Close Encounters of the Verification Kind Travis L. Brown Director of Financial Aid American...
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Transcript of Close Encounters of the Verification Kind Travis L. Brown Director of Financial Aid American...
Close Encounters of the Verification Kind
Travis L. Brown
Director of Financial Aid
American InterContinental University
Something Old; Something New
The verification regulations reside in 34 CFR 668, Subpart E
This subpart was revised in the final regulations published on October 29, 2010
These Subpart E regulations take effect July 1, 2012
While SOME things changed, much remained the same
Required Policies (668.53)
You must have WRITTEN policies and procedures on:
Deadlines for submitting documentationAnd the consequences for missing them
How you’ll notify students if verification changes the award
Required correction procedures
Procedures for referring overpayment cases
BUT WAIT! There’s more…
You must give each student selected “in a timely manner...a clear explanation of”:
Required documents
Student responsibilitiesDeadlines for completion
Consequences of “failing to complete any required action”
Professional Judgment (New)
“An institution’s procedures must provide that an applicant whose FAFSA information is selected for verification is required to complete verification before the institution exercises any authority under section 479(A) of the [Higher Education Act] to make changes…(668.53(c))
Who Must Be Verified
Applicant selected by Central Processing System (CPS) or the school
CPS selected: The “SAR with the star”
Any application the school believes has either incorrect or discrepant information
As required under 668.54(a)(2) and 668.16(f)
Any additional application(s) the school selectsYou can select ‘em all! (I do)
Limitation/Exclusions (New)
There will be NO MORE “30% verification cap!”You can exclude:
Deceased applicantNot a Title IV, HEA program recipient“[E]ligible to receive only unsubsidized student financial assistance” Verified by another school (with conditions)Parents unavailable or mentally incapacitatedSpouse deceased/mentally incapacitated/unavailable (for independent students)
Important Caveat
“Conflicting Information” MUST ALWAYS be resolved, regardless of verification status.
“If your school has conflicting information concerning a student’s eligibility or you have any reason to believe a student’s application information is incorrect, you must resolve the discrepancies before disbursing FSA funds.” (2010-11 Application & Verification Guide (AVG), p. 106)
What Must You Verify?
If CPS-selected, you must CURRENTLY verify:
Household size
Number enrolled in college
Adjusted gross income (AGI)
U.S. income tax paid
Certain untaxed income and benefits
Legal citation: 34 CFR 668.56(a)
What Must You Verify Starting in 2012-13?
“For each award year the Secretary publishes in the Federal Register notice the FAFSA information that an institution and an applicant may be required to verify.
“For each applicant whose FAFSA…is selected…the Secretary specifies the specific information…that the applicant must verify.” (668.56(a) and (b))
What CAN You Verify?
“In addition to verifying these required items for CPS-selected students, you can choose to verify any other application items, requiring any reasonable documentation, in accordance with consistently applied institutional policies. You may decide which students must provide documentation for any additional data elements and what constitutes acceptable documentation.” (AVG-85)
Collecting Verification Information
You basically need to collect a properly signed verification worksheet or other properly signed documentation and
Signed copies of the appropriate tax returns
“You should remind your students that they must submit the completed worksheet and copies of the relevant income tax returns…to your financial aid office, not to the [U.S.] Department of Education.” (AVG-85)
Verifying Household Size
“If the student completed the Department’s verification worksheet, no further documentation for this item is required.” (AVG-86)
Instead of the worksheet, you may accept a signed statement listing:
Names of household members
Their ages
Their relationship to the student
Verifying Household Size
You don’t have to verify this when:It’s the same as reported and verified in the previous award year
You receive the SAR or ISIR within 90 days after the date the application was signed
For a dependent student, a married household size of 3 or a single-parent household size of 2
For an independent student, a married household size of 2 or a single household size of 1
Verifying Number in College
“If the student completes the Department’s verification worksheet, no further documentation for this item is required.” (AVG-86)Instead of the worksheet, you may accept a signed statement listing:
The names and ages of those enrolledThe names of the schools they plan to attend
Verifying Number in College
You don’t have to verify this when:The reported number enrolled is 1 (the student)
You receive the SAR or ISIR within 90 days after the date the application was signed
The family members listed are enrolled at least half-time at your school, and you’ve confirmed their enrollment internally
Verifying AGI and U.S. Income Tax Paid
“To verify AGI and taxes paid, you must first identify everyone whose financial data was reported on the FAFSA and which tax returns, if any, they filed. You must check the tax returns for anyone whose financial data were reported on the FAFSA: the student and his spouse or parents if applicable…The type of [tax return filed] reported on the FAFSA should match what the student and parents actually filed.” (AVG-87)
Verifying AGI/Taxes Paid
“For verification purposes, you can accept a copy (such as a photocopy, fax, or digital image) of the original signed return filed with the IRS.“If a fax, photocopy, or other acceptable copy was made of an unsigned tax return, the filer (or at least one of the filers of a joint return) must sign the copy.“You can [also] accept a tax form that has been completed to duplicate the filed return; [it] must contain at least one filer’s signature.” (AVG-87)
Verifying AGI/Taxes Paid
You may also accept a paper return on which the preparer has stamped, typed, signed or printed his/her name (NOT the company’s name) and his/her SSN, EIN (Employer ID Number), or PTIN (Preparer Tax ID Number).You may also accept a copy of an IRS form with tax information mailed directly to your school by the IRS.
