for a period of 120 days (see section
6.4, “Fraud”). The
administrator shall give recipients written notice that they are ineligible as
soon as the administrator has sufficient knowledge and information to render a
decision. If the disqualification for fraud is issued before the
expiration of a grant of assistance, the period of ineligibility shall commence
on the day following the end of the period covered by the grant of
assistance. If fraud is discovered after the period covered by the grant
of assistance has expired, the period of ineligibility will commence on the day
of the written notice of ineligibility.
SECTION 6. DETERMINATION
OF ELIGIBILITY
Section
6.1—Recognition of Dignity and Rights
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.
Section
6.2—Determination; Redetermination
The administrator will make an
individual, factual determination of eligibility each time a person applies or
reapplies for general assistance. 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 30-day prospective analysis, but may elect to disburse that
applicant’s assistance periodically, e.g., weekly, throughout a 30-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.
§ 4309).
Section 6.3—Verification
Eligibility of applicant; duration of eligibility. The overseer shall determine eligibility
each time a person applies or reapplies for general assistance. 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.
Applicant's responsibilities. Applicants and recipients for general
assistance are responsible for providing to the overseer 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 overseer. When information required by the overseer is unavailable, the
overseer 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:
·
Need
·
Income
·
Employment
·
Use of
income
·
Expenses
·
Assets
& liabilities
·
Use of
available resources
·
Household
composition
Initial
Applicants. A person who has 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 are still responsible for providing 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).
Repeat
Applicants. All applicants for general assistance
that 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 GA administrator.
Repeat applicants are also responsible
for providing any changes of 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 twelve months
and who have been regularly employed or receiving support from a public benefit
or private source 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.
Overseer's responsibilities. In order to determine an applicant's eligibility for general
assistance, the overseer first must seek information and documentation from the
applicant. Once the applicant has presented the necessary information, the
overseer is responsible for determining eligibility. The overseer will seek
verification necessary to determine eligibility. In order to determine
eligibility, the overseer may contact sources other than the applicant for
verification only with the specific knowledge and consent of the applicant,
except that the overseer may examine public records without the applicant's
knowledge and consent.
Appropriate
sources, which the overseers may contact, include, but are not limited to:
· DHHS and any other department/agency of
the state or non-profit organizations
· financial institutions
· creditors
· utility companies
· employers
· landlords
· physicians
· persons with whom the applicant/recipient
is a cohabitant
· legally and non-legally liable relatives
Assistance
will be denied or terminated if the applicant is unwilling to supply the
overseer with necessary information, documentation, or permission to make
collateral contacts, or if the overseer cannot determine that eligibility
exists based on information supplied by the applicant or others.
Redetermination of eligibility. The overseer may redetermine a person's eligibility at any
time during the period that person is receiving assistance if the overseer 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 with 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. § 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 3 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. §§ 4314(5), 4314(6),
4315).
Section
6.4—Fraud
It is unlawful for a person to make
knowingly and willfully a false representation of a material fact to the
administrator in order to receive general assistance or cause someone else to
receive general assistance (22 M.R.S. § 4315). False representation shall
consist of any individual knowingly and willfully:
a) making a false statement to the
general assistance administrator, either orally or in writing, in order to
obtain assistance to which the applicant or the applicant’s household is not
entitled;
b) concealing information from the
general assistance administrator in order to obtain assistance to which the
applicant or applicant’s household is not entitled; or
c) using general assistance benefits
for a purpose other than that for which they were intended.
No person may be denied assistance solely
for making a false representation prior to being given an opportunity for a
fair hearing.
Period of Ineligibility. When the general assistance administrator
finds that a person has knowingly and willfully misrepresented material facts
for the purpose of making himself or herself eligible for general assistance,
the administrator shall notify that applicant in writing that he or she has
been disqualified from receiving assistance for 120 days. For the purpose
of this section, a material misrepresentation is a false statement about
eligibility factor 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 5
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 ordinance. 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.
§ 4309(3)).
Reimbursement. If a recipient does not appeal the
decision or if the fair hearing authority determines that a recipient did make
a false representation, the recipient will be required to reimburse the
municipality for any assistance received to which he/she was not entitled.
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. § 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 as though
the household is comprised of the dependents only, except that the entire
household income will be considered available to them.
Section
6.5—Period of Eligibility
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. § 4309). Upon receiving a completed and signed application the
administrator will determine the applicant’s eligibility on the basis of a 30‑day
prospective analysis.
When an applicant submits an incomplete
or unsigned application, due to the 24-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
30-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 30-day period of eligibility. When the administrator
elects to disburse general assistance for a period of time less than 30 days,
subsequent grants of assistance during that 30-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.
Section 6.6—Determination of
Need
The period of time used to calculate need
will be the next 30-day period from the date of application (22 M.R.S. §
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 section 6.8, whichever is less. The sum of
these expenses, as calculated for a prospective 30-day period, is the
applicant’s 30-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. § 4308(2)) (see section 4.9 of this ordinance).
Applicants will also not be considered in
need of general assistance 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 section 6.8 (22 M.R.S. §§ 4301(10), 4305(3-B)). The
difference between the applicant’s income and the overall maximum levels of
assistance established by this ordinance is the applicant’s deficit.
Once an applicant’s deficit has been determined,
the specific maximum levels of assistance for each basic necessity (see
Appendixes A-H of this ordinance)
shall be used by the administrator to guide the distribution of assistance for
which the applicant is eligible. 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.
§ 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 30-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 30-day income for the
purposes of computing eligibility (22 M.R.S. § 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 general assistance provide documentation of his or her use
of income. This documentation can take the form of cancelled checks and/or
receipts which demonstrate that the applicant has exhausted all household
income received over the last 30-day period. Except as is deemed appropriate by
the GA administrator for “unforeseen” repeat applicants (See Section 6.3 of
this ordinance), 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 30-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 non-elective 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
non-prescription drugs, and the costs of any other commodity or service
determined essential by the administrator.
