3500 Failure to Meet Work Related Requirements
3510 Effect of Failure to Meet Work Related Requirements on Eligibility - There shall be ineligibility for benefits when a non-exempt person fails or refuses to meet work related requirements without good cause. See KEESM 3540 for a Potential Employment Violation.
Penalties and violations can result in a hardship to the family without other alternatives of support, so they must be applied with care and consideration. To ensure the appropriate and uniform application of policy, the following guidelines must be followed in all instances of employment services non-cooperation.
3511 Effect of Failure to Meet Work
Related Requirements for Non-Recipients - For
a failure occurring while the person is not a recipient, (e.g., application
is pending and there has been a potential employment violation or there
is a required employment services failure), there is ineligibility until
the failure or refusal ceases.
Such failure or refusal does not incur a penalty in cash assistance or food assistance for purposes of establishing a first or subsequent penalty.
3511.1 Effect on TANF Eligibility for Non-Recipients
- The mandatory filing unit of which
the individual is a member shall be ineligible except in situations where
the mandatory individual who fails the requirements is a child who is
not able to act in their own behalf. In that circumstance, only the minor
parent is ineligible. This failure results in a denial for cash benefits
and is NOT considered a penalty nor does it count towards establishing
a first or subsequent penalty.
Note: See 2230 on treatment of teen
parents not enrolled in school.
3511.2 Effect on Food Assistance Eligibility for Non-Recipients - For food assistance, the only work related provisions that apply to applicants are the Potential Employment provisions of 3540. Only the individual who failed to comply is ineligible. Eligibility for the remaining household members shall be determined considering the individual who failed to comply as an excluded household member.
3512 Effect
of Failure to Meet Work Related Requirements for Recipients - GOALS
is a voluntary program. If the client fails or refuses to participate
in their assigned activity, the activity will end and the work program
block will be discontinued. No penalty will be applied.
For ongoing TANF and Food Assistance
E&T cases, the penalty shall be established giving timely and adequate
notice.
When individuals are ineligible under this provision, their ineligibility will follow them and affect any mandatory filing unit (MFU) they are associated with. If the ineligible individual(s) leaves the MFU or if a non- sanctioned member of the ineligible MFU leaves and joins a different MFU, they may reapply for benefits.
3512.1 Effect on TANF Eligibility for Recipients - Employment Services Program Administrator or Employment Services Supervisor approval is required for all work program penalties.
At the point non-cooperation is first reported or discovered, the career navigator must check with Prevention and Protection Services (PPS) to determine if there is any PPS activity that might support good cause for failing to meet requirements.
If a person fails to cooperate with their assigned Employment Services activity and is also participating in the Domestic Violence/Sexual Assault activity, the career navigator will contact the DV/SA advocate to determine if there is good cause for failing to cooperate with the additional activities assigned.
All notices will inform clients they may call any time prior to an appointment to request a date or time change and up to a 24-hour grace period after they have missed an appointment to report good cause for non-cooperation. The career navigator has the option to request good cause documentation for situations including but not limited to
• Conflicting appointments
• Medical emergencies
or family illness
• Family emergencies
If the client calls
prior to the appointment requesting a change in the time or date the career
navigator will set up a new date and/or time. A new appointment notice
will be sent to document the change in the system. Good cause documentation
may be requested if needed due to multiple cancellations or other suspicious
circumstances.
If the client calls
within the 24-hour grace period after the appointment is missed, the career
navigator will determine good cause based on KEESM 3530. If good cause
is met a new appointment will be made and a new appointment notice documenting
the change will be sent.
If the client calls
after the 24-hour grace period has expired, good cause may be requested
and an Employment Service Program Administrator will review the case circumstances
to determine if the penalty notice should be rescinded.
If good cause documentation is requested prior to the appointment, during the 24-hour grace period or after the 24-hour grace period, the career navigator will allow up to 10 days for it to be mailed or brought into the DCF office. Good cause will only be requested if the client contacts the DCF career navigator.
NOTE:
If a disqualification is imposed on a TANF household for failure to comply
with TANF work related requirements and the disqualification period will
begin prior to the twenty-fourth month of TANF and the household also
receives food assistance, the agency shall impose the same disqualification
on the member of the food assistance household who failed to comply with
the TANF requirements. See 2550.
