Expenses 430-05-55-10

(Revised 01/01/04 ML2893)

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The following expenses are allowed as a deduction from countable income:

 

Calculating Expenses

A household may choose one of the following methods to calculate expenses.

 

Anticipated Expenses

Household expenses must be calculated based on expenses the household expects during the certification period. Anticipation is based on the most recent month's bills, unless the household is reasonably sure that a change will occur.

 

Billed Expenses

Except for averaged expenses, a deduction is allowed only for the month an expense is billed or otherwise becomes due, regardless of when the household plans to pay the expense. Amounts carried over from past billing periods are not deductible.

 

Averaged Expenses

For expenses that are not billed on a monthly basis the household may elect a one-time deduction or to have expenses averaged.

 

For fluctuating expenses the household may elect to use actual expenses or averaged expenses.

 

A worker must assist the household in deciding which of the following methods provides the household with the greater benefit.

 

Examples:

Expense Not Billed Monthly

  1. If a household receives a single fuel bill in February that covers a three month supply of fuel oil, the household may chose to have the bill averaged over the period of time it is intended to cover (March, April, and May) and must then be removed for June OR it may be used in its entirety in March and must be removed for April.
  2. A household certified from January 1 through June 30 reports an allowable medical expense of $100 on March 15. The worker must act on the reported change.

The household may choose to have the $100 medical deduction averaged over the remaining months of the certification period (April, May, and June), and must then be removed for July OR it may be used in its entirety in April and must then be removed for May.

 

In this example without further medical expenses, the worker must inform the household that using the medical expense, as a one time expense in April would provide a greater benefit.

 

Fluctuating Expenses

  1. An elderly household with ongoing fluctuating monthly prescription costs is certified for one year. The fluctuating costs should be averaged using a prior three month period that is indicative of what the household anticipates to have as ongoing medical expenses for the new certification period.
  2. A household is only incurring electricity costs. The most current actual verified expense is used during the certification period.

 

If a household chooses averaging, the worker must document this in the case file. The method chosen must be used for the entire certification period.

 

Annual expenses such as property taxes or homeowners insurance that are billed yearly must be allowed as a one-time payment or averaged over 12 months.