Oklahoma Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services
Fiscal Year 2007 (July 1, 2007 – June 30, 2008)
Eligibility Criteria / Indigence Threshold
(200% of Federal Poverty Guideline)
Persons in
Household |
Household
Annual Income* |
1 |
$20,420 |
2 |
$27,380 |
3 |
$34,340 |
4 |
$41,300 |
5 |
$48,260 |
6 |
$55,220 |
7 |
$61,180 |
8 |
$69,140 |
For households with more than 8 members, add $6,960 for each additional member. (This is the same increment that is applicable to smaller family sizes, as indicated by the figures above.)
*(Reference: ICIS Manual)—Income includes total annual cash receipts before taxes from all sources, with the exceptions noted below. Income includes money wages and salaries before any deductions; net receipts from self-employment (receipts from a person’s own unincorporated business, professional enterprise, or partnership, after deductions for business expenses); net receipts from farm self-employment, regular payments from social security, railroad retirement, unemployment compensation, strike benefits from union funds, workers’ compensation, veterans’ payments, public assistance (including Temporary Assistance for Needy Families), Supplemental Security Income, and training stipends; alimony, child support, and military family allotments or other regular support from an absent family member or someone not living in the household; private pensions, government employee pensions and regular insurance or annuity payments; college or university scholarships, grants, fellowships, and assistantships; and dividends, interest, net rental income, net royalties, periodic receipts from estates or trusts, and net gambling or lottery winnings.
Income does not include non-cash benefits, such as the employer-paid or union-paid portion of health insurance or other employee fringe benefits, food or housing received in lieu of wages, the value of food and fuel produced and consumed on farms, the imputed value of rent from owner-occupied non-farm or farm housing, and such Federal non-cash benefit programs as Medicare, Medicaid, food stamps, school lunches, loans, and housing assistance.
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