OBSOLETE POLICY

CHIP MANUAL

 

Obsolete 0620 - 202 Citizenship and Alien Status Requirements

Policy Effective June 1, 2018 - May 31, 2020

Previous Policy

 

Eligibility Requirement for CHIP

Individuals eligible to receive CHIP benefits include the following. 

U. S. citizens.   See Section 202-1.

Qualified Aliens.   See Section 202-2.

SSI recipients living in the U.S. on August 22, 1996 and meeting the criteria for one of the grand-fathered SSI recipient alien groups.  See Section 329 of the Medicaid manual.

Lawfully Present Children. See section 202-2.1.

(All others may only receive emergency Medicaid services, described in Section 205-6 of Medicaid policy.)

Proof of Citizenship, Qualified Aliens and Identity

U.S. Citizens must document their Citizenship and Identity.   (See Table IV) Verify citizenship and identity through electronic data sources before asking for verification from the customer.

Applicants: Do not delay or deny benefits when an individual declares to be a US Citizen or US National or qualified alien, and there is no evidence that contradicts their claim.

If otherwise eligible, provide CHIP coverage and give the client reasonable time to provide the documentation.

“Reasonable time” is defined as (at least) 95 days from the date verification is requested.  

A client needs to either provide the documentation by the end of the time-frame given, or provide proof they are working to obtain the documentation.  Give more time to clients who show a good faith effort to provide the documentation. 

If the client has been given reasonable time and does not provide the documentation or proof they are working on obtaining it, remove the client from the CHIP coverage with proper notice.

 

Citizenship/Identity Documentation Exceptions

The following individuals are EXEMPT and do not have to meet the Cit/ID documentation requirement.  If the individual loses an exempt status they must meet the Cit/ID requirement at their next scheduled review.

SSI recipients and those in an SSI Protected group

SS-DI recipients

Medicare recipients

Children in receipt of Title IV-B or Title IV-E Subsidized Adoption Assistance

Children in receipt of Title IV-B or Title IV-E Foster Care Payments

Qualifying Aliens*

Clients only eligible for Emergency Medicaid

Household members who are not receiving Medicaid or CHIP benefits

Children who received deemed newborn eligibility: When a child receives deemed newborn coverage, the child’s citizenship and identity is verified.  No additional verification is required.  

A child receives deemed newborn eligibility when the mother was eligible and received Medicaid at the time of the child’s birth.

Make a collateral contact with the applicable State Medicaid agency to verify the claim that the child received deemed newborn coverage.

Once the agency has verification of the child's eligibility under the deemed newborn eligibility, the child never has to provide Cit/ID documentation again.  

Documentation Requirements

States must obtain satisfactory documentary evidence of an applicant’s or recipient’s, citizenship and identity.  Verify citizenship/identification and alien status through electronic data sources first before requesting any documents from the customer.

Table IV (Charts 1, and 2) outlines acceptable Citizenship documentation.  

Chart 3 on Table IV describes the acceptable sources of identity documentation.

States are allowed to match with the States Verification and Exchange System (SVES) via the Social Security Administration (SSA) interface. A match satisfies the citizenship and identity requirement. See #2 below for additional information.

States are allowed to match with the State Vital Statistics to obtain birth verification.  

When a client born in Utah does not have an original birth certificate, do an electronic search for birth years that have been computerized.  For years that have not been computerized, they are to submit a Form 125 to Utah State Vital Records to obtain verification that a birth record is on file with the state.

SCHIP-I

SCHIP-I verifies information regarding the person's claim of US citizenship or nationality.

The client's name, SSN and date of birth compares with data in the SSA Master File of SSN Holders (Numident).

The interface is daily and responses are received the next day.

 Two responses are possible: positive and no match with SSA records.

A positive response satisfies the Citizenship and Identity requirement. See Table IV, Chart 1.

The data submitted is consistent with SSA records.

 No additional information is required from the client.

An inconsistency or no match response indicates the data submitted to SSA does not match. (IE, misspelled name, incorrect SSN, incorrect DOB or incorrect citizenship declaration.)

The agency first makes a reasonable effort to identify and resolve the cause of the inconsistency. For example, typographical or other clerical error.

When an inconsistency is identified and corrected, resubmit the request.

 When an inconsistency is not found by the agency, OR if the second request result is the same, the client has 90 days to provide proper citizenship documentation.

The 90 days starts with the date on the notice.

CHIP benefits remain open during the 90 day verification period.

If the case closes for any reason during the 90 day verification period, the 90 days continues to run.

Once the 90 day verification period has expired, it cannot be extended or repeated.

If proper citizenship documentation has not been provided by the end of the 90 day verification period, remove the individual from coverage at the end of the month for which 10-day notice can be given.