If mailed to you by the filer(s), must have a filer’s signature
Special Tax Filing Situations
These include (from AVG-88 & 89):Electronic filers
Non-filers
Filing extensions
Fiscal year tax returns
Nonresident filers
Foreign income
Tax return not available
Tax transcript or copy of tax return
What Will Change in 2012-13?
Section 668.57 addresses “Acceptable documentation”
It references four areas:“Adjusted Gross Income (AGI), income earned from work, or U.S. income tax paid
“Number of family members in household
“Number of family household members enrolled in eligible postsecondary institutions
“Other information”
Verifying Untaxed Income and Benefits
Three specific types must currently be verified:
Child support
IRA/Keogh deductions
Interest on tax-free bonds
Verifying Untaxed Income and Benefits
“In addition, you must verify all other untaxed income reported on the U.S. individual income tax return (excluding schedules).” (AVG-90)
ANY untaxed income and benefits that must be reported on the FAFSA are subject to verification.
Verifying Untaxed Income and Benefits
“Except for child support, the required items can be verified using the tax return or alternative tax documents.“Non-filers should submit a signed statement confirming that they did not file a tax return and listing the amount and specific sources of untaxed income and benefits by name.” (AVG-90)Untaxed income and benefits from any governmental source, granted on the basis of a financial need assessment, need not be verified.
Verifying Child Support Received
MUST verify if reported or you believe it was received but not reportedCompleted verification worksheet sufficientIf questions, can request:
Copy of divorce decree/separation agreementSigned statement from the parent who’s payingCopies of cancelled checks/money order receipts
Verifying IRA/Keogh Deductions
Verified using the tax return
Applicable line items appear on page 1 of both Form 1040 and Form 1040A
Verifying Interest on Tax-Free Bonds
Verified using the tax return
Applicable line items appear on page 1 of both Form 1040 and Form 1040A
Various and Sundry
You can make interim disbursements of aid while verification is pending
One disbursement of Pell/Perkins/FSEOG
Up to 60 days employment for FWS
Can originate DL, but can’t disburse
A student can be selected for verification AFTER a disbursement has been made
Caused by subsequent CPS transaction
May cause repayment of previously disbursed aid
Various and Sundry
There is a current verification tolerance of $400Allowance for “minor errors” that don’t affect eligibility
How to determine tolerance:Add original (incorrect) AGI and untaxed income; subtract original U.S. income tax paidDo the same for the correct valuesIf original total vs. corrected total is $400 or less, no need to correct (but can )
NO tolerance for non-dollar items (e.g., HH size)
Changes for 2012-13
668.59(a): “For the subsidized student financial assistance programs, if an applicant’s FAFSA information changes as a result of verification, the applicant or the institution must submit to the Secretary any changes to—
(1) A nondollar item; or
(2) A single dollar item of $25 or more.”
“Subsidized Student Financial Assistance Programs?”
Defined in 668.52
“Title IV, HEA programs for which eligibility is determined on the basis of an applicant’s EFC.”
Federal Pell Grant
Federal SEOG
Federal Work-Study
Federal Perkins Loan
Direct Subsidized Loan
Various and Sundry
“A Pell applicant selected for verification must complete the process by the deadline published in the Federal Register. [For 2010-2011] the deadline is expected to be September 26, 2011, or 120 days after the last day of the student’s enrollment, whichever is earlier. Campus-based …applicants must complete verification by the same deadline or by an earlier one established by your aid office.” (AVG-94)
Various and Sundry
Late Disbursements“Generally a student ceases to be eligible for aid once he has finished the term and is no longer enrolled. However, he may submit verification documentation and receive a late disbursement after that time if the Department processed a SAR or ISIR with an official EFC while he was still enrolled.” (AVG-94)
Correcting, Updating and Adjusting
You can correct anything incorrectly reported on the original FAFSA submissionOnly a few answers from the FAFSA can be updated to reflect changes after the FAFSA was signedYou can use your professional judgment to adjust reported information to account for special circumstances
Correcting
Three options with correcting:Error doesn’t affect eligibility
Correction increases eligibility
Correction decreases eligibility
Guidance contained in AVG-101 and 102
Updating
Only three items can currently be updated:Household size
Must be updated to be correct at time of verificationCan only be updated if selected for verification
Number in collegeMust be updated to be correct at time of verificationCan only be updated if selected for verification
Dependency statusMust update if this changes during award yearCANNOT be updated if due to change in marital statusUpdate must be performed even if not selected for verification
Updating in 2012-13
668.55(c): “An institution may require an applicant to update FAFSA information under paragraph (a) [dependency status] or (b) [household size/number in college] of this section for a change in the applicant’s marital status if the institution determines the update is necessary to address an inequity or to reflect more accurately the applicant’s ability to pay.”
