Appendix A2 - 7 CFR 275 REVISED FOR AE79

A2- 7 CFR Part 275 (up to date as of 9-26-2023).pdf

RIN 0584-AE79 Reform Provisions for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program’s Quality Control System

Appendix A2 - 7 CFR 275 REVISED FOR AE79

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Appendix A2- OMB 0584-NEW for AE79
7 CFR Part 275 (up to date as of 9/26/2023)
Performance Reporting System

7 CFR Part 275 (Sept. 26, 2023)

This content is from the eCFR and is authoritative but unofficial.

Title 7 —Agriculture
Subtitle B —Regulations of the Department of Agriculture
Chapter II —Food and Nutrition Service, Department of Agriculture
Subchapter C —Supplemental Nutrition Assistance and Food Distribution Program

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7 CFR Part 275 (Sept. 26, 2023)

Part 275 Performance Reporting System
Subpart A Administration
§ 275.1 General scope and purpose.
§ 275.2 State agency responsibilities.
§ 275.3 Federal monitoring.
§ 275.4 Record retention.
Subpart B Management Evaluation (ME) Reviews
§ 275.5 Scope and purpose.
§ 275.6 Management units.
§ 275.7 Selection of sub-units for review.
§ 275.8 Review coverage.
§ 275.9 Review process.
Subpart C Quality Control (QC) Reviews
§ 275.10 Scope and purpose.
§ 275.11 Sampling.
§ 275.12 Review of active cases.
§ 275.13 Review of negative cases.
§ 275.14 Review processing.
Subpart D Data Analysis and Evaluation
§ 275.15 Data management.
Subpart E Corrective Action
§ 275.16 Corrective action planning.
§ 275.17 State corrective action plan.
§ 275.18 Project area/management unit corrective action plan.
§ 275.19 Monitoring and evaluation.
Subpart F Responsibilities for Reporting on Program Performance
§ 275.20 ME review schedules.
§ 275.21 Quality control review reports.
§ 275.22 Administrative procedure.
Subpart G Program Performance
§ 275.23 Determination of State agency program performance.
§ 275.24 High performance bonuses.
Editorial Note: Nomenclature changes to subchapter C appear by Amdt. 381, 65 FR 64586, Oct. 30, 2000.

PART 275—PERFORMANCE REPORTING SYSTEM
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 2011–2036.

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7 CFR 275.1

Editorial Note: OMB control numbers relating to this part 275 are contained in § 271.8.
Subpart A—Administration
§ 275.1 General scope and purpose.
Under the Food and Nutrition Act of 2008, each State agency is responsible for the administration of SNAP in
accordance with the Act, Regulations, and the State agency's plan of operation. To fulfill the requirements of the Act,
each State agency shall have a system for monitoring and improving its administration of the program. The State
agency is also responsible for reporting on its administration to FNS. These reports shall identify program
deficiencies and the specific administrative action proposed to meet the program requirements established by the
Secretary. If it is determined, however, that a State has failed without good cause to meet any of the program
requirements established by the Secretary, or has failed to carry out the approved State plan of operation, the
Department shall suspend and/or disallow from the State such funds as are determined to be appropriate in
accordance with part 276 of this chapter.
[Amdt. 160, 45 FR 15898, Mar. 11, 1980, as amended by Amdt. 266, 52 FR 3407, Feb. 4, 1987; Amdt. 328, 56 FR 60051, Nov. 27,
1991; 75 FR 33436, June 11, 2010]

§ 275.2 State agency responsibilities.
(a) Establishment of the performance reporting system.
(1) The State agency shall establish a continuing performance reporting system to monitor program
administration and program operations. The method for establishing each component of the system
is identified and explained in subparts B through F of this part. The components of the State
agency's performance reporting system shall be:
(i)

Data collection through management evaluation (ME) reviews and quality control (QC) reviews;

(ii) Analysis and evaluation of data from all sources;
(iii) Corrective action planning;
(iv) Corrective action implementation and monitoring; and
(v) Reporting to FNS on program performance.
(2) The State agency must ensure corrective action is effected at the State and project area levels.
(b) Staffing standards. The State agency shall employ sufficient State level staff to perform all aspects of the
Performance Reporting System as required in this part of the regulations. The staff used to conduct QC
reviews shall not have prior knowledge of either the household or the decision under review. Where there
is prior knowledge, the reviewer must disqualify her/himself. Prior knowledge is defined as having:
(1) Taken any part in the decision that has been made in the case;
(2) any discussion of the case with staff who participated in the decision; or
(3) any personal knowledge of or acquaintance with persons in the case itself. To ensure no prior
knowledge on the part of QC or ME reviewers, local project area staff shall not be used to conduct
QC or ME reviews; exceptions to this requirement concerning local level staff may be granted with
prior approval from FNS. However, local personnel shall not, under any circumstances, participate in
ME reviews of their own project areas.
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(c) Use of third party contractors. Any State agency procuring services of a contractor for quality control
related services, including any project or training that involves the interpretation of SNAP regulations,
policies, or handbooks for quality control or payment accuracy purpose, must ensure that all activities and
deliverables performed by the contractor within the scope of the contract adhere to Federal law,
regulations, and policies. Activities performed or deliverables provided by a contractor that are not in
accordance with Federal law, regulations, or policies are unallowable SNAP administrative costs and are
not eligible for Federal reimbursement.
(1) For expenses related to the hiring of a contractor for any quality control related work to qualify for
SNAP administrative cost reimbursement under § 277.4(b), FNS requires the following:
(i)

The State must notify FNS in writing of its intent to hire a contractor at least 30 days prior to
entering into the contract to do so. The notification must include a copy of the selected
contractor's complete proposal, which must receive FNS approval before the State may proceed
with the procuring the contract.

(ii) Once the contract is procured, the State must submit to FNS a copy of the signed contract and
documentation that outlines all tasks and deliverables to be performed or produced by the
contractor.
(iii) The State must submit to FNS a copy of all deliverables, including any training materials,
provided by the contractor.
(iv) The State must notify FNS of the date, time, and location of any training sessions led by the
contractor at least 10 days in advance of the training. FNS shall be allowed to attend any such
training session with or without providing prior notice to the State agency or the contractor.
(v) If the State discusses individual sampled cases with the contractor, the State must document,
within the case file, the contents of the discussion and any action taken by the State as a result
of the discussion. If the discussion occurs orally, FNS shall be given notice 24 hours in advance
of the discussion and shall be allowed to participate in the discussion. If the discussion occurs
in writing, the State must ensure that FNS is copied on all written correspondence discussing
individual sampled cases.
(2) Copies of documentation and notices required in paragraph (c)(1) of this section must be provided to
the appropriate FNS Regional SNAP Director.
(3) In accordance with the non-procurement debarment procedures under 2 CFR part 417, or successor
regulations, FNS shall debar any person that, in carrying out the quality control system, knowingly
submits or causes to be submitted false information to FNS.
(d) FNS Access to State Systems. Subject to data and security protocols agreed to by FNS and a State agency
administering SNAP, each State agency shall ensure that FNS has complete access, including remote
access for QC purposes, to both the records that are used in the administration of SNAP, including but not
limited to the records contained within certification and EBT systems, and the information systems in
which such records are contained.
[Amdt. 160, 45 FR 15898, Mar. 11, 1980, as amended by Amdt. 266, 52 FR 3407, Feb. 4, 1987; 86 FR 44586, Aug. 13, 2021; 88 FR
23559, Apr. 18, 2023]

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§ 275.3 Federal monitoring.
The Food and Nutrition Service shall conduct the review described in this section to determine whether a State
agency is operating SNAP and the Performance Reporting System in accordance with program requirements. The
Federal reviewer may consolidate the scheduling and conduction of these reviews to reduce the frequency of entry
into the State agency. FNS regional offices will conduct additional reviews to examine State agency and project area
operations, as considered necessary to determine compliance with program requirements. FNS shall notify the
State agency of any deficiencies detected in program or system operations. Any deficiencies detected in program or
system operations which do not necessitate long range analytical and evaluative measures for corrective action
development shall be immediately corrected by the State agency. Within 60 days of receipt of the findings of each
review established below, State agencies shall develop corrective action addressing all other deficiencies detected
in either program or system operations and shall ensure that the State agency's own corrective action plan is
amended and that FNS is provided this information at the time of the next formal semiannual update to the State
agency's Corrective Action Plan, as required in § 275.17.
(a) Reviews of State Agency's Administration/Operation of SNAP. FNS shall conduct an annual review of
certain functions performed at the State agency level in the administration/operation of the program. FNS
will designate specific areas required to be reviewed each fiscal year.
(b) Reviews of State Agency's Management Evaluation System. FNS will review each State agency's
management evaluation system on a biennial basis; however, FNS may review a State agency's
management evaluation system on a more frequent basis if a regular review reveals serious deficiencies
in the ME system. The ME review will include but not be limited to a determination of whether or not the
State agency is complying with FNS regulations, an assessment of the State agency's methods and
procedures for conducting ME reviews, and an assessment of the data collected by the State agency in
conducting the reviews.
(c) Reviews of State Agency's Quality Control System. FNS will conduct a management evaluation (ME) of at
least two State Quality Control systems annually, to the maximum extent practicable. The ME will include,
but not be limited to, a determination of whether the State agency is complying with FNS regulations; an
assessment of the State agency's methods and procedures for conducting and managing the Quality
Control system; and an assessment of the data collected by the State agency and submitted to the FNS
Regional Office for conducting reviews.
(d) Validation of State Agency error rates. FNS shall validate each State agency's payment error rate, as
described in § 275.23(c), during each annual quality control review period. Federal validation reviews shall
be conducted by reviewing against the Food and Nutrition Act of 2008 and the regulations, taking into
account any FNS-authorized waivers to deviate from specific regulatory provisions. FNS shall validate
each State agency's reported negative error rate. Any deficiencies detected in a State agency's QC system
shall be included in the State agency's corrective action plan. The findings of validation reviews shall be
used as outlined in § 275.23(d)(4).
(1) Payment error rate. The validation review of each State agency's payment error rate shall consist of
the following actions:
(i)

FNS will select a subsample of a State agency's completed active cases, as follows:

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(A) For State agencies that determine their active sample sizes in accordance with §
275.11(b)(1)(ii), the Federal review sample for completed active cases is determined as
follows:
Average monthly reviewable caseload (N)

Federal subsample target (n′)

31,489 and over

n′ = 400

10,001 to 31,488

n′ = .011634 N + 33.66

10,000 and under

n′ = 150

(B) For State agencies that determine their active sample sizes in accordance with §
275.11(b)(1)(iii), the Federal review sample for completed active cases is determined as
follows:
Average monthly reviewable caseload (N)

Federal subsample target (n′)

60,000 and over

n′ = 400

10,001 to 59,999

n′ = .005 N + 100

10,000 and under

n′ = 150

(C) In the above formula, n' is the minimum number of Federal review sample cases which
must be selected when conducting a validation review, except that FNS may select a lower
number of sample cases if:
(1) The State agency does not report a change in sampling procedures associated with a
revision in its required sample size within 10 days of effecting the change; and/or
(2) The State agency does not complete the number of case reviews specified in its
approved sampling plan.
(D) The reduction in the number of Federal cases selected will be equal to the number of
cases that would have been selected had the Federal sampling interval been applied to the
State agency's shortfall in its required sample size. This number may not be exact due to
random starts and rounding.
(E) In the above formula, N is the State agency's minimum active case sample size as
determined in accordance with § 275.11(b)(1).
(ii) FNS Regional Offices will conduct case record reviews to the extent necessary to determine the
accuracy of the State agency's findings using the household's certification records and the
State agency's QC records as the basis of determination. The FNS Regional Office may choose
to verify any aspects of a State agency's QC findings through telephone interviews with
participants or collateral contacts. In addition, the FNS Regional Office may choose to conduct
field investigations to the extent necessary.
(iii) Upon the request of a State agency, the appropriate FNS Regional Office will assist the State
agency in completing active cases reported as not completed due to household refusal to
cooperate.
(iv) FNS will also review the State agency's sampling procedures, estimation procedures, and the
State agency's system for data management to ensure compliance with §§ 275.11 and 275.12.
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(v) FNS validation reviews of the State agency's active sample cases will be conducted on an
ongoing basis as the State agency reports the findings for individual cases and supplies the
necessary case records. FNS will begin the remainder of each State agency's validation review
as soon as possible after the State agency has supplied the necessary information regarding
its sample and review activity.
(2) Underissuance error rate. The validation review of each State agency's underissuance error rate shall
occur as a result of the Federal validation of the State agency's payment error rate as outlined in
paragraph (c)(1) of this section.
(3) Negative case error rate. The validation review of each State agency's negative case error rate shall
consist of the following actions:
(i)

FNS will select a subsample of a State agency's completed negative cases, as follows:
Average monthly reviewable negative caseload (N)

Federal subsample target (n′)

5,000 and over

n′ = 160

501 to 4,999

n′ = .0188 N + 65.7

Under 500

n′ = 75

(A) In the above formula, n' is the minimum number of Federal review sample cases which
must be selected when conducting a validation review, except that FNS may select a lower
number of sample cases if:
(1) The State agency does not report a change in sampling procedures associated with a
revision in its required sample size within 10 days of effecting the change; and/or
(2) The State agency does not complete the number of case reviews specified in its
approved sampling plan.
(B) The reduction in the number of Federal cases selected will be equal to the number of
cases that would have been selected had the Federal sampling interval been applied to the
State agency's shortfall in its required sample size. This number may not be exact due to
random starts and rounding.
(C) In the above formula, N is the State agency's minimum negative case sample size as
determined in accordance with § 275.11(b)(2).
(ii) FNS Regional Offices will conduct case record reviews to the extent necessary to determine
whether the household case record contained sufficient documentation to justify the State
agency's QC findings of the correctness of the State agency's decision to deny, suspend or
terminate a household's participation.
(iii) FNS will also review each State agency's negative case sampling and review procedures against
the provisions of §§ 275.11 and 275.13.
(iv) FNS will begin each State agency's negative sample case validation review as soon as possible
after the State agency has supplied the necessary information, including case records and
information regarding its sample and review activity.
(4) Arbitration.

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(i)

7 CFR 275.3(d)(4)(i)

Whenever the State agency disagrees with the FNS regional office concerning individual QC
case findings and the appropriateness of actions taken to dispose of an individual case, the
State agency may request that the dispute be arbitrated on a case-by-case basis by an FNS
Arbitrator, subject to the following limitations.
(A) The State agency may only request arbitration when the State agency's and FNS regional
office's findings or disposition of an individual QC case disagree.
(B) The arbitration review shall be limited to the point(s) within the Federal findings or
disposition that the State agency disputes. However, if the arbitrator in the course of the
review discovers a mathematical error in the computational sheet, the arbitration shall
correct the error while calculating the allotment.

