Programs |
Manual Section |
ALTCS |
The customer opened a bank account for his nephew and funded it with $5,000. Even though he put the account in the nephew’s name, he still has full control of the account. The resource remains countable to the customer.
A check received by an individual as payment but which is not yet cashed, even six months or more after receipt, is considered constructively received and included in the resource calculation.
The customer irrevocably assigns a $10,000 Certificate of Deposit to his grandchildren. Since the assignment is irrevocable and the CD is no longer available to the customer, the $10,000 assignment is not considered constructively received, but is evaluated as a transfer.
tThe customer assigns a $5,000 savings account to his brother, and the account is now solely in the brother's name. The account cannot be made available solely due to the customer's action. As a result, the savings account cannot be treated as constructively received but instead is evaluated as a transfer.
The customer refuses an inheritance that reverts to another individual named in the will and is no longer available. The resource is no longer considered constructively received, but is evaluated as a transfer.
The customer entered a NF on April 15th and applied for ALTCS on April 18th. On April 29th he paid the NF $5,000. On April 25th the NF had billed the customer for 16 days in April totaling $2,990 and that payment was due no later than May 5th.
For April, $2,990 is considered payment of a current bill, but the balance of the payment ($2,010) is an advance payment and is considered a constructively received resource.