Adjusting
“An aid administrator may use professional judgment (PJ), on a case-by-case basis only, to alter the data elements used to calculate the EFC. The alteration is valid only at the school making it.” (AVG-104)
CANNOT “…modify either the formula or the tables used in the EFC calculation…”
Document, document, document!!
Discrepant Tax Data
“…FAAs must have a fundamental understanding of relevant tax issues that can considerably affect the need analysis. You are obligated to know: (1) whether a person was required to file a tax return, (2) what the correct filing status for a person should be, and (3) that an individual cannot be claimed as an exemption by more than one person.” (AVG-107)
Required to File
For 2010, a tax return must be filed when:Single filer under age 65 has gross income of at least $9,350
Married filing jointly filers are both under 65 and have gross income of at least $18,700
Married filing separately of any age and have gross income of at least $3,650
Head of household under 65 and have gross income of at least $12,050
Qualifying widow(er) with dependent child under 65 and have gross income of at least $15,050
Definition of “Gross Income”
“Gross income means all income you received in the form of money, goods, property and services that is not exempt from tax, including any income from sources outside the United States or from the sale of your main home (even if you can exclude part or all of it).” (IRS Publication 17, Your Federal Income Tax, p. 4)
Correct Filing Status
The IRS recognizes five filing statuses:Single
Married Filing Jointly
Married Filing Separately
Head of Household
Qualifying Widow(er) With Dependent Child
Filing Status Definitions
“Your filing status is single if, on the last day of the year, you are unmarried or legally separated from your spouse under a divorce or separate maintenance decree, and you do not qualify for another filing status.” (Publication 17, p. 20)
Filing Status Definitions
“You can choose married filing jointly as your filing status if you are married and both you and your spouse agree to file a joint return. On a joint return, you report your combined income and deduct your combined allowable expenses. You can file a joint return even if one of you had no income or deductions.” (Pub. 17, p. 20)
Filing Status Definitions
“You can choose married filing separately as your filing status if you are married. This filing status may benefit you if you want to be responsible only for your own tax or if it results in less tax than filing a joint return.” (Pub. 17, p. 20)
Filing Status Definitions
“You may be able to file as head of household if you meet all the following requirements:
You are unmarried or ‘considered unmarried’ on the last day of the year.
You paid more than half the cost of keeping up a home for the year.
A ‘qualifying person’ lived with you in the home for more than half the year (except for temporary absences, such as school).” (Pub. 17, p. 21)
HoH Filing Status Definitions
How is one “considered unmarried?”
Five tests:You file a separate return
You paid more than half the cost of keeping up your home for the tax year
Your spouse did not live in your home during the last 6 months of the tax year (does not include temporary absences)
Your home was the main home of your child, stepchild, or foster child for more than half the year
You must be able to claim an exemption for the child (Pub. 17, pp. 20-21)
HoH Filing Status Definitions
Who is a “qualifying person?”
It’s more complex than this, but basically, it’s a:
Son, daughter, or grandchild who lives with you more than half the year and meets certain other tests
Qualifying relative who is your father or mother
Qualifying relative other than your father or mother (such as a grandparent, brother, or sister who meets certain tests) (Pub. 17, p. 22)
HoH Filing Status Definitions
What is a “temporary absence?”“You and your qualifying person are considered to live together even if one or both of you are temporarily absent from your home due to special circumstances such as illness, education, business, vacation, or military service. It must be reasonable to assume that the absent person will return to the home after the temporary absence. You must continue to keep up the home during the absence.” (Pub. 17, p. 23)
Filing Status Definitions
“If your spouse died in 2010, you can use married filing jointly as your filing status for 2010 if you otherwise qualify to use that status. The year of death is the last year for which you can file jointly with your deceased spouse.
“You may be eligible to use qualifying widow(er) with dependent child as your filing status for two years following the year your spouse died [if you have not remarried].” (Pub. 17, p. 23)
References
Federal Register, October 29, 2010Part II, Department of Education
34 CFR Parts 600, 602, 603, et. al.
Program Integrity Issues; Final Rule
2010-11 Handbook of Federal Student AidApplication and Verification Guide
Chapter 4: Verification
Chapter 5: Corrections, Updates, and Adjustments
References
IRS Publication 17, Your Federal Income Tax For Individuals, For use in preparing 2010 returns