The following kinds of income will be excluded when determining a household's eligibility and benefit level.
Any cash contributions from a non-legally responsible person (i.e., someone without a court order or other binding agreement) that are restricted for a specific purpose and provide for a portion of any rent or mortgage, fuel, utilities and/or food or other needs are excluded from income.
A vendor payment is excluded from income whenever a person or organization outside the household uses its own funds to make a direct payment to a household's creditors or to a person or organization providing a service to the household. The following are examples of excluded vendor payments:
If the employer provides housing to an employee, the value of the housing shall also be an excluded vendor payment:
The PASS program allows persons who receive or who might qualify to receive SSI benefits to develop a plan in which the goal is to become employed. The PASS must be approved by the Social Security Administration (SSA) to permit the individual to set aside a specified amount of money to be used or deposited into a special bank account for future use.
These specified funds are to be used to achieve the work goal stated in the approved PASS and shall be excluded from income in determining SNAP eligibility and benefit level.
PASS funds may include, but are not limited to, earned income or unearned income, or funds from an insurance settlement. SSI benefits are not used as PASS funds and, therefore, are still considered countable income for SNAP purposes.
Exclusion of PASS funds from income for SNAP purposes is verified by a copy of the PASS agreement and the PASS approval letter from the SSA.
PASS funds are not counted as assets because the assets of a household member who receives SSI are excluded for SNAP purposes, in accordance with 106 CMR 363.140(H)(7).
106 CMR, § 363.230