Items
not considered to be basic necessities and thus will not be allowed in the
budget computation include:
· Internet services
· Cable or satellite television
· Cellular phones
· Cigarettes/alcohol
· Gifts purchased
· Pet care costs
· Costs of trips or vacations
· Paid court fines
· Repayments of unsecured loans
· Legal fees
· Late fees
·
Credit card
debt.
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.
§ 4315-A). Those additional requirements will be applied in the
following manner:
1) 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;
2) The
administrator will notify applicants in writing of the specific use-of-income
requirements placed on them;
3) 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
4) 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.
Calculation of Income and Expenses. When determining eligibility, the
administrator will subtract the applicant’s net income from the overall maximum
level of assistance found at the beginning of section 6.8. If income is
greater than the overall maximum level of assistance, the applicant will not be
eligible except in an emergency (see section 4.9). 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 section 6.8 of this
ordinance 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 ordinance or the actual 30-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.
1) 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;
2) The
total general assistance grant cannot exceed the total deficit unless the
applicant is in an emergency situation; and
3) 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 ordinance.
Section
6.7—Income
Income Standards. Applicants whose income exceeds
the overall maximum level of assistance provided in section 6.8 shall not be
eligible for general assistance except in an emergency. The administrator
will conduct an individual factual inquiry into the applicant’s income and
expenses each time an applicant applies.
Calculation of Income. To determine whether applicants
are in need, the administrator will calculate the income they will receive
during the next 30-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 30-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
section 6.8, 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.
§ 4308) (see section 4.9 of this ordinance). To calculate weekly income and
expenses, the administrator will use actual income received or actual
anticipated income.
Types of Income. Income that will be considered in
determining an applicant’s need includes:
a) 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. § 4301(7)).
b) Income
from Other Assistance or Social Services Programs. 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 general assistance the applicant is
eligible to receive. Although applicants may have only a limited or reduced
need for general assistance 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 30-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 non-heating purposes
solely on the basis of the recipient’s receipt of HEAP/ECIP.
·
Family Development Accounts (22 M.R.S. § 3762)
·
Americorp VISTA program benefits (42 U.S.C. § 5044 (f))
·
Property tax rebates issued under the Maine Residents
Property Tax Program (so-called “Circuit breaker” program) (36 M.R.S. § 6216)
c) Court-Ordered
Support Payments.
Alimony and child support payments will be considered income only if actually
received by the applicant. The general assistance administrator will
refer cases where support payments are not actually received to the State
Department of Health and Human Services’ Child Support Enforcement Unit. In order to be eligible for future GA,
applicants being referred to DHHS for such enforcement services 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.
d) 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. § 4301(7)).
e) 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.
f) 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.
g) The
Pooling or Non-Pooling of Income.
When two or more individuals share the same dwelling unit but not all members
of the household are applying for general assistance, the administrator shall
make a finding under a rebuttable presumption that the entire household is
pooling income (22 M.R.S. § 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 non-pooling for the duration of the shared living
arrangement. Such documentation would include evidence of the entire household
expenses as well as bank statements, cancelled 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.
h) Lump
Sum Income. A lump
sum payment received by any GA applicant or recipient prior to the date of
application for general assistance 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 to the date of
application for general assistance, the administrator will assess the need for
prorating an applicant’s eligibility for general assistance according to the
following criteria (22 M.R.S. § 4301(7), (8-A)):
1) identify
the date the lump sum payment was received;
2) subtract
from the lump sum payment all required payments;
3) subtract
from the lump sum any amount the applicant can demonstrate was spent on basic
necessities, including all basic necessities as defined by the general
assistance 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.
§ 4301(7), (8-A));
4) add to the remainder all
income received by the household between the date of receipt of the lump sum
payment and the date of application for general assistance; and
5) divide the sum
created in subsection (4) by the greater of the verified actual monthly amounts
for all of the household's basic necessities or 150% of the applicable
federal poverty guidelines. 22 M.R.S.
§ 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. § 4308)
Section
6.8—Basic Necessities; Maximum Levels of Assistance
Overall Maximum Levels of Assistance. Notwithstanding any of the maximum
levels of assistance for specific basic necessities listed in Appendices B-H of
this ordinance, an applicant’s eligibility for general assistance will be first
determined by subtracting his or her income from the overall maximum level of
assistance designated in Appendix A for the applicable household size (22 M.R.S.
§ 4305 (3-B)). The difference yielded by this calculation shall be the
applicant’s deficit.
Applicants will be eligible for general
assistance 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
general assistance unless they are in an emergency, in which case eligibility
for emergency general assistance will be determined according to section 4.9 of
this ordinance.
Maximum
Levels of Assistance for Specific Basic Necessities. 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.
Temporary exceptions to this general rule
may be made by the administrator in the following circumstances: (1) 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; (2) 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 general assistance; and (3) 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.
A) Food. 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 Department of Health and Human Services on or about October of each
year. See Appendix B of this
ordinance for the current year’s food maximums.
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. § 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.
B) Housing. The administrator will provide
assistance with rent or mortgage payments that are reasonable and/or within the
allowed maximum levels. See Appendix C of this ordinance for the current year’s
housing maximums. 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 to not
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. § 4319(2).
Rental Payments to Non-Relatives. 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. § 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 section 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 Department of Health and Human Services,
Division of Health Engineering, pursuant to 10-144A Code of Maine Regulations,
Chapter 201, as a condition of that landlord receiving future general
assistance payments on behalf of his or her tenants.
Mortgage Payments. In the case of a request for
assistance with a mortgage payment, the general assistance 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:
(1) the
marketability of the shelter’s equity;
(2) the
amount of equity;
(3) 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;
(4) the
extent to which liquidation may aid the applicant’s financial rehabilitation;
(5) 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;
(6) the
imminence of the applicant’s dislocation from owned housing because of his or
her inability to meet the mortgage payments;
(7) the
likelihood that the provision of housing assistance will prevent such
dislocation; and
(8) the
applicant’s age, health, and social situation.
