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> 2005 Poverty Guidelines

[Federal Register: February 18, 2005 (Volume 70, Number 33)]
[Notices]
[Page 8373-8375]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr18fe05-76]

DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES

Office of the Secretary

Annual Update of the HHS Poverty Guidelines
AGENCY: Department of Health and Human Services.

ACTION: Notice

SUMMARY: This notice provides an update of the HHS poverty guidelines
to account for last (calendar) year's increase in prices as measured by
the Consumer Price Index.

EFFECTIVE DATE: These guidelines go into effect on the day they are
published (unless an office administering a program using the
guidelines specifies a different effective date for that particular
program).

ADDRESSES: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and
Evaluation, Room 404E, Humphrey Building, Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS), Washington, DC 20201.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For information about how the poverty
guidelines are used or how income is defined in a particular program,
contact the Federal (or other) office that is responsible for that
program.

For general questions about the poverty guidelines (but NOT for
questions about a particular program that uses the poverty guidelines),
contact Gordon Fisher, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning
and Evaluation, Room 404E, Humphrey Building, Department of Health and
Human Services, Washington, DC 20201--telephone: (202) 690-7507;
persons with Internet access may visit the poverty guidelines Internet
site at http://aspe.hhs.gov/poverty.

For information about the Hill-Burton Uncompensated Services
Program (no-fee or reduced-fee health care services at certain
hospitals and other health care facilities for certain persons meeting
eligibility criteria involving the poverty guidelines), contact the
Office of the Director, Division of Facilities Compliance and Recovery,
Health Resources and Services Administration, HHS, Room 10-105,
Parklawn Building, 5600 Fishers Lane, Rockville, Maryland 20857. To
speak to a person, call (301) 443-5656. To receive a Hill-Burton
information package, call 1-800-638-0742 (for callers outside Maryland)
or 1-800-492-0359 (for callers in Maryland), and leave your name and
address on the Hotline recording. Persons with Internet access may
visit the Division of Facilities Compliance and Recovery Internet Home
page site at http://www.hrsa.gov/osp/dfcr. The Division of Facilities
Compliance and Recovery notes that as set by 42 CFR 124.505(b), the
effective date of this update of the poverty guidelines for facilities
obligated under the Hill-Burton Uncompensated Services Program is sixty
days from the date of this publication.

For information about the percentage multiple of the poverty
guidelines to be used on immigration forms such as USCIS Form I-864,
Affidavit of Support, contact U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
Services. To obtain information on the most recent applicable poverty
guidelines from U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, call 1-800-
375-5283. Persons with Internet access may obtain the information from
the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Internet site at http://
uscis.gov/graphics/howdoi/affsupp.htm.

For information about the Department of Labor's Lower Living
Standard Income Level (an alternative eligibility criterion with the
poverty guidelines for certain programs under the Workforce Investment
Act of 1998), contact Janeice Youngblood, Employment and Training
Administration, U.S. Department of Labor--telephone: (202) 693-3606--e-
mail: youngblood.janeice@dol.gov; persons with Internet access may
visit the Employment and Training Administration's Lower Living
Standard

[[Page 8374]]

Income Level Internet site at http://www.doleta.gov/llsil.

For information about the number of people in poverty since 1959 or
about the Census Bureau poverty thresholds, contact the Housing and
Household Economic Statistics Division information staff (HHES-Info),
Room G251, Federal Office Building 3, U.S. Census Bureau,
Washington, DC 20233-8500--telephone: (301) 763-3242. Persons with
Internet access may visit the Poverty section of the Census Bureau's
Internet site at http://www.census.gov/hhes/www/poverty.html or the
U.S. Census Bureau Question and Answer Center at http://ask.census.gov.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Poverty - Persons in family unit guideline
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2005 Poverty Guidelines for the 48 Contiguous States and the District of Columbia
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1.......................................................... $9,570
2.......................................................... 12,830
3.......................................................... 16,090
4.......................................................... 19,350
5.......................................................... 22,610
6.......................................................... 25,870
7.......................................................... 29,130
8.......................................................... 32,390
------------------------------------------------------------
For family units with more than 8 persons, add $3,260 for each
additional person......................................................
================================================
2005 Poverty Guidelines for Alaska
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1.......................................................... $11,950
2.......................................................... 16,030
3.......................................................... 20,110
4.......................................................... 24,190
5.......................................................... 28,270
6.......................................................... 32,350
7.......................................................... 36,430
8.......................................................... 40,510
------------------------------------------------------------
For family units with more than 8 persons, add $4,080 for each
additional person......................................................
================================================
2005 Poverty Guidelines for Hawaii
-------------------------------------------------------------------
1.......................................................... $11,010
2.......................................................... 14,760
3.......................................................... 18,510
4.......................................................... 22,260
5.......................................................... 26,010
6.......................................................... 29,760
7.......................................................... 33,510
8.......................................................... 37,260
------------------------------------------------------------
For family units with more than 8 persons, add $3,750 for each
additional person. ....................................................
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Separate poverty guideline figures for Alaska and Hawaii reflect Office
of Economic Opportunity administrative practice beginning in the 1966-
1970 period. Note that the Census Bureau poverty thresholds--the
version of the poverty measure used for statistical purposes--have
never had separate figures for Alaska and Hawaii. The poverty
guidelines are not defined for Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands,
American Samoa, Guam, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, the
Federated States of Micronesia, the Commonwealth of the Northern
Mariana Islands, and Palau. In cases in which a Federal program using
the poverty guidelines serves any of those jurisdictions, the Federal
office that administers the program is responsible for deciding
whether to use the contiguous-states-and-D.C. guidelines for those
jurisdictions or to follow some other procedure.