(ii) The FNS Arbitrator(s) shall be an individual or individuals who are not directly involved in the
validation effort.
(iii) With the exception of the restrictions contained in paragraph (c)(4)(iii), for an arbitration request
to be considered, it must be received by the appropriate FNS regional office within 20 calendar
days of the date of receipt by the State agency of the regional office case findings. In the event
the last day of this time period falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or Federal or State holiday, the
period shall run to the end of the next work day. The State agency shall be restricted in its
eligibility to request arbitration of an individual case if that case was not disposed of and the
findings reported in accordance with the timeframes specified in § 275.21(b)(2). For each day
late that a case was disposed of and the findings reported, the State agency shall have one less
day to request arbitration of the case.
(iv) When the State agency requests arbitration, it shall submit all required documentation to the
appropriate FNS regional office addressed to the attention of the FNS Arbitrator. The FNS
regional office QC staff may submit an explanation of the Federal position regarding a case to
the FNS Arbitrator.
(A) A complete request is one that contains all information necessary for the arbitrator to
render an accurate, timely decision.
(B) If the State agency's request is not complete the arbitrator shall make a decision based
solely on the available documents.
(v) The FNS Arbitrator shall have 20 calendar days from the date of receipt of a State agency's
request for arbitration to review the case and make a decision.
(5) Household cooperation. Households are required to cooperate with Federal QC reviewers. Refusal to
cooperate shall result in termination of the household's eligibility. The Federal reviewer shall follow
the procedures in § 275.12(g)(1)(ii) in order to determine whether a household is refusing to
cooperate with the Federal QC reviewer. If the Federal reviewer determines that the household has
refused to cooperate, as opposed to failed to cooperate, the household shall be reported to the State
agency for termination of eligibility.
(e) Assessment of Corrective Action.
(1) FNS will conduct will conduct a comprehensive annual assessment of a State agency's corrective
action process by compiling all information relative to that State agency's corrective action efforts,
including the State agency's system for data analysis and evaluation. The purpose of this
assessment and review is to determine if: identified deficiencies are analyzed in terms of causes and
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magnitude and are properly included in either the State or Project Area/Management Unit corrective
action plan; the State agency is implementing corrective actions according to the appropriate plan;
target completion dates for reduction or elimination of deficiencies are being met; and, corrective
actions are effective. In addition, FNS will examine the State agency's corrective action monitoring
and evaluative efforts. The assessment of corrective action will be conducted at the State agency,
project area, and local level offices, as necessary.
(2) In addition, FNS will conduct on-site reviews of selected corrective actions as frequently as
considered necessary to ensure that State agencies are implementing proposed corrective actions
within the timeframes specified in the State agency and/or Project Area/Management Unit corrective
action plans and to determine the effectiveness of the corrective action. The on-site reviews will
provide State agencies and FNS with a mechanism for early detection of problems in the corrective
action process to minimize losses to the program, participants, or potential participants.
[Amdt. 160, 45 FR 15898, Mar. 11, 1980, as amended by Amdt. 237, 47 FR 57669, Dec. 28, 1982; Amdt. 260, 49 FR 6303, Feb. 17,
1984; Amdt. 266, 52 FR 3407, Feb. 4, 1987; 53 FR 1604, Jan. 21, 1988; 54 FR 23951, June 5, 1989; Amdt. 309, 55 FR 1672, Jan.
18, 1990; Amdt. 328, 56 FR 60051, Nov. 27, 1991; Amdt. 366, 62 FR 29658, June 2, 1997; Amdt. 373, 64 FR 38294, July 16, 1999;
68 FR 59523, Oct. 16, 2003; 75 FR 33436, June 11, 2010; 86 FR 44586, Aug. 13, 2021]

§ 275.4 Record retention.
(a) The State agency shall maintain Performance Reporting System records to permit ready access to, and
use of, these records. Performance Reporting System records include information used in data analysis
and evaluation, corrective action plans, corrective action monitoring records in addition to ME review
records and QC review records as explained in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section. To be readily
accessible, system records shall be retained and filed in an orderly fashion. Precautions should be taken
to ensure that these records are retained without loss or destruction for the 3-year period required by
these regulations. Information obtained on individual households for Performance Reporting System
purposes shall be safeguarded in accordance with FNS policies on disclosure of information for SNAP.
(b) ME review records consist of thorough documentation of review findings, sources from which information
was obtained, procedures used to review SNAP requirements including sampling techniques and lists,
and ME review plans. The State agency must submit documented evidence of review findings to the FNS
Regional Office upon request for purposes of evaluating State corrective action plans.
(c) QC review records consist of Forms FNS–380, Worksheet for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program,
FNS–380–1, Quality Control Review Schedule, FNS–245, Negative Quality Control Review Schedule; other
materials supporting the review decision, including all correspondence with the household and all case
notes, digital or otherwise, taken or used by the eligibility worker that are applicable to the review period;
sample lists; sampling frames; tabulation sheets; and reports of the results of all quality control reviews
during each review period.
[Amdt. 160, 45 FR 15898, Mar. 11, 1980, as amended by Amdt. 260, 49 FR 6304, Feb. 17, 1984; Amdt. 262, 49 FR 50597, Dec. 31,
1984; 75 FR 33436, June 11, 2010; 86 FR 44586, Aug. 13, 2021]

Subpart B—Management Evaluation (ME) Reviews

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§ 275.5 Scope and purpose.
(a) Objectives. Each State agency shall ensure that project areas operate SNAP in accordance with the Act,
regulations, and FNS-approved State Plan of Operation. To ensure compliance with program
requirements, ME reviews shall be conducted to measure compliance with the provisions of FNS
regulations. The objectives of an ME review are to:
(1) Provide a systematic method of monitoring and assessing program operations in the project areas;
(2) Provide a basis for project areas to improve and strengthen program operations by identifying and
correcting deficiencies; and
(3) Provide a continuing flow of information between the project areas, the States, and FNS, necessary
to develop the solutions to problems in program policy and procedures.
(b) Frequency of review.
(1) State agencies shall conduct a review once every year for large project areas, once every two years
for medium project areas, and once every three years for small project areas, unless an alternate
schedule is approved by FNS. The most current and accurate information on active monthly
caseload available at the time the review schedule is developed shall be used to determine project
area size.
(2) A request for an alternate review schedule shall be submitted for approval in writing with a proposed
schedule and justification. In any alternate schedule, each project area must be reviewed at least
once every three years. Approval of an alternate schedule is dependent upon a State agency's
justification that the project areas that will be reviewed less frequently than required in paragraph
(b)(1) of this section are performing adequately and that previous reviews indicate few problems or
that known problems have been corrected. FNS retains the authority for approving any alternate
schedule and may approve a schedule in whole or in part. Until FNS approval of an alternate
schedule is obtained, the State agency shall conduct reviews in accordance with paragraph (b)(1) of
this section.
(3) FNS may require the State agency to conduct additional on-site reviews when a serious problem is
detected in a project area which could result in a substantial dollar or service loss.
(4) State agencies shall also establish a system for monitoring those project areas' operations which
experience a significant influx of migratory workers during such migrations. This requirement may be
satisfied by either scheduling ME reviews to coincide with such migrations or by conducting special
reviews. As part of the review the State agency shall contact local migrant councils, advocate
groups, or other organizations in the project area to ensure that migrants are receiving the required
services.
[Amdt. 160, 45 FR 15900, Mar. 11, 1980, as amended by Amdt. 262, 49 FR 50597, Dec. 31, 1984; Amdt. 266, 52 FR 3408, Feb. 4,
1987]

§ 275.6 Management units.
(a) Establishment of management units. For the purpose of ME reviews, State agencies may, subject to FNS
approval, establish “management units” which are different from project areas designated by FNS for
participation in the program. For example, State-established welfare districts, regions or other

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administrative structures within a State may be so designated. Management units can be designated as
either large, medium, or small for purposes of frequency of review. However, establishment of
management units solely for the purpose of reducing the frequency of review will not be approved by FNS.
(b) FNS approval of management units. State agencies shall submit requests for establishment of
management units to FNS, which shall have final authority for approval of such units as well as any
changes in those previously approved by FNS.
(1) The following minimum criteria must be met prior to requesting FNS approval:
(i)

The proposed management unit must correspond with existing State-established welfare
districts, regions, or other administrative structures; and

(ii) The unit must have supervisory control over SNAP operations within that geographic area and
have authority for implementation of corrective action.
(2) In submitting the request for FNS approval, the State agency shall include the following information
regarding the proposed management unit:
(i)

That the proposed management unit meets the minimum criteria described in paragraphs (b)(1)
(i) and (ii) of this section;

(ii) Geographic coverage, including the names of the counties/project areas within the unit and the
identification (district or region number) and location (city) of the office which has supervisory
control over the management unit;
(iii) SNAP participation, including the number of persons and number of households;
(iv) The number of certification offices;
(v) The number of issuance units;
(vi) The dollar value of allotments issued as reflected in the most recent available data; and
(vii) Any other relevant information.
[Amdt. 160, 45 FR 15900, Mar. 11, 1980; 45 FR 23637, Apr. 8, 1980, as amended by Amdt. 266, 52 FR 3408, Feb. 4, 1987]

§ 275.7 Selection of sub-units for review.
(a) Definition of sub-units. Sub-units are the physical locations of organizational entities within project areas
responsible for operating various aspects of SNAP and include but are not limited to certification offices,
call centers, and employment and training offices.
(b) Selection of Sub-units for Review. State agencies shall select a representative number of sub-units of each
category for review in order to determine a project area's compliance with program standards.
[Amdt. 160, 45 FR 15900, Mar. 11, 1980; 45 FR 23638, Apr. 8, 1980; 45 FR 46784, July 11, 1980, as amended by Amdt. 266, 52 FR
3408, Feb. 4, 1987; 81 FR 2741, Jan. 19, 2016]

§ 275.8 Review coverage.
(a) During each review period, State agencies shall review the national target areas of program operation
specified by FNS. FNS will notify State agencies of the minimum program areas to be reviewed at least 90
days before the beginning of each annual review period, which is the Federal fiscal year. FNS may add
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additional areas during the review period if deemed necessary. The FNS headquarters office will add
national target areas during the review period only for deficiencies of national scope. State agencies have
60 days in which to establish a plan schedule for such reviews.
(b) State agencies shall be responsible for reviewing each national target area or other program requirement
based upon the provisions of the regulations governing SNAP and the FNS-approved Plan of Operation. If
FNS approves a State agency's request for a waiver from a program requirement, any different policy
approved by FNS would also be reviewed. When, in the course of a review, a project area is found to be out
of compliance with a given program requirement, the State agency shall identify the specifics of the
problem including: the extent of the deficiency, the cause of the deficiency, and, as applicable, the specific
procedural requirements the project area is misapplying.
[Amdt. 266, 52 FR 3408, Feb. 4, 1987, as amended by Amdt. 356, 59 FR 29713, June 9, 1994]

§ 275.9 Review process.
(a) Review procedures. State agencies shall review the program requirements specified for review in § 275.8
of this part using procedures that are adequate to identify problems and the causes of those problems.
As each project area's operational structure will differ, State agencies shall review each program
requirement applicable to the project area in a manner which will best measure the project area's
compliance with each program requirement.
(b) ME review plan.
(1) State agencies shall develop a review plan prior to each ME review. This review plan shall specify
whether each project area is large, medium, or small and shall contain:
(i)

Identification of the project area to be reviewed, program areas to be reviewed, the dates the
review will be conducted, and the period of time that the review will cover;

(ii) Information secured from the project area regarding its caseload and organization;
(iii) Identification of the sub-units selected for review and the techniques used to select them;
(iv) At State agency option it may also indicate whether the State agency is using the ME review
process to perform non-discrimination reviews; and
(v) A description of the review method(s) the State agency plans to use for each program area
being reviewed.
(2) ME review plans shall be maintained in an orderly fashion and be made available to FNS upon
request.
(c) Review methods.
(1) State agenices shall determine the method of reviewing the program requirements associated with
each program area. For some areas of program operation it may be necessary to use more than one
method of review to determine if the project area is in compliance with program requirements. The
procedures used shall be adequate to identify any problems and the causes of those problems.
(2) State agencies shall ensure that the method used to review a program requirement does not bias the
review findings. Bias can be introduced through leading questions, incomplete reviews, incorrect
sampling techniques, etc.
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(d) Review worksheet.
(1) State agencies shall use a review worksheet to record all review findings. For each sub-unit reviewed
the State agency shall, on the worksheet, identify:
(i)

The sub-unit being reviewed;

(ii) Each program requirement reviewed in the sub-unit;
(iii) The method used to review each program requirement;
(iv) A description of any deficiency detected;
(v) The cause(s) of any deficiency detected, if known;
(vi) The number of casefiles and/or program records selected and examined within the sub-unit,
identification of those selected (record case number, household name, etc.), the proportion
which were not subject to review, as well as the method used to select the sample;
(vii) Where applicable, the numerical extent of any deficiency detected through examination of
program records; and
(viii) Any pertinent comments concerning the sub-unit's operation.
(2) State agencies shall promptly forward review findings to the appropriate State office for analysis,
evaluation, and corrective action planning. Review worksheets shall be retained in an orderly fashion
and made available to FNS upon request.
[Amdt. 160, 45 FR 15900, Mar. 11, 1980; 45 FR 25375, Apr. 15, 1980, as amended by Amdt. 266, 52 FR 3409, Feb. 4, 1987; Amdt.
356, 59 FR 29713, June 9, 1994; 81 FR 2741, Jan. 19, 2016]

Subpart C—Quality Control (QC) Reviews
§ 275.10 Scope and purpose.
(a) As part of the Performance Reporting System, each State agency is responsible for conducting quality
control reviews. For SNAP quality control reviews, a sample of households shall be selected from two
different categories: Households which are participating in SNAP (called active cases) and households
for which participation was denied, suspended or terminated (called negative cases). Reviews shall be
conducted on active cases to determine if households are eligible and receiving the correct allotment of
SNAP benefits. The determination of whether the household received the correct allotment will be made
by comparing the eligibility data gathered during the review against the amount authorized on the master
issuance file. Reviews of negative cases shall be conducted to determine whether the State agency's
decision to deny, suspend or terminate the household, as of the review date, was correct. Quality control
reviews measure the validity of SNAP cases at a given time (the review date) by reviewing against SNAP
standards established in the Food and Nutrition Act of 2008 and the Regulations, taking into account any
FNS authorized waivers to deviate from specific regulatory provisions. FNS and the State agency shall
analyze findings of the reviews to determine the incidence and dollar amounts of errors, which will
determine the State agency's liability for payment errors in accordance with the Food and Nutrition Act of
2008, as amended, and to plan corrective action to reduce excessive levels of errors for any State agency.
(b) The objectives of quality control reviews are to provide:
(1) A systematic method of measuring the validity of the SNAP caseload;
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(2) A basis for determining error rates;
(3) A timely continuous flow of information on which to base corrective action at all levels of
administration; and
(4) A basis for establishing State agency liability for errors that exceed the National performance
measure.
(c) The review process is the activity necessary to complete reviews and document findings of all cases
selected in the sample for quality control reviews. The review process shall consist of:
(1) Case assignment and completion monitoring;
(2) Case reviews;
(3) Supervisory review of completed worksheets and schedules; and
(4) Transmission of completed worksheets and schedules to the State agency for centralized data
compilation and analysis.
[Amdt. 149, 44 FR 45893, Aug. 3, 1979, as amended by Amdt. 260, 49 FR 6304, Feb. 17, 1984; 54 FR 7016, Feb. 15, 1989; Amdt.
328, 56 FR 60051, Nov. 27, 1991; Amdt. 373, 64 FR 38294, July 16, 1999; 75 FR 33436, June 11, 2010]