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 general assistance if after reviewing the above criteria the
administrator determines that:
(1) the
monthly mortgage obligation is in accordance with the maximum levels of
assistance available for housing appropriate to the applicant’s household size;
(2) 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 re-amortize
the mortgage in such a way as to suspend or reduce the mortgage obligation; and
(3) the
failure to provide a mortgage payment in a timely manner could jeopardize the
applicant’s continued right of possession of the property.
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.
Liens. 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. § 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 general assistance 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 general assistance 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 general assistance 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.S.R.A.
§ 841(2)) and General Assistance. If the applicant chooses to seek property tax
assistance through General Assistance, or if the applicant is denied a poverty
tax abatement, the administrator may consider using general assistance to meet
this need only if:
a) the
property tax in question is for the applicant’s place of residence;
b) there
is a tax lien on the property which is due to mature within 60 days of the date
of application;
c) 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
d) the
applicant, with sufficient notice, applies for property tax relief through the
Maine Resident Property Tax Program, when available.
Housing Maximums. The maximum levels of housing
assistance contained in this ordinance have been derived either from a locally
accomplished fair market rental survey or the fair market rental values
developed by the United States 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
of this ordinance for the current year’s housing maximums.
If and when the maximum levels of housing
contained in this ordinance 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 ordinance pursuant to the ordinance adoption and
amendment procedures found at 22 M.R.S. § 4305.
C) Utilities. 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 section 4.9.
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 general assistance 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.
§ 4308(2)) (see section 4.9 and 6.3). 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.
Electricity Maximums for Households
Without Electric Hot Water.
See Appendix D of this
ordinance for the current year’s electricity maximums.
Electricity Maximums for Households
that Use Electrically Heated Hot Water. See Appendix D of this ordinance for the
current year’s electricity maximums.
Non-Electric Utilities. The allowed amount for water and
sewer utility service will be budgeted at a 30-day reasonable usage rate.
D) Fuel. Expenses for home heating will be
budgeted according to the actual need for fuel during the heating season
(September through May) provided 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 section
4.9. 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 section 4.9 of this ordinance.
See Appendix
E of this ordinance for the current year’s fuel maximums.
E) 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, up to the
maximums below. 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 5 years of age. See
Appendix F of this ordinance for the current year’s personal care and
household supplies maximums.
F) 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 general assistance
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.
1) 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.
2) Medical. 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 non-emergency 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
general assistance at the established Medicaid rates for all medical services,
prescriptions, or other medical commodities. Before authorizing general assistance
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/non-prescription
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, non-prescription 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.
3) Hospital
Bills. In the
event of an emergency admission to the hospital, the hospital must notify the
administrator within 5 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 Title 22 M.R.S. § 396-F(1). Anyone who
is not eligible for the hospital’s free care program may apply for general
assistance. Applicants must apply for assistance within 30 days of being
discharged from the hospital and provide a notice from the hospital certifying
that they re 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 section 6.6 of this
ordinance.
4) Dental.
The municipality will pay for medically necessary dental services only.
As is the case with medical services generally, the municipality will issue general
assistance for dental services at the established Medicaid rates for those
services, and before authorizing the general assistance 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 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.
5) Eye
Care. In order to
be eligible to receive general assistance for eyeglasses, an applicant must
have his or her medical need certified by a person licensed to practice
optometry. The general assistance 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.
6) 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 job related reasons exist and/or for any other reasons the
administrator deems necessary.
7) Work-Related
Expenses. In determining
need, reasonable and actual work-related expenses will be deducted from earned
income. These expenses include childcare costs, work clothes, supplies
and transportation at the actual costs not to exceed the ordinance maximum (see
Appendix G for this year’s maximum mileage allotment).
The applicant is required to provide documentation substantiating the
costs and that the expenses were necessary.
8) 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. 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.
9) Burials,
Cremations. Under
the circumstances and in accordance with the procedures and limitations
described below (see section 6.9),
the municipality recognizes its responsibility to pay for the burial or
cremation of eligible persons. See Appendix H for the current maximums.
10) Capital
Improvements. 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
pre-approved 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
general assistance for capital improvements when:
1) the
failure to do so would place the applicant(s) in emergency circumstances;
2) there
are no other resources available to effect the capital repair; and
3) there
is no more cost-effective alternative available to the applicant or
municipality to alleviate an emergency situation.
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. § 4320
when general assistance 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) “Liens”, above.
Section
6.9—Burials; Cremations
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 the next business day following the funeral director’ receipt
of the body, whichever is earlier (22 M.R.S. §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 municipal
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
general assistance 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 section 4.10 of this ordinance.
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 general
assistance 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 eligible for general assistance, by virtue of
their eligibility, have no legal obligation to pay for the burial or cremation
of their relatives. For these reasons, all general assistance 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, siblings, children and grandchildren of the deceased, who live in
Maine or own property in Maine, 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 municipal administrator with any reasonably
requested information regarding their income, assets, and basic living expenses.
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.
Ten Days to Determine Eligibility. The administrator may take up to 10
days from the date of contact by the funeral director to issue a written
decision regarding the amount of the municipal contribution toward the burial
or cremation. The 10-day eligibility determination period from the date of
contact by the funeral director 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 10-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 with regard to whether the deceased is interred by means of
burial or cremated. See Appendix
H for the maximum levels of assistance granted for the purpose of burials.
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
general assistance for cremation services. See Appendix H for the
maximum levels of assistance granted for the purpose of cremations.
Section
6.10—Notice of Decision
Written Decision. The administrator will give a
written decision to each applicant after making a determination of eligibility
each time a person applies. The decision will be given to the applicant within
24 hours of receiving a completed and signed application (22 M.R.S. §
4305(3)) (see Article IV, section 4.6).
When an applicant submits an incomplete
or unsigned application, due to the 24-hour decision requirement placed on the
GA administrator, the GA administrator may decide to render a notice of
“ineligibility” and provide the applicant with another application to submit as
soon as is practicable for the applicant.
