AN ACT
RELATING TO PUBLIC ASSISTANCE; EXTENDING
THE LIFE OF THE WELFARE REFORM OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE; AMENDING THE NEW MEXICO
WORKS ACT; DECLARING AN EMERGENCY.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF
THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO:
Section 1. Section 2-17-1 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1998,
Chapter 8, Section 21 and Laws 1998, Chapter 9, Section 21) is amended to read:
"2-17-1. WELFARE REFORM OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE CREATED--
TERMINATION.--The joint interim legislative "welfare reform oversight
committee" is created. The
committee shall function from the date of its appointment until December 15
prior to the first session of the forty-ninth legislature."
Section 2. Section 27-2B-3 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1998,
Chapter 8, Section 3 and Laws 1998, Chapter 9, Section 3, as amended by Laws
2001, Chapter 295, Section 1 and by Laws 2001, Chapter 326, Section 1) is
amended to read:
"27-2B-3. DEFINITIONS.--As used in the New Mexico Works
Act:
A. "benefit group" means a pregnant
woman or a group of people that includes a dependent child, all of that
dependent child's full, half, step- or adopted siblings living with the
dependent child's parent or relative within the fifth degree of consanguinity
and the parent with whom the children live;
B. "cash assistance" means cash
payments funded by the temporary assistance for needy families block grant
pursuant to the federal act and by state funds;
C. "department" means the human
services department;
D. "dependent child" means a natural,
adopted or step-child or ward who is:
(1) seventeen years of age or younger;
(2) eighteen years of age and is enrolled in high
school; or
(3) between eighteen and twenty-two years of age
and is receiving special education services regulated by the state board of
education;
E. "director" means the director of
the income support division of the department;
F. "earned income" means cash or
payment in kind that is received as wages from employment or payment in lieu of
wages; and earnings
from self-employment or earnings acquired from the direct provision of
services, goods or property, production of goods, management of property or
supervision of services;
G. "federal act" means the federal
Social Security Act and rules promulgated pursuant to the Social Security Act;
H. "federal poverty guidelines" means
the level of income defining poverty by family size published annually in the
federal register by the United States department of health and human
services;
I. "immigrant" means alien as defined
in the federal act;
J. "parent" means natural parent,
adoptive parent, stepparent or legal guardian;
K. "participant" means a recipient of
cash assistance or services or a member of a benefit group who has reached the
age of majority;
L. "person" means an individual;
M. "secretary" means the secretary of
the department;
N. "services" means child-care
assistance; payment for employment-related transportation costs; job search
assistance; employment counseling; employment, education and job training
placement; one-time payment for necessary employment-related costs; case management;
or other activities whose purpose is to assist transition into employment;
O. "unearned income" means old age,
survivors and disability insurance; railroad retirement benefits; veterans
administration compensation or pension; military retirement; pensions,
annuities and retirement benefits; lodge or fraternal benefits; shared shelter
payments; settlement payments; individual Indian money; child support;
unemployment compensation benefits; union benefits paid in cash; gifts and
contributions; and real property income; and
P. "vehicle" means a conveyance for
the transporting of individuals to or from employment, for the activities of
daily living or for the transportation of goods; "vehicle" does not
include boats, trailers or mobile homes used as a principle place of
residence."
Section 3. Section 27-2B-6 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1998,
Chapter 8, Section 6 and Laws 1998, Chapter 9, Section 6, as amended by Laws
2001, Chapter 295, Section 3 and by Laws 2001, Chapter 326, Section 3) is
amended to read:
"27-2B-6. DURATIONAL LIMITS.--
A. Pursuant to the federal act, on or after
July 1, 1997 a participant may receive
federally funded cash assistance and services for up to sixty months.
B. During a participant's fourth, sixth and
eighth semi-annual reviews, the department shall examine the participant's
progress to determine if the participant has successfully completed an
educational or training program or increased the number of hours he is working
as required by the federal act. The
department may refer the participant to alternative work activities or provide
additional services to address possible barriers to employment facing the
participant.
C. Up to twenty percent of the population of
participants may be exempted from the sixty-month durational limit set out in
Subsection A of this section because of hardship or because those participants
are battered or subject to extreme cruelty.