§ 275.11 Sampling.
(a) Sampling plan. Each State agency shall develop a quality control sampling plan which demonstrates the
integrity of its sampling procedures.
(1) Content. The sampling plan shall include a complete description of the frame, the method of sample
selection, and methods for estimating characteristics of the population and their sampling errors.
The description of the sample frames shall include: source, availability, accuracy, completeness,
components, location, form, frequency of updates, deletion of cases not subject to review, and
structure. The description of the methods of sample selection shall include procedures for:
estimating caseload size, overpull, computation of sampling intervals and random starts (if any),
stratification or clustering (if any), identifying sample cases, correcting over-or undersampling, and
monitoring sample selection and assignment. A time schedule for each step in the sampling
procedures shall be included.
(2) Criteria. Sampling plans proposing non-proportional or other alternative designs shall document
compliance with the approval criteria in paragraph (b)(4) of this section. All sampling plans shall:
(i)

Conform to principles of probability sampling;

(ii) Specify and explain the basis for the sample sizes chosen by the State agency;
(iii) If the State agency has chosen an active sample size as specified in paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this
section, include a statement that, whether or not the sample size is increased to reflect an
increase in participation as discussed in paragraph (b)(3) of this section, the State agency will
not use the size of the sample chosen as a basis for challenging the resulting error rates.
(iv) If the State agency has chosen a negative sample size as specified in paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this
section, include a statement that, whether or not the sample size is increased to reflect an
increase in negative actions as discussed in paragraph (b)(3) of this section, the State agency
will not use the size of the sample chosen as a basis for challenging the resulting error rates.
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(3) Design. FNS generally recommends a systematic sample design for both active and negative
samples because of its relative ease to administer, its validity, and because it yields a sample
proportional to variations in the caseload over the course of the annual review period. (To obtain a
systematic sample, a State agency would select every kth case after a random start between 1 and
k. The value of k is dependent upon the estimated size of the universe and the sample size.) A State
agency may, however, develop an alternative sampling design better suited for its particular
situation. Whatever the design, it must conform to commonly acceptable statistical theory and
application (see paragraph (b)(4) of this section).
(4) FNS review and approval. The State agency shall submit its sampling plan to FNS for approval as a
part of its State Plan of Operation in accordance with § 272.2(e)(4). In addition, all sampling
procedures used by the State agency, including frame composition, construction, and content shall
be fully documented and available for review by FNS.
(b) Sample size. There are two samples for the SNAP quality control review process, an active case sample
and a negative case sample. The size of both these samples is based on the State agency's average
monthly caseload during the annual review period. Costs associated with a State agency's sample sizes
are reimbursable as specified in § 277.4.
(1) Active cases.
(i)

All active cases shall be selected in accordance with standard procedures, and the review
findings shall be included in the calculation of the State agency's payment error rate.

(ii) Unless a State agency chooses to select and review a number of active cases determined by
the formulas provided in paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this section and has included in its sampling
plan the reliability certification required by paragraph (a)(2)(iii) of this section, the minimum
number of active cases to be selected and reviewed by a State agency during each annual
review period shall be determined as follows:
Average monthly reviewable caseload (N)

Minimum annual sample size (n)

60,000 and over

n = 2400

10,000 to 59,999

n = 300 + [0.042(N−10,000)]

Under 10,000

n = 300

(iii) A State agency which includes in its sampling plan the statement required by paragraph
(a)(2)(iii) of this section may determine the minimum number of active cases to be selected
and reviewed during each annual review period as follows:
Average monthly reviewable caseload (N)

Minimum annual sample size (n)

60,000 and over

n = 1020

12,942 to 59,999

n = 300 + [0.0153(N−12,941)]

Under 12,942

n = 300

(iv) In the formulas in paragraphs (b)(1)(ii) and (iii) of this section n is the required active case
sample size. This is the minimum number of active cases subject to review which must be
selected each review period. Also in the formulas, N is the average monthly participating
caseload subject to quality control review (i.e., households which are included in the active
universe defined in paragraph (e)(1) of this section) during the annual review period.
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(2) Negative cases.
(i)

Unless a State agency chooses to select and review a number of negative cases determined by
the formulas provided in paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section and has included in its sampling
plan the reliability certification required by paragraph (a)(2)(iv) of this section, the minimum
number of negative cases to be selected and reviewed by a State agency during each annual
review period shall be determined as follows:
Average monthly reviewable negative caseload (N)

Minimum annual sample size (n)

5,000 and over

n = 800

500 to 4,999

n = 150 + [0.144(N−500)]

Under 500

n = 150

(ii) A State agency which includes in its sampling plan the statement required by paragraph
(a)(2)(iv) of this section may determine the minimum number of negative cases to be selected
and reviewed during each annual review period as follows:
Average monthly reviewable negative caseload (N)

Minimum annual sample size (n)

5,000 and over

n = 680

684 to 4,999

n = 150 + [ 0.1224(N−683)]

Under 684

n = 150

(iii) In the formulas in this paragraph (b)(2), n is the required negative sample size. This is the
minimum number of negative cases subject to review which must be selected each review
period.
(iv) In the formulas in this paragraph (b)(2), N is the average monthly number of negative cases
which are subject to quality control review (i.e., households which are part of the negative
universe defined in paragraph (e)(2) of this section) during the annual review period.
(3) Unanticipated changes. Since the average monthly caseloads (both active and negative) must be
estimated at the beginning of each annual review period, unanticipated changes can result in the
need for adjustments to the sample size. FNS shall not penalize a State agency that does not adjust
its sample size if the actual caseload during a review period is less than 20 percent larger than the
estimated caseload initially used to determine sample size. If the actual caseload is more than 20
percent larger than the estimated caseload, the larger sample size appropriate for the actual
caseload will be used in computing the sample completion rate.
(4) Alternative designs. The active and negative sample size determinations assume that State agencies
will use a systematic or simple random sample design. State agencies able to obtain results of
equivalent reliability with smaller samples and appropriate design may use an alternative design with
FNS approval. To receive FNS approval, proposals for any type of alternative design must:
(i)

Demonstrate that the alternative design provides payment error rate estimates with equal-orbetter predicted precision than would be obtained had the State agency reviewed simple
random samples of the sizes specified in paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(2) of this section.

(ii) Describe all weighting, and estimation procedures if the sample design is non-self-weighted, or
uses a sampling technique other than systematic sampling.
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(iii) Demonstrate that self-weighting is actually achieved in sample designs claimed to be selfweighting.
(c) Sample selection. The selection of cases for quality control review shall be made separately for active and
negative cases each month during the annual review period. Each month each State agency shall select
for review approximately one-twelfth of its required sample, unless FNS has approved other numbers of
cases specified in the sampling plan.
(1) Substitutions. Once a household has been identified for inclusion in the sample by a predesigned
sampling procedure, substitutions are not acceptable. An active case must be reviewed each time it
is selected for the sample. If a household is selected more than once for the negative sample as the
result of separate and distinct instances of denial, suspension or termination, it shall be reviewed
each time.
(2) Corrections. Excessive undersampling must be corrected during the annual review period. Excessive
oversampling may be corrected at the State agency's option. Cases which are dropped to
compensate for oversampling shall be reported as not subject to review. Because corrections must
not bias the sample results, cases which are dropped to compensate for oversampling must
comprise a random subsample of all cases selected (including those completed, not completed, and
not subject to review). Cases which are added to the sample to compensate for undersampling must
be randomly selected from the entire frame in accordance with the procedures specified in
paragraphs (b), (c)(1), and (e) of this section. All sample adjustments must be fully documented and
available for review by FNS.
(d) Required sample size. A State agency's required sample size is the larger of either the number of cases
selected which are subject to review or the number of cases chosen for selection and review according to
paragraph (b) of this section.
(e) Sample frame. The State agency shall select cases for quality control review from a sample frame. The
choice of a sampling frame shall depend upon the criteria of timeliness, completeness, accuracy, and
administrative burden. Complete coverage of the sample universes, as defined in paragraph (f) of this
section, must be assured so that every household subject to quality control review has an equal or known
chance of being selected in the sample. Since the SNAP quality control review process requires an active
and negative sample, two corresponding sample frames are also required.
(1) Active cases. The frame for active cases shall list all households which were:
(i)

Certified prior to, or during, the sample month; and

(ii) issued benefits for the sample month, except for those households excluded from the universe
in paragraph (f)(1) of this section. State agencies may elect to use either a list of certified
eligible households or a list of households issued an allotment. If the State agency uses a list
of certified eligible households, those households which are issued benefits for the sample
month after the frame has been compiled shall be included in a supplemental list. If the State
agency uses an issuance list, the State agency shall ensure that the list includes those
households which do not actually receive an allotment because the entire amount is recovered
for repayment of an overissuance in accordance with the allotment reduction procedures in §
273.18.
(2) Negative cases. The frame for negative cases shall list:

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(i)

7 CFR 275.11(e)(2)(i)

All actions to deny an application in the sample month except those excluded from the universe
in paragraph (f)(2) of this section. If a household is subject to more than one denial action in a
single sample month, each action shall be listed separately in the sample frame; and

(ii) All actions to suspend or terminate a household in the sample month except those excluded
from the universe in paragraph (f)(2) of this section. Each action to suspend or terminate a
household in the sample month shall be listed separately in the sample frame.
(3) Unwanted cases. A frame may include cases for which information is not desired (e.g., households
which have been certified but did not actually participate during the sample month). When such
cases cannot be eliminated from the frame beforehand and are selected for the sample, they must
be accounted for and reported as being not subject to review in accordance with the provisions in §§
275.12(g) and 275.13(e).
(f) Sample universe. The State agency shall ensure that its active and negative case frames accurately reflect
their sample universes. There are two sample universes for the SNAP quality control review process, an
active case universe and a negative case universe. The exceptions noted below for both universes are
households not usually amenable to quality control review.
(1) Active cases. The universe for active cases shall include all households certified prior to, or during,
the sample month and receiving SNAP benefits for the sample month, except for the following:
(i)

A household in which all the members had died or had moved out of the State before the review
could be undertaken or completed;

(ii) A household receiving SNAP benefits under a disaster certification authorized by FNS;
(iii) A household which is under investigation for intentional Program violation, including a
household with a pending administrative disqualification hearing;
(iv) A household appealing an adverse action when the review date falls within the time period
covered by continued participation pending the hearing; or
(v) A household receiving restored benefits in accordance with § 273.17 but not participating
based upon an approved application. Other households excluded from the active case universe
during the review process are identified in § 275.12(g).
(2) Negative cases. The universe for negative cases shall include all actions taken to deny, suspend, or
terminate a household in the sample month except the following:
(i)

A household which had its case closed due to expiration of the certification period;

(ii) A household denied SNAP benefits under a disaster certification authorized by FNS;
(iii) A household which withdrew an application prior to the agency's determination;
(iv) A household which is under active investigation for Intentional Program Violation;
(v) A household which has been sent a notice of pending status but which was not actually denied
participation;
(vi) A household which was terminated for failure to file a complete monthly report by the extended
filing date, but reinstated when it subsequently filed the complete report before the end of the
issuance month;

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(vii) Other households excluded from the negative case universe during the review process as
identified in § 275.13(e).
(g) Demonstration projects. Households correctly classified for participation under the rules of an FNSauthorized demonstration project which FNS determines to significantly modify the rules for determining
households' eligibility or allotment level, shall be included in the selection and review process. They shall
be included in the universe for calculating sample sizes and included in the sample frames for sample
selection as specified in paragraphs (b) through (e) of this section. In addition, they shall be included in
the quality control review reports as specified in § 275.21(d) and included in the calculation of a State
agency's completion rate as specified in § 275.23(b)(1). The review of these cases shall be conducted in
accordance with the provisions specified in §§ 275.12(h) and 275.13(f). FNS shall establish on an
individual demonstration project basis whether the results of the reviews of active and negative
demonstration project cases shall be included or excluded from the determination of State agencies' error
rates as described in § 275.23(b).
[Amdt. 260, 49 FR 6304, Feb. 17, 1984; 49 FR 14495, Apr. 12, 1984, as amended by Amdt. 262, 49 FR 50598, Dec. 31, 1984; Amdt.
266, 52 FR 3409, Feb. 4, 1987; Amdt. 328, 56 FR 60051, Nov. 27, 1991; Amdt. 366, 62 FR 29658, June 2, 1997; Amdt. 373, 64 FR
38295, July 16, 1999; 68 FR 59523, Oct. 16, 2003; 75 FR 33436, June 11, 2010; 86 FR 44586, Aug. 13, 2021]

§ 275.12 Review of active cases.
(a) General. A sample of households which were certified prior to, or during, the sample month and issued
SNAP benefits for the sample month shall be selected for quality control review. These active cases shall
be reviewed to determine if the household is eligible and, if eligible, whether the household is receiving the
correct allotment. The determination of a household's eligibility shall be based on an examination and
verification of all elements of eligibility (i.e., basic program requirements, resources, income, and
deductions). The elements of eligibility are specified in §§ 273.1 and 273.3 through 273.9 of this chapter.
The verified circumstances and the resulting benefit level determined by the quality control review shall be
compared to the benefits authorized by the State agency as of the review date. When changes in
household circumstances occur, the reviewer shall determine whether the changes were reported by the
participant and handled by the agency in accordance with the rules set forth in §§ 273.12, 273.13 and
273.21 of this chapter, as appropriate. For active cases, the review date shall always fall within the
sample month, either the first day of a calendar or fiscal month or the day of certification, whichever is
later. The review of active cases shall include: a household case record review; a field investigation,
except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section; the identification of any variances; an error analysis;
and the reporting of review findings.
(b) Household case record review. The reviewer shall examine the household case record to identify the
specific facts relating to the household's eligibility and basis of issuance. If the reviewer is unable to
locate the household case record, the reviewer shall identify as many of the pertinent facts as possible
from the household issuance record. The case record review shall include all information applicable to the
case as of the review month, including the application and worksheet in effect as of the review date.
Documentation contained in the case record can be used as verification if it is not subject to change and
applies to the sample month. If during the case record review the reviewer can determine and verify the
household's ineligibility the review can be terminated at that point, provided that if the determination is
based on information not obtained from the household then the correctness of that information must be
confirmed as provided in paragraph (c)(2) of this section. The reviewer shall utilize information obtained
through the case record review to complete column (2) of the Form FNS–380, and to tentatively plan the
content of the field investigation.
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(c) Field investigation. A full field investigation shall be conducted for all active cases selected in the sample
month except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section. A full field investigation shall include a review
of any information pertinent to a particular case which is available through the State Income and Eligibility
Verification System (IEVS) as specified in § 272.8 of this chapter. If during the field investigation the
reviewer determines and verifies the household's ineligibility, the review can be terminated at that point,
provided that if the determination is based on information not obtained from the household then the
correctness of that information must be confirmed as provided in paragraph (c)(2) of this section. In
Alaska an exception to this requirement can be made in those isolated areas not reachable by regularly
scheduled commercial air service, automobile, or other public transportation provided one fully
documented attempt to contact the household has been made. Such cases may be completed through
casefile review and collateral contact. The field investigation will include interviews with the head of
household, spouse, or authorized representative; contact with collateral sources of information; and any
other materials and activity pertinent to the review of the case. The scope of the review shall not extend
beyond the examination of household circumstances which directly relate to the determination of
household eligibility and basis of issuance status. The reviewer shall utilize information obtained through
the field investigation to complete column (3) of the Form FNS–380.
(1) Personal interviews. Personal interviews shall be conducted in a manner that respects the rights,
privacy, and dignity of the participants. Prior to conducting the personal interview, the reviewer shall
notify the household that it has been selected, as part of an ongoing review process, for review by
quality control, and that a personal face-to-face interview will be conducted in the future. The
method of notifying the household and the specificity of the notification shall be determined by the
State agency, in accordance with applicable State and Federal laws. The personal interview may take
place at the participant's home, at an appropriate State agency certification office, or at a mutually
agreed upon alternative location. The State agency shall determine the best location for the
interview to take place, but would be subject to the same provisions as those regarding certification
interviews at § 273.2(e)(2) of this chapter. Those regulations provide that an office interview must
be waived under certain hardship conditions. Under such hardship conditions the quality control
reviewer shall either conduct the personal interview with the participant's authorized representative,
if one has been appointed by the household, or with the participant in the participant's home. Except
in Alaska, when an exception to the field investigation is made in accordance with this section, the
interview with the participant may not be conducted by phone. During the personal interview with the
participant, the reviewer shall:
(i)

Explore with the head of the household, spouse, authorized representative, or any other
responsible household member, household circumstances as they affect each factor of
eligibility and basis of issuance;

(ii) Establish the composition of the household;
(iii) Review the documentary evidence in the household's possession and secure information about
collateral sources of verification; and
(iv) Elicit from the participant names of collateral contacts. The reviewer shall use, but not be
limited to, these designated collateral contacts. If required by the State, the reviewer shall
obtain consent from the head of the household to secure collateral information. If the
participant refuses to sign the release of information form, the reviewer shall explain fully the
consequences of this refusal to cooperate (as contained in paragraph (g)(1)(ii) of this section),
and continue the review to the fullest extent possible.

