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Food Stamp Program
Food Stamp Application/Interview Process
How and Where do you apply for Food
Stamps?
Applications can be obtained and completed at the local food stamp office that
will normally be in the county or city in which your client lives. Your clients
have the right to submit the application the same day. You can also call the
office and ask them to send you an application, help your client fill it in
and send it in by mail, or in some cases, by fax. The local office will give
your client an appointment for an interview.
What personal forms and information
are needed to enroll?
Prior to being certified, your clients must provide their physical identification
and a Social Security number or proof that they have applied for one if they
do not have one.
How long does it take to process
an application?
Your clients find out if they are eligible within 30 days of submitting their
application. Your clients who have not heard within this timeframe should call
or visit their state food stamp office.
What if an application is incomplete?
Your clients' application will be accepted and an interview will be scheduled,
as long as the application contains your clients' name, address (if applicable),
and signature. However, before eligibility can be determined, your client
may be required to provide the missing information.
How long can my clients get Food
Stamps? Do my clients need to reapply for benefits?
Once your clients are approved for food stamps, they are given a set time that
benefits will last. This set time is called a “certification period”,
and can last anywhere from one to 12 months. The food stamp office sends your
client a notice that it is time to come in for re-certification toward the
end of the certification period.
What is the food stamp application
process like?
Applying for food stamps consists of three steps: filing an application form,
being interviewed by a food stamp case worker, and verifying information provided
at the interview.
How should my client file an application
for food stamps?
Your clients can submit their application at any food stamp office, or at many
legal aid offices and drop-in centers. Your clients can also call the food
stamp office and ask that an application be sent to them by mail. The food
stamp office must provide the application form on the day it is requested and
accept the application on the day it is filed. Your clients can submit their
application to the food stamp office in person, through an authorized representative
or by mail. Each state also has its own food stamp hotline.
What is an authorized representative?
An authorized representative is someone your clients approve to apply for and
collect food stamps on their behalf. Applicants may ask a friend or relative
to act as an authorized representative if they anticipate having trouble
with the application process or getting to the store to use their benefits.
Authorized representatives may also purchase food for your
clients using the EBT card or food stamp coupons. All food stamps collected
on behalf of your client must be used for your client’s benefit.
To select an authorized representative, your client must write a letter
to the food stamp office. The letter should contain the name of the authorized
representative, date, and your client's signature.
Can my client receive expedited
food stamp benefits?
Yes. Clients that have less than $150/month in income and no more than $100
in resources, or shelter costs in excess of their combined income and resources
can get expedited service. Expedited service requires that the agency provide
food stamps within seven days of the application date.
Case managers should note that many people who are homeless
qualify for expedited service. If expedited service is denied, an applicant
has a right to a fair hearing.
To get expedited service, verification of your client's
identity is required. No other verification is
needed to receive the first month’s worth of food stamps. To
receive additional months of food stamps, your clients will need to help
verify any information on which verification was postponed at initial
certification.
Do my clients have to be interviewed
to get Food Stamps?
Yes. Typically your clients will have a face-to-face interview at the food
stamp office to determine eligibility. Before the meeting, the food stamp office
should provide your clients with a list of documentation to bring.
The state agency is required to inform your clients of
their right to waive a face-to-face interview in favor of a telephone
interview, if a hardship is determined by the agency. Examples of hardships
include, but are not limited to:
- Illness
- Transportation difficulties
- Work or training hours, which prevent your clients
from making it to a food stamp office while it is open
What documentation should my client
bring to the interview to prove his/her identity?
The food stamp agency must accept any documents that reasonably establish your
client's identity. No requirement for a specific type of document may be imposed.
Examples of acceptable documentation include, but are not limited to:
- Driver’s license
- Identification card
- Identification for health benefits or for other
assistance or social services programs
- Voter registration card
- Birth certificate
If no documentation is available, the food stamp agency
can verify identity through a collateral contact, such as a call to a
homeless shelter or a case manager.
Under these liberal rules, the state agency should be able to verify information
for almost any homeless client. If the food stamp agency denies benefits to
your clients for lack of identification, they can challenge the denial through
a fair hearing.
Can my client apply for Food Stamps
through a pre-release program?
Yes. Pre-release programs are designed to allow people in public institutions
(institutions owned by or controlled by the Federal government, a state, a
city, or a county) to apply for benefits, even though they will not receive
benefits until their release.
Under Food Stamp Program regulations, if your clients are
applying for Supplemental Security Income (SSI) through a pre-release
program they can apply for food stamp benefits jointly with their application
for SSI. You should ensure that your clients in pre-release programs
who are applying for SSI are also applying for food stamps.
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