The preceding figures are the 2005 update of the poverty guidelines
required by section 673(2) of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act
(OBRA) of 1981 (Pub. L. 97-35--reauthorized by Pub. L. 105-285, Section
201 (1998)). As required by law, this update reflects last year's
change in the Consumer Price Index (CPI-U); it was done using the same
procedure used in previous years. (The poverty guidelines are
calculated each year from the latest published Census Bureau poverty
thresholds--not from the previous year's guidelines. Besides the
inflation adjustment, the guidelines are also rounded and adjusted to
standardize the differences between family sizes.)

Section 673(2) of OBRA-1981 (42 U.S.C. 9902(2)) requires the use of
these poverty guidelines as an eligibility criterion for the Community
Services Block Grant program. The poverty guidelines are also used as
an eligibility criterion by a number of other Federal programs (both
HHS and non-HHS). Due to confusing legislative language dating back to
1972, the poverty guidelines have sometimes been mistakenly referred to
as the ``OMB'' (Office of Management and Budget) poverty guidelines or
poverty line. In fact, OMB has never issued the guidelines; the
guidelines are issued each year by the Department of Health and Human
Services. The poverty guidelines may be formally referenced as ``the
poverty guidelines updated periodically in the Federal Register by the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under the authority of 42
U.S.C. 9902(2).''

The poverty guidelines are a simplified version of the poverty
thresholds that the Census Bureau uses for statistical purposes--to
prepare its estimates of the number of persons and families in poverty.
The poverty guidelines issued by the Department of Health and Human
Services are used for administrative purposes--for instance, for
determining whether a person or family is financially eligible for
assistance or services under a particular Federal program. Since the
poverty guidelines in this notice--the 2005 guidelines--reflect price
changes through calendar year 2004, they are approximately equal to the
poverty thresholds for calendar year 2004 which the Census Bureau
expects to issue in August 2005. (A preliminary version of the 2004
thresholds is now available from the Census Bureau.)

In certain cases, as noted in the relevant authorizing legislation
or program regulations, a program uses the poverty guidelines as only
one of several eligibility criteria, or uses a percentage multiple of
the guidelines (for example, 125 percent or 185 percent of the
guidelines). Non-Federal organizations that use the poverty guidelines
under their own authority in non-Federally-funded activities can choose
to use a percentage multiple of the guidelines such as 125 percent or
185 percent.

In some cases, these poverty guidelines may not become effective
for a particular program until a regulation or notice specifically
applying to the program in question has been issued.
The poverty guidelines given above should be used for both farm and
non-farm families. Similarly, these guidelines should be used for both
aged and non-aged units. The poverty guidelines have never had an aged/
non-aged distinction; only the Census Bureau poverty thresholds have
separate figures for aged and non-aged one-person and two-person units.
Note that this notice no longer provides definitions of ``income,''
``family,'' ``unrelated individual,'' and ``household.'' This is
because there are no universal administrative definitions of these
terms that are valid for all programs that use the poverty guidelines.
Since the definitions previously included were illustrative only and
were not meant to be binding, it was decided to omit them. To find out
whether income is before taxes or after taxes, or whether a particular
type of income should be counted in determining eligibility for a
specific program, or for what time period income should be counted, or
what precise definition of ``family'' or ``household'' is used by a
particular program, or whether a particular person should be counted in
determining income eligibility, please consult the office or
organization administering the

[[Page 8375]]

program in question; that office or organization has the responsibility
for making decisions about such definitions (to the extent that the
definition is not already contained in legislation or regulations).

Dated: February 14, 2005.

Michael O. Leavitt,
Secretary of Health and Human Services.
[FR Doc. 05-3144 Filed 2-15-05; 12:57 pm]
BILLING CODE 4154-05-P.


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