In order to ensure that applicants
understand their rights, it is the responsibility of the general assistance
administrator to explain the applicants’ right to a fair hearing in the written
notice of decision.
Contents. After an application has been
completed, applicants will be given written notice of any decision concerning
their eligibility for assistance. In addition to the contents of a
written decision listed in section 4.6 of this ordinance, the notice will state
that applicants:
a) have
the right to a fair hearing and the method by which they may obtain a fair
hearing and;
b) have
the right to contact the DHHS if they believe the municipality has violated the
law. The decision will state the method for notifying the department.
Disbursement of General Assistance. Except when determined impractical
by the administrator, all general assistance will be provided in the form of a
voucher or purchase order payable to a vendor or through direct municipal
payment to a provider of goods or services. General assistance will not
be issued in the form of a cash payment to an applicant unless there is no
alternative to making such a cash payment, in which case the administrator
shall document the circumstances for issuing general assistance in the form of
cash (22 M.R.S. § 4305(6)).
SECTION 7. THE
FAIR HEARING
Section
7.1—Right to a Fair Hearing
Within 5 working days of receiving a
written notice of denial, reduction or termination of assistance, or within 10
working days after any other act or failure to act, the applicant or his or her
authorized representative has the right to request a fair hearing (22 M.R.S. §
4322). The right to review a decision of the general assistance
administrator is a basic right of the applicant to a full evidentiary hearing
and is not limited solely to a review of the decision.
Section
7.2—Method of Obtaining a Fair Hearing
Upon receiving notification of the
decision of the general assistance administrator, all claimants will be
informed of the method of obtaining a fair hearing. All complaints that
are not clear requests for a fair hearing will be answered by a personal
interview or in writing by the general assistance administrator. If the
client is satisfied with the adjustment or explanation, the administrator will
make an entry in the case record and file any correspondence involved.
Written Request. To obtain a fair hearing, the
claimant, or his or her authorized representative, must make a written request
within 5 working days of receiving the administrator’s decision to grant, deny,
reduce or terminate assistance, or within 10 working days after any other act
or failure to act. The administrator will make available a printed form
for requesting a fair hearing and will assist the claimant in completing it if
necessary. On the printed form, the claimant will give the following
information:
a) the
decision on which review is sought;
b) the
reason(s) for the claimant’s dissatisfaction and why the claimant believes
he/she is eligible to receive assistance; and
c) the
relief sought by the claimant.
The administrator cannot deny or dismiss
a request for a hearing unless it has been withdrawn (in writing) by the
claimant.
Scheduling the Fair Hearing. Upon receipt of the completed
written request the fair hearing authority must meet and hold the hearing within
5 working days. The administrator will notify the claimant in writing
when and where the hearing will be held (22 M.R.S. § 4322). In addition
to the date, time and place of the hearing, the notice of fair hearing sent to
the claimant shall include, at a minimum, the claimant’s rights to:
a) be
his or her own spokesperson at the fair hearing, or be represented by legal
counsel or other spokesperson at the hearing, at the claimant’s own expense;
b) confront
and cross-examine any witnesses presented at the hearing against the claimant;
and
c) present
witnesses on his or her own behalf.
Arrangements for the date, time, and
place of the hearing will take into consideration the convenience of the
claimant and hearing authority. The claimant will be given timely notice
to allow for preparation and will also be given adequate preliminary
information about the hearing procedure to allow for effective preparation of his
or her case.
Section
7.3—The Fair Hearing Authority
The municipal officers will appoint a
fair hearing authority (FHA) that will determine, based on all the evidence
presented at the fair hearing, whether the claimant(s) were eligible to receive
assistance at the time they applied for GA. The FHA is charged with
the responsibility of ensuring that general assistance is administered in
accordance with the state law and local ordinance.
The
fair hearing authority may consist of the municipal officers, one or more
persons appointed by the municipal officers to act as the FHA, or, if
designated, the board of appeals created under 30-A M.R.S. § 2691 (22 M.R.S. §
4322). In determining the organization of the fair hearing authority, the
municipal officers will use the following criteria. The person(s) serving
as FHA must:
a) not
have participated in the decision which is the subject of the appeal;
b) be
impartial;
c) be
sufficiently skilled in interviewing techniques to be able to obtain evidence
and the facts necessary to make a fair determination; and
d) be
capable of evaluating all evidence fairly and realistically, explaining to the
claimant the laws and regulations under which the administrator operated, and
interpreting to the administrator any evidence of unsound, unclear, or
inadequate policies, practices or actions.
Section
7.4—Fair Hearing Procedure
When
a claimant requesting a fair hearing is notified of the date, time, and place
of the hearing in writing, he/she will also be given adequate preliminary
information about the hearing procedure to allow for effective preparation of
his or her case. The claimant shall be permitted to review his or her
file prior to the hearing. At a minimum, the claimant will be told the
following information, which will govern all fair hearings. All fair hearings
will:
a) be
conducted privately, and will be open only to the claimant, witnesses, legal
counsel, or others whom the claimant wants present, and the general assistance
administrator, his or her agents, counsel and witnesses;
b) be
opened with a presentation of the issue by the fair hearing authority;
c) be
conducted informally, without technical rules of evidence, but subject to the
requirements of due process;
d) allow
the claimant and the administrator the option to present their positions for
themselves or with the aid of others, including legal counsel;
e) give
all participants an opportunity to present oral or written testimony or
documentary evidence, offer rebuttal; question witnesses presented at the
hearing; and examine all evidence presented at the hearing;
f) result
in a decision, based exclusively on evidence or testimony presented at the
hearing; and
g) be
tape recorded, and result in a written decision that is given to the claimant
and filed with evidence introduced at the hearing. The fair hearing
authority will allow the claimant to establish all pertinent facts and
circumstances, and to advance any arguments without undue interference.
