68. How is grandparent income counted towards the baby of a teen parent?
If you are a teen parent under 18 and you live with your child’s grandparent (your own parent or the baby’s other grandparent) the grandparent’s income is counted after deducting 200% of the federal poverty guideline for the grandparent, grandparent’s spouse and other dependents who are not receiving assistance. 106 C.M.R. § 704.236.
This is true even though your baby’s grandparents have no legal responsibility to support your baby.
Family Size | 200% of Poverty Monthly |
---|---|
1 | $2,430 |
2 | $3,287 |
3 | $4,143 |
4 | $5,000 |
These are the 2023 amounts. They usually go up in January or February each year. See http://www.mass.gov/dta/eligibility.
Example
Sherry is 17. Sherry and her baby live with Sherry’s mother, Grace Ryan, and Sherry’s 15-year-old sister. Grace Ryan earns $42,000 per year before taxes, or $3,500 per month. Subtract 200% of the federal poverty level for a family of two ($3,287) from Grace’s monthly earnings. The difference, $213 a month, is counted as unearned income against the grant for Sherry and her baby.
Advocacy Reminders
- Only the income of a grandparent counts. Do not count income of the teen’s stepparent (grandparent’s spouse) or the teen’s siblings. 106 C.M.R. § 704.236.
- There is no grandparent deeming if a teen parent lives with a non-parent relative such as an aunt, uncle, older sibling, or her own grandparents, and the relative is not receiving TAFDC.
- There is no grandparent deeming if the teen parent is 18 or 19.
- There is no grandparent deeming if the teen has left the home and the grandparents are caring for the teen’s baby. The grandparents can get a one-person grant for the baby excluding their income. See who has a choice about whether to be in the assistance unit.
- There is no grandparent deeming for MassHealth unless the grandparent applies for MassHealth as part of the family group.