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(2) Collateral contacts. The reviewer shall obtain verification from collateral contacts in all instances
when adequate documentation was not available from the participant. This second party verification
shall cover each element of eligibility as it affects the household's eligibility and allotment. The
reviewer shall make every effort to use the most reliable second party verification available (for
example, banks, payroll listings, etc.), in accordance with FNS guidelines, and shall thoroughly
document all verification obtained. If any information obtained by the QC reviewer differs from that
given by the participant, then the reviewer shall resolve the differences to determine which
information is correct before an error determination is made. The manner in which the conflicting
information is resolved shall include recontacting the participant unless the participant cannot be
reached. When resolving conflicting information reviewers shall use their best judgement based on
the most reliable data available and shall document how the differences were resolved.
(d) Variance identification. The reviewer shall identify any element of a basic program requirement or the
basis of issuance which varies (i.e., information from review findings which indicates that policy was
applied incorrectly and/or information verified as of the review date that differs from that used at the
most recent certification action). For each element that varies, the reviewer shall determine whether the
variance was State agency or participant caused. The results of these determinations shall be coded and
recorded in column (4) of the Form FNS–380.
(1) Variances included in error analysis. Except for those variances in an element resulting from one of
the situations described in paragraph (d)(2) of this section, any variance involving an element of
eligibility or basis of issuance shall be included in the error analysis. Such variances shall include but
not be limited to those resulting from a State agency's failure to take the disqualification action
related to SSN's specified in § 273.6(c) of this chapter, and related to work requirements, specified in
§ 273.7(f) of this chapter.
(2) Variances excluded from error analysis. The following variances shall be excluded from the
determination of a household's eligibility and basis of issuance for the sample month:
(i)

Any variance resulting from the nonverified portion of a household's gross nonexempt income
where there is conclusive documentation (a listing of what attempts were made to verify and
why they were unsuccessful) that such income could not be verified at the time of certification
because the source of income would not cooperate in providing verification and no other
sources of verification were available. If there is no conclusive documentation as explained
above, then the reviewer shall not exclude any resulting variance from the error determination.
This follows certification policy outlined in § 273.2(f)(1)(i) of this chapter.

(ii) Any variance in cases certified under expedited certification procedures resulting from
postponed verification of an element of eligibility as allowed under § 273.2(i)(4)(i) of this
chapter. Verification of gross income, deductions, resources, household composition, alien
status, or tax dependency may be postponed for cases eligible for expedited certification.
However, if a case certified under expedited procedures contains a variance as a result of a
residency deficiency, a mistake in the basis of issuance computation, a mistake in participant
identification, or incorrect expedited income accounting, the variance shall be included in the
error determination. This exclusion shall only apply to those cases which are selected for QC
review in the first month of participation under expedited certification.
(iii) Any variance subsequent to certification in an element of eligibility or basis of issuance which
was not reported and was not required to have been reported as of the review date. The
elements participants are required to report and the time requirements for reporting are
specified in §§ 273.12(a) and 273.21(h) and (i) of this chapter, as appropriate. If, however, a
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change in any element is reported, and the State agency fails to act in accordance with §§
273.12(c) and 273.21(j) of this chapter, as appropriate, any resulting variance shall be included
in the error determination.
(iv) Any variance in deductible expenses which was not provided for in determining a household's
benefit level in accordance with § 273.2(f)(3)(i)(B) of this chapter. This provision allows
households to have their benefit level determined without providing for a claimed expense
when the expense is questionable and obtaining verification may delay certification. If such a
household subsequently provides the needed verification for the claimed expense and the State
agency does not redetermine the household's benefits in accordance with § 273.12(c) of this
chapter, any resulting variance shall be included in the error determination.
(v) Any variance resulting from use by the State agency of information concerning households or
individuals from an appropriate Federal source, provided that such information is correctly
processed by the State agency. An appropriate Federal source is one which verifies: Income
that it provides directly to the household; deductible expenses for which it directly bills the
household; or other household circumstances which it is responsible for defining or
establishing. To meet the provisions for correct processing, the eligibility worker must have
appropriately acted on timely information. In order to be timely, information must be the most
current that was available to the State agency at the time of the eligibility worker's action.
(vi) Two variances relating to the Immigration and Naturalization Service's (INS) Systematic Alien
Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) Program.
(A) A variance based on a verification of alien documentation by INS. The reviewer shall
exclude such variance only if the State agency properly used SAVE and the State agency
provides the reviewer with:
(1) The alien's name;
(2) The alien's status; and
(3) Either the Alien Status Verification Index (ASVI) Query Verification Number or the INS
Form G–845, as annotated by INS.
(B) A variance based on the State agency's wait for the response of INS to the State agency's
request for official verification of the alien's documentation. The reviewer shall exclude
such variance only if the State agency properly used SAVE and the State agency provides
the reviewer with either:
(1) The date of request, if the State agency was waiting for an automated response; or
(2) A copy of the completed Form G–845, if the State agency was waiting for secondary
verification from INS.
(vii) Subject to the limitations provided in paragraphs (d)(2)(vii)(A) through (d)(2)(vii)(F) of this
section, any variance resulting from application of a new Program regulation or implementing
memorandum of a mandatory or optional change in Federal law that occurs during the first 120
days from the required implementation date. The variance exclusion shall apply to any action
taken on a case directly related to implementation of a covered provision during the 120-day
exclusionary period until the case is required to be recertified or acted upon for some other
reason.

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(A) When a regulation allows a State agency an option to implement prior to the required
implementation date, the date on which the State agency chooses to implement may, at
the option of the State, be considered to be the required implementation date for purposes
of this provision. The exclusion period would be adjusted to begin with this date and end
on the 120th day that follows. States choosing to implement prior to the required
implementation date must notify the appropriate FNS Regional Office, in writing, prior to
implementation that they wish the 120 day variance exclusion to commence with actual
implementation. Absent such notification, the exclusionary period will commence with the
required implementation date.
(B) A State agency shall not exclude variances which occur prior to the States
implementation.
(C) A State agency which did not implement until after the exclusion period shall not exclude
variances under this provision.
(D) Regardless of when the State agency actually implemented the regulation, the variance
exclusion period shall end on the 120th day following the required implementation date,
including the required implementation date defined in paragraph (d)(2)(vii)(A) of this
section.
(E) For purposes of this provision, implementation occurs on the effective date of State
agency's written statewide notification to its eligibility workers.
(F) This variance exclusion applies to changes occasioned by final regulations or interim
regulations. In the case of a final regulation issued following an interim regulation, the
exclusion applies only to significant changes made to the earlier interim regulation. A
significant change is one which the final regulation requires the State agency to
implement on or after publication of a final rule.
(viii) Any variance resulting from incorrect written policy that a State agency acts on that is provided
by a Departmental employee authorized to issue SNAP policy and that the State agency
correctly applies. For purposes of this provision, written Federal policy is that which is issued in
regulations, notices, handbooks, category three and four Policy Memoranda under the Policy
Interpretation Response System, and regional policy memoranda issued pursuant to these.
Written Federal policy is also a letter from the Food and Nutrition Service to a State agency
which contains comments on the State agency's SNAP manual or instructions.
(ix) Any variance in a child support deduction which was the result of an unreported change
subsequent to the most recent certification action shall be excluded from the error
determination.
(3) Other findings. Findings other than variances made during the review which are pertinent to the
SNAP household or the case record may be acted on at the discretion of the State agency. Examples
of such findings are: an incorrect age of a household member which is unrelated to an element of
eligibility; an overdue subsequent certification; no current application on file; insufficient
documentation; incorrect application of the verification requirements specified in part 273 of this
chapter; and deficiencies in work registration procedural requirements. Such deficiencies include:
inadequate documentation of each household member's exempt status; work registration form for
each nonexempt household member not completed at the time of application and every six months
thereafter; and the household not advised of its responsibility to report any changes in the exempt
status of any household member.
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7 CFR 275.12(e)

(e) Error analysis. The reviewer shall analyze all appropriate variances in completed cases, in accordance with
paragraph (d) of this section, which are based upon verified information and determine whether such
cases are either eligible, eligible with a basis of issuance error, or ineligible. The review of an active case
determined ineligible shall be considered completed at the point of the ineligibility determination. For
households determined eligible, the review shall be completed to the point where the correctness of the
basis of issuance is determined, except in the situations outlined in paragraph (g) of this section. In the
event that a review is conducted of a household which is receiving restored or retroactive benefits for the
sample month, the portion of the allotment which is the restored or retroactive benefit shall be excluded
from the determination of the household's eligibility and/or basis of issuance. A SNAP case in which a
household member(s) receives public assistance shall be reviewed in the same manner as all other SNAP
cases, using income as received. The determination of a household's eligibility and the correctness of the
basis of issuance shall be determined based on data entered on the computation sheet as well as other
information documented on other portions of the Form FNS–380, as appropriate.
(f) Reporting of review findings. All information verified to be incorrect during the review of an active case
shall be reported to the State agency for appropriate action on an individual case basis. This includes
information on all variances in elements of eligibility and basis of issuance in both error and nonerror
cases. In addition, the reviewer shall report the review findings on the Form FNS–380–1, in accordance
with the following procedures:
(1) Eligibility errors. If the reviewer determines that a case is ineligible, the occurrence and the total
allotment issued in the sample month shall be coded and reported. Whenever a case contains a
variance in an element which results in an ineligibility determination and there are also variances in
elements which would cause a basis of issuance error, the case shall be treated as an eligibility error.
The reviewer shall also code and report any variances that directly contributed to the error
determination. In addition, if the State agency has chosen to report information on all variances in
elements of eligibility and basis of issuance, the reviewer shall code and report any other such
variances which were discovered and verified during the course of the review.
(2) Basis of issuance of errors. If the reviewer determines that SNAP allotments were either overissued
or underissued to eligible households in the sample month, the State agency shall code and report
any variances that directly contributed to the error determination that were discovered and verified
during the course of the review. For fiscal year 2014, only variances that exceed $37.00 (the
threshold) shall be included in the calculation of the underissuance error rate, overissuance error
rate, and payment error. For fiscal years 2015 and thereafter, this QC tolerance level shall be adjusted
annually by the percentage by which the Thrifty Food Plan (TFP) for the 48 contiguous States and
the District of Columbia is adjusted. If the State agency has chosen to report information on all
variances in elements of eligibility and basis of issuance, the reviewer shall code and report any
other such variances that were discovered and verified during the course of the review.
(g) Disposition of case reviews. Each case selected in the sample of active cases must be accounted for by
classifying it as completed, not completed, or not subject to review. These case dispositions shall be
coded and recorded on the Form FNS–380–1.
(1) Cases reported as not complete. Active cases shall be reported as not completed if the household
case record cannot be located and the household itself is not subsequently located; if the household
case record is located but the household cannot be located unless the reviewer attempts to locate
the household as specified in this paragraph; or if the household refuses to cooperate, as discussed
in this paragraph. All cases reported as not complete shall be reported to the State agency for

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7 CFR 275.12(g)(1)(i)

appropriate action on an individual case basis. Without FNS approval, no active case shall be
reported as not completed solely because the State agency was unable to process the case review
in time for it to be reported in accordance with the timeframes specified in § 275.21(b)(2).
(i)

If the reviewer is unable to locate the participant either at the address indicated in the case
record or in the issuance record and the State agency is not otherwise aware of the
participant's current address, the reviewer shall attempt to locate the household by contacting
at least two sources which the State agency determines are most likely to be able to inform the
reviewer of the household's current address. Such sources include but are not limited to:
(A) The local office of the U.S. Postal Service;
(B) The State Motor Vehicle Department;
(C) The owner or property manager of the residence at the address in the case record; and
(D) Any other appropriate sources based on information contained in the case record, such as
public utility companies, telephone company, employers, or relatives. Once the reviewer
has attempted to locate the household and has documented the response of each source
contacted, if the household still cannot be located and the State agency has documented
evidence that the household did actually exist, the State agency shall report the active
case as not subject to review. In these situations documented evidence shall be
considered adequate if it either documents two different elements of eligibility or basis of
issuance, such as a copy of a birth certificate for age and pay status for income; or
documents the statement of a collateral contact indicating that the household did exist.
FNS Regional Offices will monitor the results of the contacts which State agencies make
in attempting to locate households.

(ii) If a household refuses to cooperate with the quality control reviewer and the State agency has
taken other administrative steps to obtain that cooperation without obtaining it, the household
shall be notified of the penalities for refusing to cooperate with respect to termination and
reapplication, and of the possibility that its case will be referred for investigation for willful
misrepresentation. If a household refuses to cooperate after such notice, the reviewer mustattempt to complete the case and shall report the household's refusal to the State agency for
termination of its participation without regard for the outcome of that attempt. For a
determination of refusal to be made, the household must be able to cooperate, but clearly
demonstrate that it will not take actions that it can take and that are required to complete the
quality control review process. In certain circumstances, the household may demonstrate that it
is unwilling to cooperate by not taking actions after having been given every reasonable
opportunity to do so, even though the household or its members do not state that the
household refuses to cooperate. Instances where the household's unwillingness to cooperate in
completing a quality control review has the effect of a refusal to cooperate shall include the
following:
(A) The household does not respond to a letter from the reviewer sent Certified Mail-Return
Receipt Requested within 30 days of the date of receipt;
(B) The household does not attend an agreed upon interview with the reviewer and then does
not contact the reviewer within 10 days of the date of the scheduled interview to
reschedule the interview; or

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7 CFR 275.12(g)(1)(ii)(C)

(C) The household does not return a signed release of information statement to the reviewer
within 10 days of either agreeing to do so or receiving a request from the reviewer sent
Certified Mail-Return Receipt Requested. However, in these and other situations, if there is
any question as to whether the household has merely failed to cooperate, as opposed to
refused to cooperate, the household shall not be reported to the State agency for
termination.
(2) Cases not subject to review. Active cases which are not subject to review, if they have not been
eliminated in the sampling process, shall be eliminated in the review process. In addition to cases
listed in § 275.11(f)(1), these shall include:
(i)

Death of all members of a household if they died before the review could be undertaken or
completed;

(ii) The household moved out of State before the review could be undertaken or completed;
(iii) The household, at the time of the review, is under active investigation for intentional SNAP
violation, including a household with a pending administrative disqualification hearing;
(iv) A household receiving restored benefits in accordance with § 273.17 of this chapter but not
participating based upon an approved application for the sample month;
(v) A household dropped as a result of correction for oversampling;
(vi) A household participating under disaster certification authorized by FNS for a natural disaster;
(vii) A case incorrectly listed in the active frame;
(viii) A household appealing an adverse action when the review date falls within the time period
covered by continued participation pending the hearing;
(ix) A household that did not receive benefits for the sample month; or
(x) A household that still cannot be located after the reviewer has attempted to locate it in
accordance with paragraph (g)(1)(i) of this section.
(h) Demonstration projects. Households correctly classified for participation under the rules of a
demonstration project which establishes new FNS-authorized eligibility criteria or modifies the rules for
determining households' eligibility or allotment level shall be reviewed following standard procedures
provided that FNS does not modify these procedures to reflect modifications in the treatment of elements
of eligibility or basis of issuance in the case of a demonstration project. If FNS determines that
information obtained from these cases would not be useful, then they may be excluded from review.
[Amdt. 260, 49 FR 6306, Feb. 17, 1984; 49 FR 14495, Apr. 12, 1984]

Editorial Note: For FEDERAL REGISTER citations affecting § 275.12, see the List of CFR Sections Affected, which
appears in the Finding Aids section of the printed volume and at www.govinfo.gov.