Information that the claimant does not have an opportunity to hear or see will
not be used in the fair hearing decision or made part of the hearing
record. Any material reviewed by the fair hearing authority must be made
available to the claimant or his or her representative. The claimant will
be responsible for preparing a written transcript if he/she wishes to pursue
court action.
The fair hearing authority shall admit
all evidence if it is the kind of evidence upon which reasonable persons are
accustomed to rely in the conduct of serious affairs (22 M.R.S. § 4322).
Claimant’s Failure to Appear. In the event the claimant fails to
appear, the FHA will send a written notice to the claimant that the GA
administrator’s decision was not altered due to the claimant’s failure to
appear. Furthermore, the notice shall indicate that the claimant has 5
working days from receipt of the notice to submit to the GA administrator
information demonstrating “just cause,” for failing to appear.
For the
purposes of a claimant’s failure to appear at a fair hearing, examples of “just
cause” include:
a) a death or serious
illness in the family;
b) a personal illness which reasonably
prevents the party from attending the hearing;
c) an emergency or unforeseen event which
reasonably prevents the party from attending the hearing;
d) an obligation or responsibility which a
reasonable person in the conduct of his or her affairs could reasonably
conclude takes precedence over the attendance at the hearing; or
e) lack of receipt of adequate or timely
notice; excusable neglect, excusable inadvertence, or excusable mistake.
If the claimant (or their attorney)
establishes just cause, the request for the hearing will be reinstated and a
hearing rescheduled.
In the event a claimant who is
represented by legal counsel fails to appear at a fair hearing, legal counsel
shall not testify in place of the claimant on matters of ‘fact’ but may cross
examine witnesses and make ‘legal’ arguments on behalf of the claimant.
Section
7.5—The Fair Hearing Decision
The decision of the fair hearing
authority will be binding on the general assistance administrator, and will be
communicated in writing to the claimant within 5 working days after
completion of the hearing. Written notice of the decision will contain the
following:
a) a
statement of the issue;
b) relevant
facts brought out at the hearing;
c) pertinent
provisions in the law or general assistance ordinance related to the decision;
and
d) the
decision and the reasons for it.
A copy of the notice of the decision will
be given to the claimant. The hearing record and the case record will be
maintained by the general assistance administrator.
The written notice of the decision will
state that if the claimant is dissatisfied with the fair hearing decision,
he/she has a further legal right to appeal the decision pursuant to the Maine
Rules of Civil Procedure, Rule 80B. To take advantage of this right, the
claimant must file a petition for review with the Superior Court within 30 days
of receipt of the fair hearing decision.
When the decision by the fair hearing
authority or court authorizes assistance to the claimant, the assistance will
be provided within 24 hours.
SECTION 8. RECOVERY
OF EXPENSES
Recipients. The municipality may recover the
full amount of assistance granted to a person from either the recipient or from
any person liable for the recipient, or his or her executors or administrators
in a civil action. However, prior to recovering assistance granted, the
municipality shall “offset” the value of any workfare performed by a GA
recipient, at a rate not less than minimum wage.
Prior to taking a recipient to court to
recover the amount of assistance, the municipality will seek voluntary
repayment from the recipient by notifying him/her in writing and discussing it
with the recipient. The municipality shall not attempt to recover such
costs if, as a result of the repayment, the person would again become eligible
for general assistance (22 M.R.S. § 4318).
Recipients Anticipating Workers’
Compensation Benefits.
The municipality shall claim a lien for the value of all general assistance
payments made to a recipient on any lump sum payment made to that recipient
under the Workers’ Compensation Act or similar law of any other state (22 M.R.S.
§ 4318, 39-A M.R.S. § 106). After issuing any general assistance on
behalf of a recipient who has applied for or is receiving Workers’
Compensation, the municipality shall file a notice of the municipal lien with
the general assistance recipient and the Office of Secretary of State, Uniform
Commercial Code division.
The notice of lien shall be filed on a
UCC-1 form which must be signed by the recipient of general assistance who has
applied for or is receiving Workers’ Compensation. Any general assistance
applicant who has applied for or who is receiving Workers’ Compensation
benefits and who refuses to sign a properly prepared UCC-1 form will be found
ineligible to receive general assistance until he or she provides the required
signature. The municipality shall also send a photocopy of that filing to
the recipient’s Worker’s Compensation attorney, if known, the applicant’s
employer or the employer’s insurance company, and, at the administrator’s
discretion, to the Workers’ Compensation Board. The lien shall be
enforced at the time any lump sum Workers’ Compensation benefit is issued.
Recipients of SSI. All applicants who receive general
assistance while receipt of their Supplemental Security Income (SSI) assistance
is pending or suspended, and which therefore may be retroactively issued to the
applicant at a later date, will be required to sign a statement on an Interim
Assistance Agreement form distributed by the DHHS that authorizes the Social
Security Administration to direct a portion of any retroactive SSI payment to
the municipality and/or the state in repayment for the general assistance
granted. Any general assistance applicant who has applied for or who may
be applying for SSI, or who may be required to apply for SSI pursuant to 22 M.R.S.
§ 4317, and who refuses to sign the Interim Agreement SSI authorization form
will be found ineligible to receive general assistance until he or she provides
the required signature (22 M.R.S. § 4318).
Relatives. The spouse of an applicant, and
the parents of any applicant under the age of 25, are liable for the support of
the applicant (22 M.R.S. § 4319). In addition, grandchildren, children,
siblings, parents and grandparents are liable for the burial costs of each
other. The municipality considers these relatives to be available resources and
liable for the support of their relatives in proportion to their respective
ability. The municipality may complain to any court of competent
jurisdiction to recover any expenses made on the behalf of a recipient if the
relatives fail to fulfill their responsibility (22 M.R.S. § 4319).
SECTION 9. SEVERABILITY
Should any section or provision of this
ordinance be declared by the courts to be invalid, such decision shall not
invalidate any other section or provision of the ordinance.
