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Oct. 8, 2004 Role in Directly Certifying School-Age Food Stamp Recipients for the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs
1 IntroductionThis memorandum addresses two issues in the Food Stamp Program and the National School Lunch / School Breakfast Programs. These issues are:
The recently enacted Child Nutrition and WIC Reauthorization Act of 2004, P.L. 108-265 (June 30, 2004) amended the Richard B. Russell National School Lunch Act and the Food Stamp Act to make it easier for food stamp households with school-age children in public and private schools to get certified for free school meals and to have their school meal eligibility verified. The State agency that administers the school lunch and breakfast programs must obtain information regarding the household’s participation in the Food Stamp Program from the State agency that administers the Food Stamp Program. The State agency administering the Food Stamp Program must enter into an agreement with the State agency administering the school lunch and breakfast programs. State and local food stamp agencies must cooperate with these certification and verification efforts. 2 Direct CertificationDirect Certification is the process under which local education agencies certify children who are members of households receiving assistance under the Food Stamp Program, as eligible for free school meals, without further application, based on information provided by the State/local agency administering the Food Stamp Program. Congress intended Direct Certification to foster and facilitate participation in the Child Nutrition programs by simplifying access to free meals for children in households already certified to receive food stamps. This process reduces the burden for low-income families and for schools and builds on a proven certification process that is more accurate than a school-based application. Direct Certification has been shown to accurately bring more children into the program. Basic Legal Requirement The recently enacted “Child Nutrition and WIC Reauthorization Act of 2004” amended the Food Stamp Act by adding a new subsection (u) to Section 11. The text appears in Attachment 1. All state social services agencies will be required to participate in Direct Certification. Phasing In Direct certification is optional until local education agencies are required to directly certify children in food stamp households. Required Direct Certification is phased in as follows:
The state social services agency must enter into an agreement with the state agency for school nutrition programs. The agreements will detail exactly how the state social services agency and the state agency for school nutrition programs will operate Direct Certification. Please note that some states have separate agencies that administer public and private schools. If so, an agreement must be taken with all agencies that administer the school nutrition programs. Methods of Direct Certification Three methods are the most common. Some state social services agencies and educational agencies use a mixture of methods.
Current Situation Direct Certification is very common across the United States. In the 2001-2002 school year:
The type of Direct Certification that exists may be limited by the particular circumstances of the state social services agency and the state and local educational authorities. For example, in some states, individual counties or groups of counties have their own computer systems that record the names of food stamp clients. In such a state, state-level matching may be difficult or impossible. 3 Direct VerificationDirect Verification is the process under which local education agencies verifying household applications approved for free or reduced price school meals use data maintained by the Food Stamp Program to verify the household’s eligibility without contacting the household. National School Lunch Program regulations require local educational authorities to verify the eligibility of some children for free or reduced price meals. Traditionally, households selected for verification have been required to submit documents substantiating their income or their participation in the Food Stamp Program (proof of participation in the Food Distribution Program on Indian Reservations or in the State’s Temporary Assistance for Needy Families Program (TANF) are also acceptable). For children who receive food stamps, the state school nutrition agency or local educational agency can request that the state / local social services agency verify that the household does, in fact, receive food stamps. Direct Verification helps to reduce the number of terminations that occur when a household fails to comply with procedural requirements. A study from 2003 showed that half of the students that were selected for verification did not respond to the request for verification. Of those who did not respond, half were actually eligible. Direct Verification helps to minimize this problem. Basic Legal Requirement The same Reauthorization Act contains the text in Attachment Two, which provides for Direct Verification. Basic Policy A local educational authority may choose to verify a child’s food stamp participation directly with the state / local social services agency. If the local educational authority does choose Direct Verification, the state social services agency must cooperate by making available information from the child’s food stamp participation record. By law, the state social services agency may not verify food stamp participation using information that is more than 180 days old, measured from the child’s date of application for meals in school. When a state social services agency verifies that a child is a member of a food stamp household, verification of the child’s eligibility for free meals is complete. However, the new law also provides that to verify eligibility for free and reduced price meals, the local educational agency may obtain and use income and program participation information from a public agency administering TANF and Medicaid. Some children who receive free or reduced-price meals may receive benefits from the TANF or Medicaid Programs, but not the Food Stamp Program. While this verification is not strictly a food stamp function, in many states there will be a common agreement to cover all three programs. The same 180-day limit on verification will apply to information from TANF and Medicaid No Phasing In This procedure goes into effect for all state social services agencies, on July 1, 2005. Operational Requirements for State Social Services Agencies State social services agencies and the state agencies for school nutrition programs will need to coordinate their planning in those jurisdictions where Direct Verification will occur. When a local educational authority chooses to use Direct Verification, the educational authority and social services agency will need to agree, in advance, how to exchange information. 4 What We Would Like You to Do
5 PDD’s Next StepsOver the next few months we shall:
/S/ Arthur Foley Arthur T. Foley
Attachment OneDirect Certification Section 104(b)(2) of the Reauthorization Act added the following Paragraph (u) to Section 11 of the Food Stamp Act (u) AGREEMENT FOR DIRECT CERTIFICATION AND COOPERATION.--
Attachment TwoDirect Verification The Reauthorization Act added the following paragraph to Section 105(a)(3) (F) DIRECT VERIFICATION.—
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Accessibility | Privacy/Security | Nondiscrimination | USDA | Last Modified: 10/26/2004 |