§ 275.13 Review of negative cases.
(a) General. A sample of actions to deny applications, or suspend or terminate a household in the sample
month shall be selected for quality control review. These negative actions shall be reviewed to determine
whether the State agency's decision to deny, suspend, or terminate the household, as of the review date,
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7 CFR 275.13(b)

was correct. Depending on the characteristics of individual State systems, the review date for negative
cases could be the date of the agency's decision to deny, suspend, or terminate program benefits, the
date on which the decision is entered into the computer system, or the date of the notice to the client.
State agencies must consistently apply the same definition for review date to all sample cases of the
same classification. The review of negative cases shall include a household case record review; an error
analysis; and the reporting of review findings, including procedural problems with the action regardless of
the validity of the decision to deny, suspend or terminate. In certain instances, contact with the household
or a collateral contact may be permitted.
(b) Household case record review. The reviewer shall examine the household case record and verify through
documentation in it whether the reason given for the denial, suspension, or termination is correct.
Through the review of the household case record, the reviewer shall complete the household case record
sections and document the reasons for denial, suspension or termination on the Negative Quality Control
Review Schedule, Form FNS–245.
(c) Error analysis.
(1) A negative case shall be considered valid if the reviewer is able to verify through documentation in
the household case record that a household was correctly denied, suspended, or terminated from
the program in accordance with the reason for the action given by the State agency in the notice.
Whenever the reviewer is unable to verify the correctness of the State agency's decision to deny,
suspend, or terminate a household's participation through such documentation, the QC reviewer may
contact the household or a collateral contact to verify the correctness of the specific negative action
under review. If the reviewer is unable to verify the correctness of the State agency's decision to
deny, suspend, or terminate the case for the specific reason given for the action, the negative case
shall be considered invalid.
(2) The reviewer shall exclude a variance when the State agency erroneously denied, suspended or
terminated a household's participation based on an erroneous verification of alien documentation by
the Immigration and Nationalization Services (INS) Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements
(SAVE) Program. The reviewer shall exclude the variance only if the State agency properly used
SAVE, and the State agency provides the reviewer with:
(i)

The alien's name;

(ii) The alien's status; and
(iii) Either the Alien Status Verification Index (ASVI) Query Verification Number or the INS Form
G–845, as annotated by INS.
(d) Reporting of review findings. When a negative case is incorrect, this information shall be reported to the
State agency for appropriate action on an individual case basis, such as recomputation of the allotment
and restoration of lost benefits. In addition, the reviewer shall code and record the error determination on
the Negative Quality Control Review Schedule, Form FNS–245.
(e) Disposition of case review. Each case selected in the sample of negative cases must be accounted for by
classifying it as completed, not completed, or not subject to review. These case dispositions shall be
coded and recorded on the Negative Quality Control Review Schedule, Form FNS–245.
(1) Cases reported as not complete. Negative cases shall be reported as not completed if the reviewer,
after all reasonable efforts, is unable to locate the case record. In no event, however, shall any
negative case be reported as not completed solely because the State agency was unable to process
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the case review in time for it to be reported in accordance with the timeframes specified in §
275.21(b)(2), without prior FNS approval. This information shall be reported to the State agency for
appropriate action on an individual case basis.
(2) Cases not subject to review. Negative cases which are not subject to review, if they have not been
eliminated in the sampling process, shall be eliminated in the review process. In addition to cases
listed in § 275.11(f)(2), these shall include:
(i)

A household which was dropped as a result of a correction for oversampling;

(ii) A household which was listed incorrectly in the negative frame.
(f) Demonstration projects. A household whose application has been denied or whose participation has been
suspended or terminated under the rules of an FNS-authorized demonstration project shall be reviewed
following standard procedures unless FNS provides modified procedures to reflect the rules of the
demonstration project. If FNS determines that information obtained from these cases would not be
useful, then these cases may be excluded from review.
[Amdt. 260, 49 FR 6309, Feb. 17, 1984, as amended at 53 FR 39443, Oct. 7, 1988; Amdt. 373, 64 FR 38296, July 16, 1999; 75 FR
33437, June 11, 2010; 86 FR 44587, Aug. 13, 2021]

§ 275.14 Review processing.
(a) General. Each State agency shall use FNS handbooks, worksheets, and schedules in the quality control
review process.
(b) Handbooks. The reviewer shall follow the procedures outlined in the Quality Control Review Handbook,
FNS Handbook 310, to conduct quality control reviews. In addition, the sample of active and negative
cases shall be selected in accordance with the sampling techniques described in the Quality Control
Sampling Handbook, FNS Handbook 311.
(c) Worksheets. The Form FNS–380, shall be used by the reviewer to record required information from the
case record, plan and conduct the field investigation, and record findings which contribute to the
determination of eligibility and basis of issuance in the review of active cases. In some instances,
reviewers may need to supplement Form FNS–380 with other forms. The State forms for appointments,
interoffice communications, release of information, etc., should be used when appropriate.
(d) Schedules. Decisions reached by the reviewer in active case reviews shall be coded and recorded on the
Integrated Review Worksheet, Form FNS–380–1. Such active case review findings must be substantiated
by information recorded on the Integrated Review Worksheet, Form FNS–380. In negative case reviews,
the review findings shall be coded and recorded on the Negative Quality Control Review Schedule, Form
FNS–245, and supplemented as necessary with other documentation substantiating the findings.
[Amdt. 260, 49 FR 6310, Feb. 17, 1984, as amended by Amdt. 262, 49 FR 50598, Dec. 31, 1984; 75 FR 33438, June 11, 2010]

Subpart D—Data Analysis and Evaluation
§ 275.15 Data management.
(a) Analysis. Analysis is the process of classifying data, such as by areas of program requirements or use of
error-prone profiles, to provide a basis for studying the data and determining trends including significant
characteristics and their relationships.
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(b) Evaluation. Evaluation is the process of determining the cause(s) of each deficiency, magnitude of the
deficiency, and geographic extent of the deficiency, to provide the basis for planning and developing
effective corrective action.
(c) Each State agency must analyze and evaluate at the State and project area levels all management
information sources available to:
(1) Identify all deficiencies in program operations and systems;
(2) Identify causal factors and their relationships;
(3) Identify magnitude of each deficiency, where appropriate (This is the frequency of each deficiency
occurring based on the number of program records reviewed and where applicable, the amount of
loss either to the program or participants or potential participants in terms of dollars. The State
agency shall include an estimate of the number of participants or potential participants affected by
the existence of the deficiency, if applicable);
(4) Determine the geographic extent of each deficiency (e.g., Statewide/individual project area or
management unit); and,
(5) Provide a basis for management decisions on planning, implementing, and evaluating corrective
action.
(d) In the evaluation of data, situations may arise where the State agency identifies the existence of a
deficiency, but after reviewing all available management information sources sufficient information is not
available to make a determination of the actual causal factor(s), magnitude, or geographic extent
necessary for the development of appropriate corrective action. In these situations, the State agency shall
be responsible for gathering additional data necessary to make these determinations. This action may
include, but is not limited to, conducting additional full or partial ME reviews in one or more project areas/
management units or discussions with appropriate officials.
(e) Deficiencies identified from all management information sources must be analyzed and evaluated
together to determine their causes, magnitude, and geographic extent. Causes indicated and deficiencies
identified must be examined to determine if they are attributable to a single cause and can be effectively
eliminated by a single action. Deficiencies and causes identified must also be compared to the results of
past corrective action efforts to determine if the new problems arise from the causal factors which
contributed to the occurrence of previously identified deficiencies.
(f) Data analysis and evaluation must be an ongoing process to facilitate the development of effective and
prompt corrective action. The process shall also identify when deficiencies have been eliminated through
corrective action efforts, and shall provide for the reevaluation of deficiencies and causes when it is
determined that corrective action has not been effective.
(g) Identification of High Error Project Areas/Counties/Local Offices. FNS may use quality control information
to determine which project areas/counties/local offices have reported payment error rates that are either
significantly greater than the State agency average or greater than the national error standard of the
Program. When FNS notifies a State agency that a “high error” area exists, the State agency shall ensure
that corrective action is developed and reported in accordance with the provisions of § 275.17. If FNS
identifies a “high error” locality which a State agency has previously identified as error-prone and taken
appropriate action, no further State agency shall be required. If a State agency's corrective action plan
fails to address problems in FNS-identified “high error” areas, FNS may require a State agency to
implement new or modified cost-effective procedures for the certification of households.
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7 CFR 275.16

[Amdt. 160, 45 FR 15909, Mar. 11, 1980, as amended by Amdt. 266, 52 FR 3409, Feb. 4, 1987; Amdt. 320, 55 FR 6240, Feb. 22,
1990]

Subpart E—Corrective Action
§ 275.16 Corrective action planning.
(a) Corrective action planning is the process by which State agencies shall determine appropriate actions to
reduce substantially or eliminate deficiencies in program operations and provide responsive service to
eligible households.
(b) The State agency and project area(s)/management unit(s), as appropriate, shall implement corrective
action on all identified deficiencies. Deficiencies requiring action by the State agency or the combined
efforts of the State agency and the project area(s)/management unit(s) in the planning, development, and
implementation of corrective action are those which:
(1) Result from a payment error rate of 6 percent or greater (actions to correct errors in individual cases,
however, shall not be submitted as part of the State agency's corrective action plan);
(2) Are the causes of other errors/deficiencies detected through quality control, including error rates of 1
percent or more in negative cases (actions to correct errors in individual cases, however, shall not be
submitted as part of the State agency's corrective action plan);
(3) Are identified by FNS reviews, GAO audits, contract audits, reports to FNS regarding the
implementation of major changes (as discussed in § 272.15) or USDA audits or investigations at the
State agency or project area level (except deficiencies in isolated cases as indicated by FNS); and,
(4) Result from 5 percent or more of the State agency's QC sample being coded “not complete” as
defined in § 275.12(g)(1) of this part. This standard shall apply separately to both active and
negative samples.
(5) Result in underissuances, improper denials, improper suspensions, improper termination, or
improper systemic suspension of benefits to eligible households where such errors are caused by
State agency rules, practices, or procedures.
(c) The State agency shall ensure that appropriate corrective action is taken on all deficiencies including each
case found to be in error by quality control reviews and those deficiencies requiring corrective action only
at the project area level. Moreover, when a substantial number of deficiencies are identified which require
State agency level and/or project area/management unit corrective action, the State agency and/or
project area/management unit shall establish an order of priority to ensure that the most serious
deficiencies are addressed immediately and corrected as soon as possible. Primary factors to be
considered when determining the most serious deficiencies are:
(1) Magnitude of the deficiency as defined in § 275.15(c)(3) of this part;
(2) Geographic extent of the deficiency (e.g., Statewide/project area or management unit);
(3) Anticipated results of corrective actions; and
(4) High probability of errors occurring as identified through all management evaluation sources.
(d) In planning corrective action, the State agency shall coordinate actions in the areas of data analysis,
policy development, quality control, program evaluation, operations, administrative cost management, civil
rights, and training to develop appropriate and effective corrective action measures.
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7 CFR 275.17

[Amdt. 160, 45 FR 15909, Mar. 11, 1980, as amended by Amdt. 169, 46 FR 7263, Jan. 23, 1981; Amdt. 262, 49 FR 50598, Dec. 31,
1984; Amdt. 266, 52 FR 3409, Feb. 4, 1987; Amdt. 328, 56 FR 60052, Nov. 27, 1991; 68 FR 59523, Oct. 16, 2003; 75 FR 33438,
June 11, 2010; 81 FR 2741, Jan. 19, 2016]

§ 275.17 State corrective action plan.
(a) State agencies shall prepare corrective action plans addressing those deficiencies specified in §
275.16(b) requiring action by the State agency or the combined efforts of the State agency and the project
area(s)/management unit(s). This corrective action plan is an open-ended plan and shall remain in effect
until all deficiencies in program operations have been reduced substantially or eliminated. State agencies
shall provide updates to their corrective action plans through regular, semiannual updates. These
semiannual updates shall be received by FNS by May 1st and November 1st respectively. Such updates
must contain:
(1) Any additional deficiencies identified since the previous corrective action plan update;
(2) Documentation that a deficiency has been corrected and is therefore being removed from the plan;
and
(3) Any changes to planned corrective actions for previously reported deficiencies.
(b) Content. State corrective action plans shall contain, but not necessarily be limited to, the following, based
on the most recent information available:
(1) Specific description and identification of each deficiency;
(2) Source(s) through which the deficiency was detected;
(3) Magnitude of each deficiency, if appropriate, as defined in § 275.15(c)(3) of this part;
(4) Geographic extent of the deficiency (e.g., Statewide/project area or management unit—specific
project areas in which the deficiency occurs);
(5) Identification of causal factor(s) contributing to the occurrence of each deficiency;
(6) Identification of any action already completed to eliminate the deficiency;
(7) For each deficiency, an outline of actions to be taken, the expected outcome of each action, the
target date for each action, and the date by which each deficiency will have been eliminated; and
(8) For each deficiency, a description of the manner in which the State agency will monitor and evaluate
the effectiveness of the corrective action in eliminating the deficiency.
(c) FNS will provide technical assistance in developing corrective action plans when requested by State
agencies.
(d) State agencies will be held accountable for the efficient and effective operation of all areas of the
program. FNS is not precluded from issuing a warning as specified in part 276 because a deficiency is
included in the State agency's corrective action plan.
[Amdt. 160, 45 FR 15909, Mar. 11, 1980, as amended by Amdt. 266, 52 FR 3409, Feb. 4, 1987]

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§ 275.18 Project area/management unit corrective action plan.
(a) The State agency shall ensure that corrective action plans are prepared at the project area/management
unit level, addressing those deficiencies not required to be included in the State corrective action plan.
State agencies may elect to prepare these plans for or in cooperation with the project area. These project
area/management unit corrective action plans shall be open-ended and shall remain in effect until all
deficiencies in program operations have been reduced substantially or eliminated. Any deficiencies
detected through any source not previously reported to the State agency which require incorporation into
the Project Area/Management Unit Corrective Action Plan shall be submitted to the State agency within
60 days of identification. As deficiencies are reduced substantially or eliminated, the project area/
management unit shall notify the State agency in writing. The project area/management unit shall be
responsible for documenting why each deficiency is being removed from the Plan. The removal of any
deficiency from the Plan will be subject to State agency and FNS review and validation.
(b) Content. Project area/management unit corrective action plans shall contain all the information necessary
to enable the State agency to monitor and evaluate the corrective action properly. Also, State agencies
shall establish requirements for project area/management units in planning, implementing and reporting
corrective action to assist the State agency's efforts to fulfill its responsibilities for determining which
deficiencies must be addressed in the State corrective action plan. States should consider requiring
project area/management unit plans to include the following, based on the most recent information
available:
(1) Specific description and identification of each deficiency;
(2) Source(s) through which the deficiency was detected;
(3) Magnitude of each deficiency, if appropriate, as defined in § 275.15(c)(3) of this part;
(4) Geographic extent of the deficiency (throughout the project area/management unit or only in specific
offices);
(5) Identification of causal factor(s) contributing to the occurrence of each deficiency;
(6) Identification of any action already completed to eliminate the deficiency;
(7) For each deficiency, an outline of actions to be taken, the expected outcome of each action, the
target date for each action, the date by which each deficiency will have been eliminated; and
(8) For each deficiency, a description of the manner in which the project area/management unit will
monitor and evaluate the effectiveness of the corrective action in eliminating the deficiency.
[Amdt. 160, 45 FR 15909, Mar. 11, 1980]

§ 275.19 Monitoring and evaluation.
(a) The State agency shall establish a system for monitoring and evaluating corrective action at the State and
project area levels. Monitoring and evaluation shall be an ongoing process to determine that deficiencies
are being substantially reduced or eliminated in an efficient manner and that the program provides
responsive service to eligible households.