If a client has reached the lifetime limit for TANF and has failed to comply with TANF work related requirements without good cause, the current hardship will be ended and the TANF case will close for exceeding the lifetime limit. No penalty will be applied to the TANF case and no comparable penalty will apply to the individual on the food assistance case.
For a failure to cooperate
with employment services requirements while the TANF Mandatory person
is in recipient status, the penalty period of ineligibility applies to
the mandatory TANF filing unit the penalized person is a part of, unless
the individual responsible for the failure is a teen parent under 18 who
is unable to act in their own behalf and is being treated as a child on
the case. In this circumstance, only the individual teen parent is ineligible
for assistance.
NOTE:
See 2230
on treatment of teen parents not enrolled in school.
NOTE:
Penalties accrued by a minor who is unable to act in their own behalf
do not count as a first or subsequent penalty when the minor becomes an
adult cash assistance recipient.
The period of ineligibility for TANF is as follows:
First
Penalty: The mandatory filing unit (MFU) will be ineligible for cash
benefits a minimum of 3 Months. The family will have to reapply for
cash benefits at the end of the 3-month period. (See 3522-
Re-Establishing Eligibility)
Second
Penalty: The MFU will be ineligible for cash benefits a minimum of
6 months. The family will have to reapply for cash benefits at the
end of the 6-month period. (See 3522-
Re-Establishing Eligibility)
Third
Penalty: The MFU will be ineligible for cash benefits a minimum of
1 year. The family will have to reapply for cash benefits at the end
of the 1-year period. (See 3522-
Re-Establishing Eligibility)
A
fourth and subsequent penalties will result in TANF ineligibility
for ten years for the individual and the MFU they are associated with.
Penalties for children in the MFU will not count against the child
when the minor becomes an adult cash recipient.
The penalty is cured when the individual(s) completes the mandatory minimum ineligibility period.
3512.2
Effect on Food Assistance Eligibility for Recipients - There
is ineligibility for the individual for food assistance when the local
DCF office has evidence that a Mandatory E&T participant, without
good cause, failed to cooperate with Mandatory Food Assistance E&T
or failed to meet 30 hours per week of verifiable participation in employment
and/or Food Assistance E&T activities.
If the recipient of
food assistance obtains a Food Assistance violation, tiered disqualifications
of 3 months, 6 months or 12 months are applied. (Note: 3rd and subsequent
violations will result in a 12 month disqualification).
Good cause shall be
determined by employment services based on the provisions of 3530 and 3530.1.
Food Assistance violations
for mandatory E&T participants shall be tiered with Potential Employment
violations.
NOTE:
For Mandatory E&T participants who are non-exempt and not working
a minimum of 30 hours a week and/or failed to meet 30 hours per week participation
in the Food Assistance E&T program will be subject to a food assistance
violation. This violation will be tiered with potential employment violations
and will have the same tiered disqualifications of 3 months, 6 months
or 12 months.
Example: Sue fails to
participate with the mandatory Food Assistance E&T program to meet
her 30 hour a week requirement. She has a previous potential employment
violation which is to be tiered with the food assistance violation. This
will be her second violation and she will be ineligible for Food Assistance
for 6 months.
Good Cause notice must
be sent by the E&T Non-Compliance Coordinator if a Mandatory E&T
client:
misses an appointment, scheduled class, or activity; or
does not provide verification of 30 hours of weekly participation.
The client must be given
10 days to provide good cause before a penalty can be requested.
The penalty is cured when the individual(s) completes the mandatory minimum ineligibility period.
For a failure to cooperate
with TANF work program requirements while the food assistance mandatory
person is in recipient status of TANF, the penalty period applies to only
the individual who failed to comply; and eligibility for the remaining
household members shall be determined considering the individual who failed
to comply as an excluded household member.
3512.3 Effect on Child Care Eligibility for Recipients- When a child care recipient is penalized for non-cooperation with work programs, child care must remain open at the current benefit level (no increase in family share deduction and no decrease in hours of care authorized) for the remainder of the current 12-month eligibility period unless one of the situations listed in 7640 should occur. At the end of the 12-month eligibility period when the case is reviewed, the family must meet all eligibility criteria to be approved for another 12-month eligibility period.