N.Y. Comp. Codes R. & Regs. tit. 18, § 387.9
(a) Nonfinancial eligibility requirements are:
(2) Citizens and eligible aliens. To be eligible to participate in the food stamp program, a person must be a citizen of the United States or be an eligible alien as set forth below.
(i) Time-limited eligibility for refugees and asylees. The following aliens are eligible for food stamps until five years after the date:
(ii) Certain permanent resident aliens. A permanent resident alien is eligible for food stamps if the alien:
(b) has worked 40 qualifying quarters of coverage as defined under title II of the Social Security Act or can be credited with such qualifying quarters. In determining the number of qualifying quarters of coverage, an alien is credited with the following: For purposes of clause (b) of this subparagraph, no qualifying quarters of coverage provided for in subclause (1) of this clause for any period beginning after December 31, 1996 may be credited to an alien if such alien, for purposes of item (i) or the parents or spouse of such alien, for purposes of items (ii) and (iii) respectively, received any Federal means-tested public benefit during the period for which such qualifying quarter of coverage is credited.
(iii) Lawfully residing aliens who are veterans or are on active duty in the armed forces of the United States. An alien lawfully residing in this State is eligible for food stamps if the alien:
(6) Transfer of resources. Households which have transferred resources as defined in subdivision (b) of this section knowingly for the purpose of qualifying or attempting to qualify for food stamp benefits shall be disqualified from participation in the food stamp program for up to one year from the date of the discovery of the transfer. This disqualification period shall be applied if the resources are knowingly transferred in the three-month period prior to application or after the household is determined eligible for benefits.
(i) Eligibility will not be affected by the transfers of the following:
(iii) The length of the disqualification period shall be based on the amount by which nonexempt transferred resources, when added to other countable resources, exceeds the allowable resource limits. The following chart will be used to determine the period of disqualification:
| Amount in excess of the resource limit | Period of disqualification (months) |
|---|---|
| $1 to 249.99 | 1 |
| 250 to 999.99 | 3 |
| 1,000 to 2,999.99 | 6 |
| 3,000 to 4,999.99 | 9 |
| 5,000 or more | 12 |
(7) Household cooperation.
(i) A household applying for food stamps must cooperate in the eligibility determination process. The eligibility determination process requires that the application form be completed and signed, the household or its authorized representative be interviewed, and certain information on the application be verified.
(ii) A household receiving SNAP benefits or reapplying for SNAP must cooperate with any quality control review of its current or previous SNAP eligibility. A household refusing to cooperate in any quality control review must be determined ineligible to receive SNAP benefits.
(b) A household cannot be denied SNAP benefits for its refusal to cooperate in a quality control review if:
(c) In the event that one or more household members no longer reside with a household terminated for refusal to cooperate, the penalty for refusal to cooperate will attach to the household of the person(s) refusing to cooperate.
(b) Resources.
All applicants and recipients of food stamps must not exceed the resource limits set forth in this subdivision; however, households which are categorically eligible for food stamps, as provided in section 387.14(a) of this Part, are not subject to the resource limitations or any other requirements of this subdivision.
(1) Liquid and nonliquid resources of all members of the household cannot exceed $2,000 for the household, except that, for households including a member or members age 60 or over, such resources cannot exceed $3,000.
(2) Jointly owned resources.
(i) Resources owned jointly by separate households shall be considered available in their entirety to each household, unless it can be demonstrated by the applicant household that such resources are inaccessible to that household. If the household can demonstrate that it has access to only a portion of the resource, the value of only that portion of the resource shall be counted toward the household's resource level. The resource shall be considered totally inaccessible to the household if:
(ii) Resources shall be considered inaccessible to persons residing in shelters for battered women and children, as defined in this Part, if:
(3) Exclusion of resources. In determining the resources of a household, only the following shall be excluded:
(ii) Household goods, personal effects, including one burial plot per household member, and the cash value of life insurance policies. The cash value of pension plans or funds shall be excluded, except that Keogh plans which involve no contractual relationship with individuals who are not household members and individual retirement accounts (IRA's) shall not be excluded under this paragraph.
(a) Licensed vehicles must have their entire value excluded when the vehicle meets any of the requirements set forth in subclauses (1) through (9) of this clause. However, when vehicles do not qualify for any of these exclusions, such vehicles must be valued according to the market value test as described in clauses (b), (c) and (d) of this subparagraph. The tests for exclusions are as follows:
(c) Licensed vehicles shall also be evaluated for their equity value except for the following types of vehicles:
(iii)
(viii) Resources having a cash value which is not accessible to the household, such as but not limited to irrevocable trust funds, security deposits on rental property or utilities, property in probate, and real property which the household is making a good-faith effort to sell at a reasonable price. Any funds in a trust or transferred to a trust, and the income produced by that trust to the extent it is not available to the household, shall be considered inaccessible to the household if:
(b) the trustee administering the funds is either:
(d) the funds held in irrevocable trust are either:
(xix) Resources of any household member who receives or is authorized to receive Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits under title XVI of the Social Security Act or benefits under part A of title IV of the Social Security Act (Aid to Families with Dependent Children).
(c) Prohibition against automated finger imaging for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.