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(b) The State agency shall ensure that corrective action on all deficiencies identified in the State Corrective
Action Plan and Project Area/Management Unit Corrective Action Plan is implemented and achieves the
anticipated results within the specified time frames. The State agency shall monitor and evaluate
corrective action at the State and project levels through a combination of reports, field reviews, and
examination of current data available through program management tools and other sources.
(c) In instances where the State agency and/or the project area/management unit determines that the
proposed corrective action is not effective in reducing substantially or eliminating deficiencies, the State
agency and/or the project area/management unit shall promptly reevaluate the deficiency, causes, and
the corrective action taken, and develop and implement new corrective actions.
[Amdt. 160, 45 FR 15909, Mar. 11, 1980]

Subpart F—Responsibilities for Reporting on Program Performance
§ 275.20 ME review schedules.
(a) Each State agency shall submit its review schedule to the appropriate FNS regional office at least 60 days
prior to the beginning of the next year's review period (the Federal fiscal year). These schedules must
ensure that all project areas/management units will be reviewed within the required time limits. Each
schedule shall identify the project areas/management units in each classification and list each project
area to be reviewed by month or by quarter. A State agency may submit a request to use an alternate
review schedule at any time. The alternate schedule shall not be effective until approved by FNS in
accordance with § 275.5(b)(2).
(b) State agencies shall notify the appropriate FNS regional office of all changes in review schedules.
[Amdt. 266, 52 FR 3410, Feb. 4, 1987]

§ 275.21 Quality control review reports.
(a) General. Each State agency shall submit reports on the performance of quality control reviews in
accordance with the requirements outlined in this section. These reports are designed to enable FNS to
monitor the State agency's compliance with Program requirements relative to the Quality Control Review
System. Every case selected for review during the sample month must be accounted for and reflected in
the appropriate report(s).
(b) Individual cases. The State agency shall report the review findings on each case selected for review during
the sample month. For active cases, the State agency shall thoroughly document the Quality Control
Review Schedule, Form FNS–380, to ensure any subsequent case reviewers fully understand household
circumstances pertaining to the QC review as well as the reasons for the individual case finding and
disposition. The State agency shall also code the findings on the Form FNS–380–1. For negative cases,
the State agency shall submit a summary report, coded and documented on the Negative Quality Control
Review Schedule, Form FNS–245, in enough detail to ensure subsequent case reviewers fully understand
the reasons for the individual finding and disposition. The review findings shall be reported as follows:
(1) The State agency shall utilize SNAPQCS, FNS' automated, web-based QC System, to report all
required QC forms, supporting evidence, and information necessary to understand the disposition
and final findings for active and negative sampled cases to FNS. Upon State agency request, FNS will
consider approval of any technical changes in the review results after they have been reported to
FNS.
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(2) The State agency shall have at least 115 days from the end of the sample month to dispose of and
report the findings of all cases selected in a sample month. FNS may grant additional time as
warranted upon request by a State agency for cause shown to complete and dispose of individual
cases.
(3) The State agency shall supply the FNS Regional Office with individual household case records and
the pertinent information contained in the individual case records, or legible copies of that material,
as well as legible hard copies of individual Forms FNS–380, FNS–380–1, and FNS–245 or other
FNS-approved report forms, within 10 days of receipt of a request for such information.
(4) For each case that remains pending 115 days after the end of the sample month, the State agency
shall immediately submit a report that includes an explanation of why the case has not been
disposed of, documentation describing the progress of the review to date, and the date by which it
will be completed. If FNS extends the time frames in paragraph (b)(2) of this section, this date will be
extended accordingly. If FNS determines that the report in the first sentence of this paragraph (b)(4)
does not sufficiently justify the case's pending status, the case shall be considered overdue.
Depending upon the number of overdue cases, FNS may find the State agency's QC system to be
inefficient or ineffective and suspend and/or disallow the State agency's Federal share of
administrative funds in accordance with the provisions of § 276.4.
(c) Monthly status. The State agency shall report in a manner directed by the regional office the monthly
progress of sample selection and completion within 125 days after the end of the sample month. Each
report shall reflect sampling and review activity for a given sample month. If FNS extends the time frames
in paragraph (b)(2) of this section, this date will be extended accordingly.
(d) Demonstration projects. The State agency shall identify the monthly status of active and negative
demonstration project (i.e., those cases described in § 275.11(g)) in accordance with paragraph (c) of this
section.
[Amdt. 260, 49 FR 6310, Feb. 17, 1984, as amended by Amdt. 262, 49 FR 50598, Dec. 31, 1984; Amdt. 266, 52 FR 3410, Feb. 4,
1987; 75 FR 33438, June 11, 2010; 86 FR 44857, Aug. 13, 2021; 86 FR 49229, Sept. 2, 2021]

§ 275.22 Administrative procedure.
Reports on program performance are intended to provide the State an opportunity to determine compliance with
program requirements, identify and resolve emerging problems, and assess the effectiveness of actions that have
been taken to correct existing problems. States' reports enable FNS to assess the nationwide status of eligibility
and basis of issuance determinations, to ensure State compliance with Federal requirements, to assist States in
improving and strengthening their programs, and to develop Federal policies. Reports must be submitted in
duplicate to the appropriate FNS Regional Office according to the time frames established in §§ 275.20, 275.21, and
275.22 of this part.
[Amdt. 160, 45 FR 15911, Mar. 11, 1980. Redesignated at 52 FR 3410, Feb. 4, 1987]

Subpart G—Program Performance

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§ 275.23 Determination of State agency program performance.
(a) Determination of efficiency and effectiveness. FNS shall determine the efficiency and effectiveness of a
State's administration of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program by measuring State compliance
with the standards contained in the Food and Nutrition Act, regulations, and the State Plan of Operation
and State efforts to improve program operations through corrective action. This determination shall be
made based on:
(1) Reports submitted to FNS by the State;
(2) FNS reviews of State agency operations;
(3) State performance reporting systems and corrective action efforts; and
(4) Other available information such as Federal audits and investigations, civil rights reviews,
administrative cost data, complaints, and any pending litigation.
(b) State agency error rates. FNS shall estimate each State agency's active case, payment, and negative case
error rate based on the results of quality control review reports submitted in accordance with the
requirements outlined in § 275.21. The determination of the correctness of the case shall be based on
certification policy as set forth in part 273 of this chapter.
(1) Demonstration projects. FNS shall make a determination for each individual project whether the
reported results of reviews of active and negative demonstration project cases shall be included or
excluded from the estimate of the active case error rate, payment error rate, and negative case error
rate.
(2) Determination of payment error rates. As specified in § 275.3(c), FNS will validate each State
agency's estimated payment error rate by rereviewing the State agency's active case sample and
ensuring that its sampling, estimation, and data management procedures are correct.
(i)

Once the Federal case reviews have been completed and all differences with the State agency
have been identified, FNS shall calculate regressed error rates using the following linear
regression equations.
(A) y1 ′ = y1 + b1 (X1 −x1), where y1′ is the average value of allotments overissued to eligible and
ineligible households; y1 is the average value of allotments overissued to eligible and
ineligible households in the rereview sample according to the Federal finding, b1 is the
estimate of the regression coefficient regressing the Federal findings of allotments
overissued to eligible and ineligible households on the corresponding State agency
findings, x1 is the average value of allotments overissued to eligible and ineligible
households in the rereview sample according to State agency findings, and X1 is the
average value of allotments overissued to eligible and ineligible households in the full
quality control sample according to State agency's findings. In stratified sample designs
Y1, X1, and x1 are weighted averages and b1 is a combined regression coefficient in which
stratum weights sum to 1.0 and are proportional to the estimated stratum caseloads
subject to review.
(B) y2 ′ = y2 + b2(X2−x2, where y2′ is the average value of allotments underissued to households
included in the active error rate, y2 is the average value of allotments underissued to
participating households in the rereview sample according to the Federal finding, b2 is the
estimate of the regression coefficient regressing the Federal findings of allotments
underissued to participating households on the corresponding State agency findings, x2 is

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the average value of allotments underissued to participating households in the rereview
sample according to State agency findings, and X2 is the average value of allotments
underissued to participating households in the full quality control sample according to the
State agency's findings. In stratified sample designs y2, X2, and x2 are weighted averages
and b2 is a combined regression coefficient in which stratum weights sum to 1.0 and are
proportional to the estimated stratum caseloads subject to review.
(C) The regressed error rates are given by r1′ = y1′/u, yielding the regressed overpayment error
rate, and r2′ = y2′/u, yielding the regressed underpayment error rate, where u is the average
value of allotments issued to participating households in the State agency sample.
(D) After application of the adjustment provisions of paragraph (b)(2)(iii) of this section, the
adjusted regressed payment error rate shall be calculated to yield the State agency's
payment error rate. The adjusted regressed payment error rate is given by r1″ + r2″.
(ii) If FNS determines that a State agency has sampled incorrectly, estimated improperly, or has
deficiencies in its QC data management system, FNS will correct the State agency's payment
and negative case error rates based upon a correction to that aspect of the State agency's QC
system which is deficient. If FNS cannot accurately correct the State agency's deficiency, FNS
will assign the State agency a payment error rate or negative case error rate based upon the
best information available. After consultation with the State agency, the assigned payment error
rate will then be used in the liability determination. After consultation with the State agency, the
assigned negative case error rate will be the official State negative case error rate for any
purpose. State agencies shall have the right to appeal assessment of an error rate in this
situation in accordance with the procedures of Part 283 of this chapter.
(iii) Should a State agency fail to complete 98 percent of its required sample size, FNS shall adjust
the State agency's regressed error rates using the following equations:
(A) r1 ″ = r1′ + 2(1−C)S1, where r1″ is the adjusted regressed overpayment error rate, r1′ is the
regressed overpayment error rate computed from the formula in paragraph (b)(2)(i)(C) of
this section, C is the State agency's rate of completion of its required sample size
expressed as a decimal value, and S1 is the standard error of the State agency sample
overpayment error rate. If a State agency completes all of its required sample size, then r1″
= r1′.
(B) r2 ″ = r2′ + 2(1−C)S2, where r2″ is the adjusted regressed underpayment error rate, r2′ is the
regressed underpayment error rate computed from the formula in paragraph (b)(2)(i)(C) of
this section, C is the State agency's rate of completion of its required sample size
expressed as a decimal value, and S2 is the standard error of the State agency sample
underpayment error rate. If a State agency completes all of its required sample size, then
r2″ = r2′.
(c) FNS Time frames for completing case review process, arbitration, and issuing error rates. The case review
process and the arbitration of all difference cases shall be completed by May 31 following the end of the
fiscal year. FNS shall determine and announce the national average payment and negative case error
rates for the fiscal year by June 30 following the end of the fiscal year. At the same time FNS shall notify
all State agencies of their individual payment and negative case error rates and payment error rate
liabilities, if any. FNS shall provide a copy of each State agency's notice of potential liability to its
respective chief executive officer and legislature. FNS shall initiate collection action on each claim for
such liabilities before the end of the fiscal year following the reporting period in which the claim arose
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unless an appeal relating to the claim is pending. Such appeals include administrative and judicial
appeals pursuant to Section 14 of the Food and Nutrition Act. While the amount of a State's liability may
be recovered through offsets to their letter of credit as identified in § 277.16(c) of this chapter, FNS shall
also have the option of billing a State directly or using other claims collection mechanisms authorized
under the Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996 (Pub. L. 104–134) and the Federal Claims Collection
Standards (31 CFR Parts 900–904), depending upon the amount of the State's liability. FNS is not bound
by the time frames referenced in paragraph (c) of this section in cases where a State fails to submit QC
data expeditiously to FNS and FNS determines that, as a result, it is unable to calculate the State's
payment error rate and payment error rate liability within the prescribed time frame.
(d) State agencies' liabilities for payment error rates. At the end of each fiscal year, each State agency's
payment error rate over the entire fiscal year will be computed and evaluated to determine whether the
payment error rate goal (national performance measure) established in paragraph (d)(1) of this section
has been met. Each State agency that fails to achieve its payment error rate goal during a fiscal year shall
be liable as specified in the paragraph (d)(2) of this section.
(1) National performance measure. FNS shall announce a national performance measure not later than
June 30 after the end of the fiscal year. The national performance measure is the sum of the
products of each State agency's error rate multiplied by that State agency's proportion of the total
value of national allotments issued for the fiscal year using the most recent issuance data available
at the time the State agency is notified of its payment error rate. Once announced, the national
performance measure for a given fiscal year will not be subject to administrative or judicial appeal.
(2) Liability. For fiscal year 2003 and subsequent years, liability for payment shall be established
whenever there is a 95 percent statistical probability that, for the second or subsequent consecutive
fiscal year, a State agency's payment error rate exceeds 105 percent of the national performance
measure. The amount of the liability shall be equal to the product of the value of all allotments
issued by the State agency in the second (or subsequent consecutive) fiscal year; multiplied by the
difference between the State agency's payment error rate and 6 percent; multiplied by 10 percent.
(3) Right to appeal payment error rate liability. Determination of a State agency's payment error rate or
whether that payment error rate exceeds 105 percent of the national performance measure shall be
subject to administrative or judicial review only if a liability amount is established for that fiscal year.
Procedures for good cause appeals of excessive payment error rates are addressed in paragraph (f)
of this section. The established national performance measure is not subject to administrative or
judicial appeal, nor is any prior fiscal year payment error rate subject to appeal as part of the appeal
of a later fiscal year's liability amount. However, State agencies may address matters related to good
cause in an immediately prior fiscal year that impacted the fiscal year for which a liability amount
has been established. The State agency will need to address how year 2 was impacted by the
event(s) in the prior year.
(4) Relationship to warning process and negligence.
(i)

States' liability for payment error rates as determined above in paragraphs (d)(1) through (d)(3)
of this section are not subject to the warning process of § 276.4(d) of this chapter.