GA
Overall Maximums
Metropolitan Areas
|
COUNTY |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5* |
|
Bangor HMFA: Bangor, Brewer, Eddington,
Glenburn, Hampden, Hermon, Holden, Kenduskeag, Milford, Old Town, Orono,
Orrington, Penobscot Indian Island Reservation, Veazie |
520 |
607 |
774 |
985 |
1111 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Penobscot County HMFA: Alton, Argyle UT, Bradford,
Bradley, Burlington, Carmel, Carroll plantation, Charleston, Chester,
Clifton, Corinna, Corinth, Dexter, Dixmont, Drew plantation, East Central
Penobscot UT, East Millinocket, Edinburg, Enfield, Etna, Exeter, Garland,
Greenbush, Howland, Hudson, Kingman UT, Lagrange, Lakeville, Lee, Levant,
Lincoln, Lowell town, Mattawamkeag, Maxfield, Medway, Millinocket, Mount
Chase, Newburgh Newport, North Penobscot UT, Passadumkeag, Patten, Plymouth,
Prentiss UT, Seboeis plantation, Springfield, Stacyville, Stetson, Twombly
UT, Webster plantation, Whitney UT, Winn, Woodville |
529 |
530 |
637 |
796 |
977 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Lewiston/Auburn MSA: Auburn, Durham, Greene, Leeds,
Lewiston, Lisbon, Livermore, Livermore Falls, Mechanic Falls, Minot, Poland,
Sabattus, Turner, Wales |
428 |
537 |
657 |
831 |
927 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Portland HMFA: Cape Elizabeth, Casco,
Cumberland, Falmouth, Freeport, Frye Island, Gorham, Gray, North Yarmouth,
Portland, Raymond, Scarborough, South Portland, Standish, Westbrook, Windham,
Yarmouth; Buxton, Hollis, Limington, Old Orchard Beach |
702 |
833 |
1079 |
1360 |
1456 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
COUNTY |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5* |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
York/Kittery/S.Berwick HMFA: Berwick, Eliot, Kittery, South
Berwick, York |
908 |
913 |
1095 |
1594 |
1737 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cumberland County HMFA: Baldwin, Bridgton, Harpswell, Harrison, Naples,
New Gloucester, Pownal, Sebago |
603 |
660 |
850 |
1015 |
1301 |
|
Brunswick |
606 |
722 |
934 |
1184 |
1420 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sagadahoc
HMFA: Arrowsic, Bath, Bowdoin,
Bowdoinham, Georgetown, Perkins UT, Phippsburg, Richmond, Topsham, West Bath,
Woolwich |
666 |
666 |
819 |
1090 |
1383 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
York County HMFA: Acton, Alfred, Arundel,
Biddeford, Cornish, Dayton, Kennebunk, Kennebunkport, Lebanon, Limerick,
Lyman, Newfield, North Berwick, Ogunquit, Parsonsfield, Saco, Sanford,
Shapleigh, Waterboro, Wells |
608 |
633 |
804 |
976 |
1093 |
|
Biddeford, Saco, Sanford |
664 |
741 |
933 |
1184 |
1400 |
*Note: Add $75 for each additional person.
Non-Metropolitan Areas
|
COUNTY |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5* |
|
Aroostook County |
411 |
497 |
620 |
788 |
908 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Franklin County |
502 |
541 |
659 |
788 |
1021 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Hancock County |
548 |
631 |
735 |
1035 |
1065 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kennebec County |
435 |
536 |
648 |
884 |
945 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Knox County |
496 |
656 |
748 |
1013 |
1168 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Lincoln County |
598 |
642 |
776 |
943 |
1112 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Oxford County |
417 |
554 |
639 |
851 |
1067 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Piscataquis County
|
520 |
593 |
734 |
931 |
997 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Somerset County |
432 |
516 |
620 |
864 |
932 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Waldo County |
583 |
625 |
754 |
924 |
982 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Washington County |
502 |
542 |
647 |
802 |
908 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* Please Note: Add $75 for each additional person.
Food
Maximums
Please
Note: The maximum amounts allowed
for food are established in accordance with the U.S.D.A. Thrifty Food Plan.
Through October 1, 2007, those amounts are:
|
Number in Household |
Weekly Maximum |
Monthly Maximum |
|
|
|
|
|
1 |
36.05 |
155 |
|
2 |
66.05 |
284 |
|
3 |
94.88 |
408 |
|
4 |
120.47 |
518 |
|
5 |
143.02 |
615 |
|
6 |
171.63 |
738 |
|
7 |
189.77 |
816 |
|
8 |
216.74 |
932 |
(Heated & Unheated Rents)
NOTE: NOT ALL MUNICIPALITIES
SHOULD ADOPT THESE SUGGESTED HOUSING MAXIMUMS! Municipalities should
ONLY consider adopting
the following numbers, if these figures are consistent with local rent
values. If not, a market survey
should be conducted and the figures should be altered accordingly. The results
of any such survey must be presented to DHHS prior to adoption. Or, no housing
maximums should be adopted and eligibility should be analyzed in terms of the
Overall Maximum—Appendix A. (See Instruction Memo for further
guidance.)
