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Yes, you do. It's income, you have to report ALL income.

If your application is approved, you must report any changes to your county office within TEN days.
You must also report those changes on your review form. Examples of changes to report are:
INCOME (like earnings, social security, inheritance, Job Insurance, gifts, interest, injury settlements, personal loans, etc.)

CHILD CARE OR CARE FOR A DISABLED ADULT WHILE YOU ARE WORKING
RESOURCES (like insurance, vehicles, sale of property, property settlement, checking, and savings accounts)

PERSONS ENTERING OR LEAVING YOUR HOME (including the birth of a child or absent parent or spouse entering or
leaving, etc.)

SCHOOL ATTENDANCE (children 16 and over who attend part-time or drop out)

BECOMING INCAPACITATED OR RECOVERY FROM INCAPACITY (able to return to work)

RECEIPT OF SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBERS FOR HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS

MAILING or LIVING ADDRESS

SUPPORT PAYMENTS MADE BY A PARENT, STEPPARENT OR OTHER RESPONSIBLE RELATIVE

MEDICAL INSURANCE COVERAGE
You may report by mail, telephone, or in person. Any assistance paid to you in error may have to be REPAID.

2006-09-20 17:23:46 · answer #1 · answered by ★Fetal☆ ★And ☆ ★Weeping☆ 7 · 2 0

Yes, you are supposed to. Remember last year when that weird guy who had all the plastic surgery was on trial for child molesting? The mom of one of his young vics was a scam-artist on welfare. They put her under the microscope and found that she had won a personal-injury suit (a scam-job against some store) and that she had not reported to welfare that she had received the settlement. They nailed her. These things can come back and bite you in the rear. Better play it safe and report it.

2006-09-20 17:24:16 · answer #2 · answered by lifeloom 2 · 1 0

Not really, but if you get caught you will have to pay back monies received since the settlement.

2006-09-20 17:25:30 · answer #3 · answered by Teacher 6 · 0 0

If the "repayment" blanketed something previous the repayment, that's taxable. You aspect out interest. in case you get a 1099-INT, record it as interest. in case you get a 1099-Misc, positioned it as different income on-line 21 of the 1040. in case you do not get a form, positioned it on-line 21 of the 1040.

2016-10-16 01:36:16 · answer #4 · answered by sovak 4 · 0 0

Come on now. Common sense says if you have money you need less from the public bucket.

2006-09-20 17:18:29 · answer #5 · answered by c.arsenault 5 · 1 0

We'll, H E L L O ! Did your income change? Take a wild guess! See how easy that was.

2006-09-20 18:20:04 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No you dont it is not reportable for taxes therefore it is not reportable for public assistance just dont put it in a savings account

2006-09-20 17:22:31 · answer #7 · answered by mcapelli66 1 · 0 3

Of course you do cause what ever you collect from them you gotta pay it back they'll find out sooner or later

2006-09-20 17:25:10 · answer #8 · answered by sugarbdp1 6 · 0 0

DONT WORRY PUBLIC ASSISTANCE WILL FIND OUT ABOUT IT. YOU ALSO SIGN A WAIVER WHEN YOU ARE ON IT THAT IF YOU DO COME INTO MONEY THAT THEY WILL BE PAID BACK

2006-09-20 17:25:55 · answer #9 · answered by sammi girls mom 5 · 0 1

Yes, you do. If it is discovered later the consequences will be brutal.

2006-09-20 17:27:43 · answer #10 · answered by theinfalliblenena 4 · 0 0

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