(ii) FNS shall not determine negligence (as described in § 276.3 of this chapter) based on the
overall payment error rate for issuances to ineligible households and overissuances to eligible
households in a State or political subdivision thereof. FNS may only establish a claim under §

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276.3 of this chapter for dollar losses from failure to comply, due to negligence on the part of
the State agency (as defined in § 276.3 of this chapter), with specific certification requirements.
Thus, FNS will not use the result of States' QC reviews to determine negligence.
(iii) Whenever a State is assessed a liability amount for an excessive payment error rate, the State
shall have the right to request an appeal in accordance with procedures set forth in part 283 of
this chapter. While FNS may determine a State to be liable for dollar loss under the provisions
of this section and the negligence provisions of § 276.3 of this chapter for the same period of
time, FNS shall not bill a State for the same dollar loss under both provisions. If FNS finds a
State liable for dollar loss under both the QC liability system and the negligence provisions, FNS
shall adjust the billings to ensure that two claims are not made against the State for the same
dollar loss.
(e) Liability amount determinations.
(1) FNS shall provide for each State agency whose payment error rate subjects it to a liability amount the
following determinations, each expressed as a percentage of the total liability amount. FNS shall:
(i)

Require the State agency to invest up to 50 percent of the liability in activities to improve
program administration (new investment money shall not be matched by Federal funds) and

(ii) Designate up to 50 percent of the liability as “at-risk” for repayment if a liability is established
based on the State agency's payment error rate for the subsequent fiscal year, or
(iii) Choose any combination of these options.
(2) Once FNS determines the percentages in accordance with paragraphs (e)(1)(i) through (e)(1)(iv) of
this section, the amount assigned as at-risk is not subject to settlement negotiation between FNS
and the State agency and may not be reduced unless an appeal decision revises the total dollar
liability. FNS and the State agency shall settle any waiver percentage amount or new investment
percentage amount before the end of the fiscal year in which the liability amount is determined. The
determination of percentages for waiver, new investment, and/or at-risk amounts by the Department
is not appealable. Likewise, a settlement of the waiver and new investment amounts cannot be
appealed.
(f) Good cause. When a State agency with otherwise effective administration exceeds the tolerance level for
payment errors as described in this section, the State agency may seek relief from liability claims that
would otherwise be levied under this section on the basis that the State agency had good cause for not
achieving the payment error rate tolerance. State agencies desiring such relief must file an appeal with the
Department's Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) in accordance with the procedures established under part
283 of this chapter. Paragraphs (f)(1) through (f)(5) of this section describe the unusual events that are
considered to have a potential for disrupting program operations and increasing error rates to an extent
that relief from a resulting liability amount or increased liability amount is appropriate. The occurrence of
an event(s) does not automatically result in a determination of good cause for an error rate in excess of
the national performance measure. The State agency must demonstrate that the event had an adverse
and uncontrollable impact on program operations during the relevant period, and the event caused an
uncontrollable increase in the error rate. Good cause relief will only be considered for that portion of the
error rate/liability amount attributable to the unusual event. The following are unusual events which State
agencies may use as a basis for requesting good cause relief and specific information that must be
submitted to justify such requests for relief:

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7 CFR 275.23(f)(1)

(1) Natural disasters and civil disorders. Natural disasters such as those under the authority of The
Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Amendments of 1988 (Pub. L. 100–707), which amended
The Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act (Pub. L. 93–288), or civil
disorders that adversely affect program operations.
(i)

When submitting a request for good cause relief based on this example, the State agency shall
provide the following information:
(A) The nature of the disaster(s) (e.g., a tornado, hurricane, earthquake, flood, etc.) or civil
disorder(s) and evidence that the President has declared a disaster;
(B) The date(s) of the occurrence;
(C) The date(s) after the occurrence when program operations were affected;
(D) The geographic extent of the occurrence (i.e., the county or counties where the disaster
occurred);
(E) The proportion of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program caseload whose
management was affected;
(F) The reason(s) why the State agency was unable to control the effects of the disaster on
program administration and errors.
(G) The identification and explanation of the uncontrollable nature of errors caused by the
event (types of errors, geographic location of the errors, time period during which the
errors occurred, etc.).
(H) The percentage of the payment error rate that resulted from the occurrence and how this
figure was derived; and
(I)

The degree to which the payment error rate exceeded the national performance measure
in the subject fiscal year.

(ii)
(A) The following criteria and methodology will be used to assess and evaluate good cause in
conjunction with the appeals process, and to determine that portion of the error rate/
liability amount attributable to the uncontrollable effects of a disaster or civil disorder:
(1) Geographical impact of the disaster;
(2) State efforts to control impact on program operations;
(3) The proportion of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program caseload affected;
and/or
(4) The duration of the disaster and its impact on program operations.
(B) Adjustments for these factors may result in a waiver of all, part, or none of the liability
amount for the applicable period. As appropriate, the waiver amount will be adjusted to
reflect States' otherwise effective administration of the program based upon the degree to
which the error rate exceeds the national performance measure. For example, a reduction
in the waiver amount may be made when a State agency's recent error rate history
indicates that even absent the events described the State agency would have exceeded
the national performance measure in the review period.
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(iii) If a State agency has provided insufficient information to determine a waiver amount for the
uncontrollable effects of a natural disaster or civil disorder using factual analysis, the waiver
amount shall be evaluated using the following formula and methodology which measures both
the duration and intensity of the event. Duration will be measured by the number of months the
event had an adverse impact on program operations. Intensity will be a proportional
measurement of the issuances for the counties affected to the State's total issuance. This ratio
will be determined using issuance figures for the first full month immediately preceding the
disaster. This figure will not include issuances made to households participating under disaster
certification authorized by FNS and already excluded from the error rate calculations under §
275.12(g)(2)(vi). The counties considered affected will include counties where the disaster/civil
disorder occurred, and any other county that the State agency can demonstrate had program
operations adversely impacted due to the event (such as a county that diverted significant
numbers of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program certification or administrative staff).
The amount of the waiver of liability will be determined using the linear equation W = Ia/Ib × [M/
12 or Mp/18] × L, where Ia is the issuance for the first full month immediately preceding the
unusual event for the county affected; Ib is the State's total issuance for the first full month
immediately preceding the unusual event; M/12 is the number of months in the subject fiscal
year that the unusual event had an adverse impact on program operations; Mp/18 is the
number of months in the last half (April through September) of the prior fiscal year that the
unusual event had an adverse impact on program operations; L is the total amount of the
liability for the fiscal year. Mathematically this formula could result in a waiver of more than 100
percent of the liability amount; however, no more than 100 percent of a State's liability amount
will be waived for any one fiscal year. Under this approach, unless the State agency can
demonstrate a direct uncontrollable impact on the error rate, the effects of disasters or civil
disorders that ended prior to the second half of the prior fiscal year will not be considered.
(2) Strikes. Strikes by State agency staff necessary to determine Supplemental Nutrition Assistance
Program eligibility and process case changes.
(i)

When submitting a request for good cause relief based on this example, the State agency shall
provide the following information:
(A) Which workers (i.e., eligibility workers, clerks, data input staff, etc.) and how many (number
and percentage of total staff) were on strike or refused to cross picket lines;
(B) The date(s) and nature of the strike (i.e., the issues surrounding the strike);
(C) The date(s) after the occurrence when program operations were affected;
(D) The geographic extent of the strike (i.e., the county or counties where the strike occurred);
(E) The proportion of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program caseload whose
management was affected;
(F) The reason(s) why the State agency was unable to control the effects of the strike on
program administration and errors;
(G) Identification and explanation of the uncontrollable nature of errors caused by the event
(types of errors, geographic location of the errors, time period during which the errors
occurred, etc.);

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(H) The percentage of the payment error rate that resulted from the strike and how this figure
was derived; and
(I)

The degree to which the payment error rate exceeded the national performance measure
in the subject fiscal year.

(ii)
(A) The following criteria shall be used to assess, evaluate and respond to claims by the State
agency for a good cause waiver of a liability amount in conjunction with the appeals
process, and to determine that portion of the error rate/liability amount attributable to the
uncontrollable effects of the strike:
(1) Geographical impact of the strike;
(2) State efforts to control impact on program operations;
(3) The proportion of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program caseload affected;
and/or
(4) The duration of the strike and its impact on program operations.
(B) Adjustments for these factors may result in a waiver of all, part, or none of the liability
amount for the applicable period. For example, the amount of the waiver might be reduced
for a strike that was limited to a small area of the State. As appropriate, the waiver amount
will be adjusted to reflect States' otherwise effective administration of the program based
upon the degree to which the error rate exceeded the national performance measure.
(iii) If a State agency has provided insufficient information to determine a waiver amount for the
uncontrollable effects of a strike using factual analysis, a waiver amount shall be evaluated by
using the formula described in paragraph (f)(1) of this section. Under this approach, unless the
State agency can demonstrate a direct uncontrollable impact on the error rate, the effects of
strikes that ended prior to the second half of the prior fiscal year will not be considered.
(3) Caseload growth. A significant growth in Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program caseload in a
State prior to or during a fiscal year, such as a 15 percent growth in caseload. Caseload growth
which historically increases during certain periods of the year will not be considered unusual or
beyond the State agency's control.
(i)

When submitting a request for good cause relief based on this example, the State agency shall
provide the following information:
(A) The amount of growth (both actual and percentage);
(B) The time the growth occurred (what month(s)/year);
(C) The date(s) after the occurrence when program operations were affected;
(D) The geographic extent of the caseload growth (i.e. Statewide or in which particular
counties);
(E) The impact of caseload growth;
(F) The reason(s) why the State agency was unable to control the effects of caseload growth
on program administration and errors;

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7 CFR 275.23(f)(3)(i)(G)

(G) The percentage of the payment error rate that resulted from the caseload growth and how
this figure was derived; and
(H) The degree to which the error rate exceeded the national performance measure in the
subject fiscal year.
(ii)
(A) The following criteria and methodology shall be used to assess and evaluate good cause
in conjunction with the appeals process, and to determine that portion of the error rate/
liability amount attributable to the uncontrollable effects of unusual caseload growth:
(1) Geographical impact of the caseload growth;
(2) State efforts to control impact on program operations;
(3) The proportion of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program caseload affected;
and/or
(4) The duration of the caseload growth and its impact on program operations.
(B) Adjustments for these factors may result in a waiver of all, part, or none of the liability
amount for the applicable period. As appropriate, the waiver amount will be adjusted to
reflect States' otherwise effective administration of the program based upon the degree to
which the error rate exceeded the national performance measure. For example, a
reduction in the waiver amount may be made when a State agency's recent error rate
history indicates that even absent the events described the State agency would have
exceeded the national performance measure in the review period. Under this approach,
unless the State agency can demonstrate a direct uncontrollable impact on the error rate,
the effects of caseload growth that ended prior to the second half of the prior fiscal year
will not be considered.
(iii) If the State agency has provided insufficient information to determine a waiver amount for the
uncontrollable effects of caseload growth using factual analysis, the waiver amount shall be
evaluated using the following five-step calculation:
(A) Step 1—determine the average number of households certified to participate Statewide in
the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program for the base period consisting of twelve
consecutive months ending with March of the prior fiscal year;
(B) Step 2—determine the percentage of increase in caseload growth from the base period
(Step 1) using the average number of households certified to participate Statewide in the
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program for any twelve consecutive months in the
period beginning with April of the prior fiscal year and ending with June of the current year;
(C) Step 3—determine the percentage the error rate for the subject fiscal year, as calculated
under paragraph (b)(2) of this section, exceeds the national performance measure
determined in accordance with paragraph (d)(1) of this section;
(D) Step 4—divide the percentage of caseload growth increase arrived at in step 2 by the
percentage the error rate for the subject fiscal year exceeds the national performance
measure as determined in step 3; and

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7 CFR 275.23(f)(3)(iii)(E)

(E) Step 5—multiply the quotient arrived at in step 4 by the liability amount for the current
fiscal year to determine the amount of waiver of liability.
(iv) Under this methodology, caseload growth of less than 15% and/or occurring in the last three
months of the subject fiscal year will not be considered. Mathematically this formula could
result in a waiver of more than 100 percent of the liability amount; however, no more than 100
percent of a State's liability amount will be waived for any one fiscal year.
(4) Program changes. A change in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program or other Federal or
State program that has a substantial adverse impact on the management of the Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance Program of a State. Requests for relief from errors caused by the uncontrollable
effects of unusual program changes other than those variances already excluded by §
275.12(d)(2)(vii) will be considered to the extent the program change is not common to all States.
(i)

When submitting a request for good cause relief based on unusual changes in the
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program or other Federal or State programs, the State
agency shall provide the following information:
(A) The type of changes(s) that occurred;
(B) When the change(s) occurred;
(C) The nature of the adverse effect of the changes on program operations and the State
agency's efforts to mitigate these effects;
(D) Reason(s) the State agency was unable to adequately handle the change(s);
(E) Identification and explanation of the uncontrollable errors caused by the changes (types of
errors, geographic location of the errors, time period during which the errors occurred,
etc.);
(F) The percentage of the payment error rate that resulted from the adverse impact of the
change(s) and how this figure was derived; and
(G) The degree to which the payment error rate exceeded the national performance measure
in the subject fiscal year.

(ii)
(A) The following criteria will be used to assess and evaluate good cause in conjunction with
the appeals process and to determine that portion of the error rate/liability amount
attributable to the uncontrollable effects of unusual changes in the Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program or other Federal and State programs:
(1) State efforts to control impact on program operations;
(2) The proportion of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program caseload affected;
and/or
(3) The duration of the unusual changes in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance
Program or other Federal and State programs and the impact on program operations.

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7 CFR 275.23(f)(4)(ii)(B)

(B) Adjustments for these factors may result in a waiver of all, part, or none of the liability
amount for the applicable period. As appropriate, the waiver amount will be adjusted to
reflect States' otherwise effective administration of the program based upon the degree to
which the error rate exceeded the national performance measure.
(5) Significant circumstances beyond the control of a State agency. Requests for relief from errors
caused by the uncontrollable effect of a significant circumstance other than those specifically set
forth in paragraphs (f)(1) through (f)(4) of this section will be considered to the extent that the
circumstance is not common to all States, such as a fire in a certification office.
(i)

The State agency shall provide the following information when submitting a request for good
cause relief based on significant circumstances, the State agency shall provide the following
information:
(A) The significant circumstances that the State agency believes uncontrollably and adversely
affected the payment error rate for the fiscal year in question;
(B) Why the State agency had no control over the significant circumstances;
(C) How the significant circumstances had an uncontrollable and adverse impact on the State
agency's error rate;
(D) Where the significant circumstances existed (i.e. Statewide or in particular counties);
(E) When the significant circumstances existed (provide specific dates whenever possible);
(F) The proportion of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program caseload whose
management was affected;
(G) Identification and explanation of the uncontrollable errors caused by the event (types of
errors, geographic location of the errors, time period during which the errors occurred,
etc.);
(H) The percentage of the payment error rate that was caused by the significant
circumstances and how this figure was derived; and
(I)

The degree to which the payment error rate exceeded the national performance measure
in the subject fiscal year.