|
Aroostook County Bedrooms 0 1 2 3 4 |
Unheated Weekly Monthly 60 259 73 312 84 363 110 471 121 521 |
Heated Weekly Monthly 75 321 92 394 108 466 143 614 154 662 |
|
|
|
|
|
Franklin County Bedrooms 0 1 2 3 4 |
Unheated Weekly Monthly 83 355 84 361 98 423 115 496 149 642 |
Heated Weekly Monthly 95 410 101 434 122 523 145 622 189 811 |
|
|
|
|
|
Hancock County Bedrooms 0 1 2 3 4 |
Unheated Weekly Monthly 90 388 100 432 111 476 163 702 163 702 |
Heated Weekly Monthly 103 443 117 503 134 577 193 829 193 829 |
|
|
|
|
|
Kennebec County Bedrooms 0 1 2 3 4 |
Unheated Weekly Monthly 68 294 80 345 97 419 137 589 140 600 |
Heated Weekly Monthly 80 344 95 409 118 506 163 702 170 732 |
|
|
|
|
Non-Metropolitan
FMR Areas
|
|
|
|
|
Knox County Bedrooms 0 1 2 3 4 |
Unheated Weekly Monthly 81 349 108 465 119 512 163 703 184 790 |
Heated Weekly Monthly 93 400 124 532 139 597 190 819 217 935 |
|
|
|
|
|
Lincoln County Bedrooms 0 1 2 3 4 |
Unheated Weekly Monthly 103 442 105 453 125 537 147 634 147 634 |
Heated Weekly Monthly 115 493 121 520 145 622 174 750 175 751 |
|
|
|
|
|
Oxford County Bedrooms 0 1 2 3 4 |
Unheated Weekly Monthly 65 278 87 375 96 412 131 562 165 708 |
Heated Weekly Monthly 76 328 102 440 116 498 156 672 196 843 |
|
|
|
|
|
Piscataquis County Bedrooms 0 1 2 3 4 |
Unheated Weekly Monthly 85 365 93 399 111 477 142 610 142 610 |
Heated Weekly Monthly 99 427 112 481 137 591 175 753 183 789 |
|
|
|
|
|
Somerset County Bedrooms 0 1 2 3 4 |
Unheated Weekly Monthly 64 277 79 338 88 380 132 566 132 566 |
Heated Weekly Monthly 76 327 94 405 110 473 159 683 164 705 |
|
|
|
|
Non-Metropolitan
FMR Areas
|
|
|
|
|
Waldo County Bedrooms 0 1 2 3 4 |
Unheated Weekly Monthly 100 429 102 437 120 517 145 622 146 630 |
Heated Weekly Monthly 111 479 117 504 140 602 172 738 178 766 |
|
|
|
|
|
Washington County Bedrooms 0 1 2 3 4 |
Unheated Weekly Monthly 80 346 82 351 92 397 115 493 118 507 |
Heated Weekly Monthly 93 401 98 422 116 497 143 617 152 655 |
|
Bangor HMFA Bedrooms 0 1 2 3 4 |
Unheated Weekly Monthly 81 350 92 394 114 492 146 629 153 656 |
Heated Weekly Monthly 96 413 110 475 140 604 180 773 201 863 |
|
|
|
|
|
Penobscot County HMFA Bedrooms 0 1 2 3 4 |
Unheated Weekly Monthly 83 358 83 358 85 367 107 458 128 552 |
Heated Weekly Monthly 98 421 98 421 111 479 140 602 173 742 |
|
|
|
|
|
Lewiston/Auburn MSA Bedrooms 0 1 2 3 4 |
Unheated Weekly Monthly 67 287 83 359 99 426 126 543 135 580 |
Heated Weekly Monthly 79 338 99 424 119 513 152 653 165 709 |
|
|
|
|
|
Portland HMFA Bedrooms 0 1 2 3 4 |
Unheated Weekly Monthly 125 536 146 626 189 813 237 1018 239 1028 |
Heated Weekly Monthly 137 587 161 693 209 898 264 1134 278 1197 |
|
|
|
|
|
York/Kittery/S. Berwick HMFA Bedrooms 0 1 2 3 4 |
Unheated Weekly Monthly 168 723 168 723 216 927 286 1231 298 1283 |
Heated Weekly Monthly 180 774 180 774 235 1012 313 1347 337 1451 |
|
|
|
|
|
Cumberland County HMFA Bedrooms 0 1 2 3 4 |
Unheated Weekly Monthly 93 401 109 469 141 605 164 705 210 904 |
Heated Weekly Monthly 105 451 125 536 160 690 191 821 246 1056 |
|
|
|
|
|
Sagadahoc County HMFA Bedrooms 0 1 2 3 4 |
Unheated Weekly Monthly 117 503 117 503 130 558 153 658 227 977 |
Heated Weekly Monthly 129 554 129 554 150 643 180 774 265 1140 |
|
|
|
|
|
York County HMFA Bedrooms 0 1 2 3 4 |
Unheated Weekly Monthly 105 452 105 452 131 563 153 656 156 670 |
Heated Weekly Monthly 117 502 119 511 151 648 180 772 193 828 |
|
|
|
|
Without
electric hot water
The
maximum amounts allowed for utilities for lights, cooking, and other electric
uses, excluding electric hot water are:
|
With
electric hot water
The maximum
amount allowed for electric utilities for dwelling units that have electrically
heated hot water shall be $70 per month for the first member of the household,
with an additional $10 per month for each additional household member.
|
Note: For electrically
heated households, the maximum amount allowed for electrical utilities per
month shall be the sum of the appropriate maximum amount under this subsection
and the appropriate maximum amount for fuel as provided In Appendix E.
In
accordance with the following conditions, the administrator may allow as a
budgetable expense the amount of an applicant’s summer-loaded special payment
arrangement (SPA) or budget payment arrangement (BPA), as calculated by the
electric utility and entered into by the applicant, even when the arranged
payment amount exceeds the above maximums or actual usage.
1) The
SPA or BPA, when annualized, does not exceed the above monthly maximums, when
annualized, for non-electrically heated dwelling units.
2) The
SPA or BPA, when annualized, does not exceed the above monthly maximums and the
fuel assistance maximums, when annualized, for electrically heated dwelling
units.
3) The
administrator determines, in consultation with the utility, that the payment
arrangement does not include in any part the installment payment of past debt
unless the municipality guaranteed to the utility the allowance of such an
arrangement as a condition of averting a disconnection.
Pursuant to the use-of-income requirements in section 6.6 of this ordinance,
whenever the administrator budgets for SPA’s or BPA’s under this section, the
recipient will be required to pay the SPA or BPA him or herself to the extent
of the income capacity of the household.
