Quote:
Originally Posted by gnadfly
|
Hey thanks for the link. Very interesting. I went to find online how they calculate the food benefits, and apparently those amounts are not necessarily what individuals actually get. They do deductions, and based on what amount of money an individual has in their bank account or other possible assests, greatly reduce what they may actually receive.
Here is a link
http://www.cbpp.org/cms/index.cfm?fa=view&id=1269
I have a friend who is disabled, she is a quadrapeligic, and is on disability. Her disability income is under 1000.00 a month. She had to get onto the SNAPS program and they only give her a maximum amount of 55.00 a month flat. Apparently they calculate her income after basic needs like rent, and do a regular review of her bank account. So if she gets birthday money and deposits that, and it shows up on their review, she will recieve an adjusted amount.
That link you provided kind of through me off, so I had to investigate it. Anyway, I imagine that the deductions and calculations are different and vary from state to state. Some states may be stricter and others not so strict.
It shows that single adults have to work a minimum of 20 hours a week to maintain any SNAP benefits, which will be reduced due to the income they make. It also shows that a single adult that doesn't work is only able to stay on the program for 3 months for a given year.
Example: Calculating a Household’s Monthly SNAP Benefits
Consider a family of three with one full-time, minimum-wage worker, two children, dependent care costs of $74 a month, and shelter costs of $833 per month.[14]
Step 1 — Gross Income: The federal minimum wage is currently $7.25 per hour. Full-time work at this level yields monthly earnings of $1,256.
Step 2 — Net Income for Shelter Deduction: Begin with the gross monthly earnings of $1,256. Subtract the standard deduction for a three-person household ($152), the earnings deduction (20 percent times $1,256, or $251), and the childcare deduction ($74). The result is $779 (Countable Income A).
Step 3 — Shelter Deduction: Begin with the shelter costs of (maximum amount allowed) $833. Subtract half of Countable Income A (half of $779 is $390) for a result of $443.
Step 4 — Net Income: Subtract the shelter deduction ($443) from Countable Income A ($779) for a result of $336.
Step 5 — Family’s Expected Contribution Towards Food: 30 percent of the household’s net income ($336) is $101.
Step 6 — SNAP Benefit: The maximum benefit in 2014 for a family of three is $497. The maximum benefit minus the household contribution ($497 minus $101) equals $396.
The family’s monthly SNAP benefit is $396.