(ii)
(A) The following criteria shall be used to assess and evaluate good cause in conjunction with
the appeals process, and to determine that portion of the error rate/liability amount
attributable to the uncontrollable effects of a significant circumstance beyond the control
of the State agency, other than those set forth in paragraph (f)(5) of this section:
(1) Geographical impact of the significant circumstances;
(2) State efforts to control impact on program operations;
(3) The proportion of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program caseload affected;
and/or
(4) The duration of the significant circumstances and the impact on program operations.

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7 CFR 275.23(f)(5)(ii)(B)

(B) Adjustments for these factors may result in a waiver of all, part, or none of the liability
amount for the applicable period. As appropriate, the waiver amount will be adjusted to
reflect States' otherwise effective administration of the program based upon the degree to
which the error rate exceeded the national performance measure.
(6) Adjustments. When good cause is found under the criteria in paragraphs (f)(1) through (f)(5) of this
section, the waiver amount may be adjusted to reflect States' otherwise effective administration of
the program based upon the degree to which the error rate exceeds the national performance
measure.
(7) Evidence. When submitting a request to the ALJ for good cause relief, the State agency shall include
such data and documentation as is necessary to support and verify the information submitted in
accordance with the requirements of paragraph (f) of this section so as to fully explain how a
particular significant circumstance(s) uncontrollably affected its payment error rate.
(8) Finality. The initial decision of the ALJ concerning good cause shall constitute the final determination
for purposes of judicial review as established under the provisions of § 283.17 and § 283.20 of this
chapter.
(g) Results of appeals on liability amount determinations.
(1) If a State agency wholly prevails on appeal and, consequently, its liability amount is reduced to $0
through the appeal, and if the State agency began new investment activities prior to the appeal
determination, FNS shall pay to the State agency an amount equal to 50 percent of the new
investment amount that was expended by the State agency.
(2) If FNS wholly prevails on a State agency's appeal, FNS will require the State agency to invest all or a
portion of the amount designated for new investment to be invested or to be paid to the Federal
government.
(3) If neither the State agency nor FNS wholly prevails on a State agency's appeal, FNS shall apply the
original waiver, new investment, and at-risk percentage determinations to the liability amount
established through the appeal. If the State agency began new investment prior to the appeal
decision and has already expended more than the amount produced for new investment as a result
of the appeal decision, the Department will match the amount of funds expended in excess of the
amount now required by the Department for new investment.
(h) New investment requirements. Once FNS has determined the percentage of a liability amount to be
invested or following an appeal and recalculation by FNS of an amount to be invested, a State agency
shall submit a plan of offsetting investments in program administration activities intended to reduce error
rates.
(1) The State agency's investment plan activity or activities must meet the following conditions to be
accepted by the Department:
(i)

The activity or activities must be directly related to error reduction in the ongoing program, with
specific objectives regarding the amount of error reduction, and type of errors that will be
reduced. The costs of demonstration, research, or evaluation projects under sections 17(a)
through (c) of the Act will not be accepted. The State agency may direct the investment plan to
a specific project area or implement the plan on a Statewide basis. In addition, the Department
will allow an investment plan to be tested in a limited area, as a pilot project, if the Department
determines it to be appropriate. A request by the State agency for a waiver of existing rules will

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7 CFR 275.23(h)(1)(ii)

not be acceptable as a component of the investment plan. The State agency must submit any
waiver request through the normal channels for approval and receive approval of the request
prior to including the waiver in the investment plan. Waivers that have been approved for the
State agency's use in the ongoing operation of the program may continue to be used.
(ii) The program administration activity must represent a new or increased expenditure. The
proposed activity must also represent an addition to the minimum program administration
required by law for State agency administration including corrective action. Therefore, basic
training of eligibility workers or a continuing correction action from a Corrective Action Plan
shall not be acceptable. The State agency may include a previous initiative in its plan; however,
the State agency would have to demonstrate that the initiative is entirely funded by State
money, represents an increase in spending and there are no remaining Federal funds earmarked
for the activity.
(iii) Investment activities must be funded in full by the State agency, without any matching Federal
funds until the entire amount agreed to is spent. Amounts spent in excess of the settlement
amount included in the plan may be subject to Federal matching funds.
(2) The request shall include:
(i)

A statement of the amount of money that is a quality control liability claim that is to be offset by
investment in program improvements;

(ii) A detailed description of the planned program administration activity;
(iii) Planned expenditures, including time schedule and anticipated cost breakdown;
(iv) Anticipated impact of the activity, identifying the types of error expected to be affected;
(v) Documentation that the funds would not replace expenditures already earmarked for an
ongoing effort; and
(vi) A statement that the expenditures are not simply a reallocation of resources.
(3) A State agency may choose to begin expending State funds for any amount of the liability designated
as “new investment” in the liability amount determination prior to any appeal. FNS reserves the right
to approve whether the expenditure meets the requirements for new investment. Expenditures made
prior to approval by the Department will be subject to approval before they are accepted. Once a new
investment plan is approved, the State agency shall submit plan modifications to the Department for
approval, prior to implementation.
(4) Each State agency which has part of a liability designated for new investment shall submit periodic
documented reports according to a schedule in its approved investment plan. At a minimum, these
reports shall contain:
(i)

A detailed description of the expenditure of funds, including the source of funds and the actual
goods and services purchased or rented with the funds;

(ii) A detailed description of the actual activity; and
(iii) An explanation of the activity's effect on errors, including an explanation of any discrepancy
between the planned effect and the actual effect.

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7 CFR 275.23(h)(5)

(5) Any funds that the State agency's reports do not document as spent as specified in the new
investment plan may be recovered by the Department. Before the funds are withdrawn, the State
agency will be provided an opportunity to provide the missing documentation.
(6) If the funds are recovered, the Department shall charge interest on the funds not spent according to
the plan in accordance with paragraph (j) of this section.
(i)

At-risk money. If appropriate, FNS shall initiate collection action on each claim for such liabilities before
the end of the fiscal year following the reporting period in which the claim arose unless an administrative
appeal relating to the claim is pending. Such appeals include administrative and judicial appeals pursuant
to Section 14 of the Food and Nutrition Act. If a State agency, in the subsequent year, is again subject to a
liability amount based on the national performance measure and the error rate issued to the State agency,
the State agency will be required to remit to FNS any money designated as at-risk for the prior fiscal year
in accordance with either the original liability amount or a revised liability amount arising from an appeal,
as appropriate, within 30 days of the date of the final billing. The requirement that the State agency pay
the at-risk amount for the prior year will be held in abeyance pending the outcome of any pending appeal
for the subsequent liability. If the subsequent year's liability is reduced to $0, the at-risk money from for
the prior fiscal year will not be required to be paid. If the subsequent year's liability is not reduced to $0,
the State agency will be required to pay the at-risk money within 30 days of the date of the appeal
decision. The amount of a State's at-risk money may be recovered through offsets to the State agency's
letter of credit as identified in § 277.16(c) of this chapter. FNS shall also have the option of billing a State
directly or using other claims collection mechanisms authorized under the Debt Collection Improvement
Act of 1996 (Pub. L. 104–134) and the Federal Claims Collection Standards (31 CFR Parts 900–904),
depending upon the amount of the State's liability.

(j)

Interest charges.
(1) To the extent that a State agency does not pay an at-risk amount within 30 days from the date on
which the bill for collection is received by the State agency, the State agency shall be liable for
interest on any unpaid portion of such claim accruing from the date on which the bill for collection
was received by the State agency. If the State agency is notified that it failed to invest funds in
accordance with an approved new investment plan, the State agency has 30 days from the date of
receipt of notification of non-expenditure of new investment funds to pay the Department the
amount of funds not so invested. If the State agency does not pay the Department the amount of
funds not invested within 30 days from the date of receipt of the notification of non-expenditure, the
State agency shall be liable for interest on the non-expended funds from the date on which the
notification was received by the State agency. If the State agency agrees to pay the claim through
reduction in Federal financial participation for administrative costs, this agreement shall be
considered to be paying the claim. If the State agency appeals such claim (in whole or in part), the
interest on any unpaid portion of the claim shall accrue from the date of the decision on the
administrative appeal, or from a date that is one year after the date the bill is received, whichever is
earlier, until the date the unpaid portion of the payment is received.
(2) A State agency may choose to pay the amount designated as at-risk prior to resolution of any
appeals. If the State agency pays such claim (in whole or in part) and the claim is subsequently
overturned or adjusted through administrative or judicial appeal, any amounts paid by the State
agency above what is actually due shall be promptly returned with interest, accruing from the date
the payment was received until the date the payment is returned.

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7 CFR 275.23(j)(3)

(3) Any interest assessed under paragraph (j)(1) of this section shall be computed at a rate determined
by the Secretary based on the average of the bond equivalent of the weekly 90-day Treasury bill
auction rates during the period such interest accrues. The bond equivalent is the discount rate (i.e.,
the price the bond is actually sold for as opposed to its face value) determined by the weekly auction
(i.e., the difference between the discount rate and face value) converted to an annualized figure. The
Secretary shall use the investment rate (i.e., the rate for 365 days) compounded in simple interest for
the period for which the claim is not paid. Interest billings shall be made quarterly with the initial
billing accruing from the date the interest is first due. Because the discount rate for Treasury bills is
issued weekly, the interest rate for State agency claims shall be averaged for the appropriate weeks.
[75 FR 33438, June 11, 2010, as amended at 80 FR 53243, Sept. 3, 2015; 86 FR 44587, Aug. 13, 2021]

§ 275.24 High performance bonuses.
(a) General rule.
(1) FNS will award bonuses totaling $48 million for each fiscal year to State agencies that show high or
improved performance in accordance with the performance measures under paragraph (b) of this
section.
(2) FNS will award the bonuses no later than September 30th of the fiscal year following the
performance measurement year.
(3) A State agency is not eligible for a bonus payment in any fiscal year for which it has a liability amount
established as a result of an excessive payment error rate in the same year. If a State is disqualified
from receiving a bonus payment under this paragraph (a)(3), and the State is not tied for a bonus, the
State with the next best performance will be awarded a bonus payment.
(4) The determination whether, and in what amount, to award a performance bonus payment is not
subject to administrative or judicial review.
(5) In determining the amount of the award, FNS will first award a base amount of $100,000 to each
State agency that is an identified winner in each category. Subsequently, FNS will divide the
remaining money among the States in each category (see paragraph (b) of this section) in
proportion to the size of their caseloads (the average number of households per month for the fiscal
year for which performance is measured).
(6) A State cannot be awarded two bonuses in the same category; the relevant categories are payment
accuracy (which is outlined in paragraph (b)(1) of this section), negative error rate (which is outlined
in paragraph (b)(2) of this section), or program access index (which is outlined in paragraph (b)(3) of
this section). If a State is determined to be among the best and the most improved in a category, it
will be awarded a bonus only for being the best. The next State in the best category will be awarded
a bonus as being among the best States.
(7) Where there is a tie to the fourth decimal point for the categories outlined in paragraphs (b)(1)
through (b)(4) of this section, FNS will add the additional State(s) into the category and the money
will be divided among all the States in accordance with paragraph (a)(5) of this section.
(8) Bonus award money shall be used only on SNAP-related expenses including, but not limited to,
investments in technology; improvements in administration and distribution; and actions to prevent
fraud, waste and abuse.
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(i)

7 CFR 275.24(a)(8)(i)

Bonus payments shall not be used for household benefits, including incentive payments.

(ii) State agency awardees shall submit their intended spending plans of bonus payments to FNS
to verify appropriate use.
(b) Performance measures. FNS will measure performance by and base awards on the following categories
of performance measures:
(1) Payment accuracy. FNS will divide $24 million among the 10 States with the lowest and the most
improved combined payment error rates as specified in paragraphs (b)(1)(i) and (b)(1)(ii) of this
section.
(i)

Excellence in payment accuracy. FNS will provide bonuses to the 7 States with the lowest
combined payment error rates based on the validated quality control payment error rates for the
performance measurement year as determined in accordance with this part.

(ii) Most improved in payment accuracy. FNS will provide bonuses to the 3 States with the largest
percentage point decrease in their combined payment error rates based on the comparison of
the validated quality control payment error rates for the performance measurement year and
the previous fiscal year, as determined in accordance with this part.
(2) Negative error rate. FNS will divide $6 million among the 6 States with the lowest and the most
improved negative error rates as specified in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) and (b)(2)(ii) of this section.
(i)

Lowest negative error rate. FNS will provide bonuses to the 4 States with the lowest negative
error rates based on the validated quality control negative error rates for the performance year
as determined in accordance with this part.

(ii) Most improved negative error rate. FNS will provide bonuses to the 2 States with the largest
percentage point decrease in their negative error rates, based on the comparison of the
performance measurement year's validated quality control negative error rates with those of the
previous fiscal year, as determined in accordance with this part. A State agency is not eligible
for a bonus under this criterion if the State's negative error rate for the fiscal year is more than
50 percent above the national average.
(3) Program access index (PAI). FNS will divide $12 million among the 8 States with the highest and the
most improved level of participation as specified in paragraphs (b)(3)(i) through (b)(3)(iii) of this
section. The PAI is the ratio of participants to persons with incomes below 125 percent of poverty, as
calculated in accordance with paragraph (b)(3)(iii) of this section (the PAI was formerly known as
the participant access rate (PAR)).
(i)

High program access index. FNS will provide bonuses to the 4 States with the highest PAI as
determined in accordance with paragraph (b)(3)(iii) of this section.

(ii) Most improved program access index. FNS will provide bonuses to the 4 States with the most
improved PAI as determined in accordance with paragraph (b)(3)(iii) of this section.
(iii) Data. For the number of participants (numerator), FNS will use the administrative annual counts
of participants minus new participants certified under special disaster program rules by State
averaged over the calendar year. For the number of people below 125 percent of poverty
(denominator), FNS will use the Census Bureau's March Supplement to the Current Population
Survey's (CPS) count of people below 125 percent of poverty for the same calendar year. FNS
will reduce the count in each State where a Food Distribution Program on Indian Reservations
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7 CFR 275.24(b)(4)

(FDPIR) program is operated by the administrative counts of the number of individuals who
participate in this program averaged over the calendar year. FNS will reduce the count in
California by the Census Bureau's percentage of people below 125% of poverty in California
who received Supplemental Security Income in the previous year. FNS reserves the right to use
data from the American Community Survey (ACS) in lieu of the CPS, and to use the count of
people below 130 percent of poverty, should these data become available in a timely fashion
and prove more accurate. Such a substitution would apply to all States.
(4) Application processing timeliness. FNS will divide $6 million among the 6 States with the highest
percentage of timely processed applications.
(i)

Data. FNS will use quality control data to determine each State's rate of application processing
timeliness.

(ii) Timely processed applications. A timely processed application is one that provides an eligible
applicant the “opportunity to participate” as defined in § 274.2 of this chapter, within thirty days
for normal processing or 7 days for expedited processing. New applications that are processed
outside of this standard are untimely for this measure, except for applications that are properly
pended in accordance with § 273.2(h)(2) of this chapter because verification is incomplete and
the State agency has taken all the actions described in § 273.2(h)(1)(i)(C) of this chapter. Such
applications will not be included in this measure. Applications that are denied will not be
included in this measure.
(iii) Evaluation of applications. Only applications that were filed on or after the beginning of the
performance measurement (fiscal) year will be evaluated under this measure.
[70 FR 6322, Feb. 7, 2005, as amended at 80 FR 53243, Sept. 3, 2015]

7 CFR 275.24(b)(4)(iii) (enhanced display)

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