D. For the purposes of this section, a
participant has been battered or subjected to extreme cruelty if he can
demonstrate by reliable medical, psychological or mental reports, court orders
or police reports that he has been subjected to and currently is affected by:
(1) physical acts that result in physical injury;
(2) sexual abuse;
(3) being forced to engage in nonconsensual
sexual acts or activities;
(4) threats or attempts at physical or sexual
abuse;
(5) mental abuse; or
(6) neglect or deprivation of medical care except
when the deprivation is based by mutual consent on religious grounds.
E. For the purposes of this section, a hardship
exception applies to a person who demonstrates through reliable medical,
psychological or mental reports, social security administration records, court
orders, police reports or department records that he is a person:
(1) who is barred from engaging in a work
activity because he is temporarily or completely disabled;
(2) who is the sole provider of home care to an
ill or disabled family member;
(3) whose ability to be gainfully employed is
affected by domestic violence;
(4) whose application for supplemental security
income is pending in the application or appeals process and who:
(a) meets the criteria of Paragraph (1) of this
subsection; or
(b) was granted a waiver from the work
requirement pursuant to Paragraph (1) of Subsection I of Section 27-2B-5 NMSA
1978 in the last twenty-four months; or
(5) who otherwise qualifies for a hardship
exception as defined by the department.
F. Pursuant to the federal act, the department
shall not count a month of receipt of cash assistance or services toward the
sixty-month durational limit if during the time of receipt the participant:
(1) was a minor and was not the head of a
household or married to the head of a household; or
(2) lived in Indian country, as defined in the
federal act, if the most reliable data available with respect to the month
indicate that at least fifty percent of the adults living in Indian country or
in the village were not employed."
Section 4. Section 27-2B-8 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1998,
Chapter 8, Section 8 and Laws 1998, Chapter 9, Section 8, as amended by Laws
2001, Chapter 295, Section 5 and by Laws 2001, Chapter 326, Section 5) is
amended to read:
"27-2B-8. RESOURCES.--
A. Liquid and nonliquid resources owned by the
benefit group shall be counted in the eligibility determination.
B. A benefit group may at a maximum own the
following resources:
(1) two thousand dollars ($2,000) in nonliquid
resources;
(2) one thousand five hundred dollars ($1,500) in
liquid resources;
(3) the value of the principal residence of the
participant;
(4) the value of burial plots and funeral
contracts for family members;
(5) individual development accounts; and
(6) the value of work-related equipment up to one
thousand dollars ($1,000).
C. Vehicles owned by the benefit group shall not
be considered in the determination of resources attributed to the benefit
group."
Section 5. Section 27-2B-14 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1998,
Chapter 8, Section 14 and Laws 1998, Chapter 9, Section 14, as amended by Laws
2001, Chapter 295, Section 7 and by Laws 2001, Chapter 326, Section 7) is
amended to read:
"27-2B-14. SANCTIONS.--
A. The department shall sanction a member of a
benefit group for noncompliance with work requirements or child support
requirements.
B. The sanction shall be applied at the
following levels:
(1) twenty-five percent reduction of cash
assistance for the first occurrence of noncompliance;
(2) fifty percent reduction of cash assistance
for the second occurrence of noncompliance; and
(3) termination of cash assistance and
ineligibility to reapply for six months for the third occurrence of
noncompliance.
C. Prior to imposing the first sanction, if the
department determines that a participant is not complying with the work
participation requirement or child support requirements, the participant shall
be required to enter into a conciliation process established by the department
to address the noncompliance and to identify good cause for noncompliance or
barriers to compliance. The conciliation
process shall occur only once prior to the imposition of the sanction. The participant shall have ten working days
from the date a conciliation notice is mailed to contact the department to
initiate the conciliation process. A
participant who fails to initiate the conciliation process shall have a notice
of adverse action mailed to him after the tenth working day following the date
on which the conciliation notice is mailed.
Participants who begin but do not complete the conciliation process
shall be mailed a notice of adverse action thirty days from the date the
original conciliation notice was mailed.
D. Reestablishing compliance shall allow full
payment to resume.
E. Noncompliance with reporting requirements may
subject a participant to other sanctions, except that an adult member of the
benefit group shall not be sanctioned for the failure of a dependent child to
attend school.
F. Effective October 1, 2001, the department
shall not terminate the medicaid benefits of any member of a benefit group due
to imposition of a sanction pursuant to the provisions of this section."
Section 6. EMERGENCY.--It is necessary for the public
peace, health and safety that this act take effect immediately.
HB 122
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