When
considering requests for heating fuel, eligible applicants will be granted
assistance with the actual amount necessary up to the following maximums:
|
When the dwelling unit is heated electrically, the maximum amount allowed for
heating purposes will be calculated by multiplying the number of gallons of
fuel allowed for that month by the current price per gallon.
When fuels such as wood, coal and/or natural gas are used for heating purposes,
they will be budgeted at actual rates, if they are reasonable. However, no
eligible applicant shall be considered to need more than:
·
7 tons of
coal per year
·
8 cords of
wood per year
·
126,000
cubic feet of natural gas per year, or
·
1000
gallons of propane.
|
Number
in Household |
Weekly
Amount |
Monthly
Amount |
|
1-2 |
$8.20 |
$35.00 |
|
3-4 |
$9.30 |
$40.00 |
|
5-6 |
$10.50 |
$45.00 |
|
7-8 |
$11.60 |
$50.00 |
Child
Under 5 Allowance
When
an applicant can verify expenditures for the following items, a special
supplement will be budgeted as necessary for households with children under 5
years of age for items such as cloth or disposable diapers, laundry powder,
oil, shampoo, and ointment up to the following amounts:
|
Number
of Children |
Weekly
Amount |
Monthly
Amount |
|
1 |
$10.50 |
$
45.00 |
|
2 |
$15.10 |
$
65.00 |
|
3 |
$20.90 |
$
90.00 |
|
4 |
$25.60 |
$110.00 |
This municipality adopts the
State of Maine travel expense reimbursement rate as set by the Office of the
State Controller. The current rate (until December 2005) for approved employment
and necessary medical travel etc. is 34 cents (34¢) per mile.
Please refer to the Office of
State Controller for changes to this rate: Telephone: 626-8420 or visit: http://www.state.me.us/osc/
Burial Maximums
The maximum amount of general assistance
granted for the purpose of burial is $1,125. Additional costs may be allowed by the GA administrator,
where there is an actual cost, for:
·
the
wholesale cost of a cement liner if the cemetery by-laws require one;
·
the opening
and closing of the grave site; and
·
a lot in
the least expensive section of the cemetery. If the municipality is able
to provide a cemetery lot in a municipally owned cemetery or in a cemetery
under municipal control, the cost of the cemetery lot in any other cemetery
will not be paid by the municipality.
The municipality’s obligation to provide
funds for burial purposes is limited to a reasonable calculation of the funeral
director’s direct costs, not to exceed the maximum amounts of assistance
described in this section.
Allowable burial expenses are limited to:
·
removal of
the body from a local residence or institution
·
a secured
death certificate or obituary
·
embalming
·
a minimum
casket
·
a
reasonable cost for necessary transportation
·
other
reasonable and necessary specified direct costs, as itemized by the funeral
director and approved by the municipal administrator.
Cremation Maximums
The
maximum amount of assistance granted for a cremation shall be $785. Additional costs may be allowed by the GA administrator
where there is an actual cost, for:
·
a cremation
lot in the least expensive section of the cemetery
·
a
reasonable cost for a burial urn not to exceed $50
·
transportation
costs borne by the funeral director at a reasonable rate per mile for
transporting the remains to and from the cremation facility.
26 M.R.S. §1043 (23)
Misconduct. “Misconduct” means a culpable breach of
the employee’s duties or obligations to the employer or a pattern of
irresponsible behavior, which in either case manifests a disregard for a
material interest of the employer. This definition relates only to an
employee’s entitlement to benefits and does not preclude an employer from
discharging an employee for actions that are not included in this definition of
misconduct. A finding that an employee has not engaged in misconduct for
purposes of this chapter may not be used as evidence that the employer lacked
justification for discharge. [1999, c. 464, §2 (rpr).]
A.
The following acts or omissions are presumed to manifest a disregard for a
material interest of the employer. If a culpable breach or a pattern of
irresponsible behavior is shown, these actions or omissions constitute
“misconduct” as defined in this subsection. This does not preclude other acts
or omissions from being considered to manifest a disregard for a material
interest of the employer. The acts or omissions included in the presumption are
the following:
(1)
Refusal, knowing failure or recurring neglect to perform reasonable and proper
duties assigned by the employer;
(2)
Unreasonable violation of rules that are reasonably imposed and communicated
and equitably enforced;
(3)
Unreasonable violation of rules that should be inferred to exist from common
knowledge or from the nature of the employment;
(4)
Failure to exercise due care for punctuality or attendance after warnings;
(5)
Providing false information on material issues relating to the employee’s
eligibility to do the work or false information or dishonesty that may
substantially jeopardize a material interest of the employer;
(6)
Intoxication while on duty or when reporting to work or unauthorized use of
alcohol while on duty;
(7)
Using illegal drugs or being under the influence of such drugs while on duty or
when reporting to work;
(8)
Unauthorized sleeping while on duty;
(9) Insubordination or
refusal without good cause to follow reasonable and proper instructions from
the employer;
(10)
Abusive or assaultive behavior while on duty, except as necessary for
self-defense;
(11)
Destruction or theft of things valuable to the employer or another employee;
(12)
Substantially endangering the safety of the employee, coworkers, customers or
members of the public while on duty;
(13)
Conviction of a crime in connection with the employment or a crime that
reflects adversely on the employee’s qualifications to perform the work; or
(14)
Absence for more than 2 work days due to incarceration for conviction of a
crime.
[1999, c. 464, §2 (new).]
B.
“Misconduct” may not be found solely on:
(1)
An isolated error in judgment or a failure to perform satisfactorily when the
employee has made a good faith effort to perform the duties assigned;
(2)
Absenteeism caused by illness of the employee or an immediate family member if
the employee made reasonable efforts to give notice of the absence and to
comply with the employer’s notification rules and policies; or
(3)
Actions taken by the employee that were necessary to protect the employee or an
immediate family member from domestic violence if the employee made all
reasonable efforts to preserve the employment.
[1999, c.
464, §2 (new).]