TennCare reminds enrollees that Tennessee lottery prizes are income

Mar 31, 2004, 4:30 am (6 comments)

Tennessee Lottery

Enrollees must report prizes of $600 or more

TennCare enrollees who hit the jackpot playing the Tennessee Lottery may not be as lucky as they think.

Winnings more than $600 must be reported to the state's health-care program for the poor and disabled, or the enrollee risks a fraud investigation.

"People need to know that lottery winnings count as income," TennCare Bureau spokeswoman Marilyn Elam said.

TennCare's 1.3 million enrollees always have been required to report any change in income. The new twist is the lottery, which began this year.

"A $20 win is not going to affect your eligibility but winning several thousand dollars could. If you don't report the income and it does affect your eligibility, that could be grounds for fraud," Elam said.

Tony Garr, executive director of the Tennessee Health Care Campaign, an advocate for TennCare enrollees, said TennCare hasn't done a good job of getting the word out about reporting lottery winnings.

"I don't think that is on the enrollees' radar screens," he said.

Elam said enrollees are told when they join the plan that they are responsible for reporting any additional sources of income to the Department of Human Services. They also receive reminders on the bottom of form letters and benefits explanations mailed to them.

Although some TennCare enrollees have had their status changed because of lottery winnings, Elam cited federal privacy laws in declining to say how many.

Tennessee Lottery Corp. spokeswoman Kym Gerlock said lottery winnings up to $599 can be collected at lottery retailers. For prizes of $600 or more, winners must go to their nearest district office, where they fill out a two-page claim sheet that notifies the Internal Revenue Service.

Lottery winners are responsible for paying the federal taxes on winnings up to $4,999. On payouts of $5,000 or more, the Lottery Corp. takes out federal taxes before giving the payout to the winners.

TennCare and Department of Human Services officials have access to claims forms filed by Tennessee Lottery winners. The forms are cross-checked with welfare and TennCare rolls to determine if the winnings affect eligibility, if the winners have outstanding student loans or child support payments, or if they've received overpayments of food stamps or welfare benefits, Elam said.

Gerlock said the Lottery Corp. deducts outstanding child support debts and student loan debts above $100 before paying out lottery winnings.

AP

Tags for this story

Other popular tags

Comments

CASH Only

Duhhhhh...

CASH Only

Maybe TN should be a Canadian province.

Saleo Paleo's avatarSaleo Paleo

Duhh  I don't believe it said anyone was wanting something for nothing Richgal57,They were only stating the facts to them. 

Saleo Paleo's avatarSaleo Paleo

I do believe when we play the lottery we are trying to get something for almost nothing,I wouldn't be playing it myself if I thought I would lose more than I would gain.

richgal57's avatarrichgal57

No, the article did not state that but let's face it, folks do not report those winnings and get caught anyway, so it needed to reiterated.

No we are not getting something for nothing when we play because we still have to pay to play regardless of win or lose.

Saleo Paleo's avatarSaleo Paleo

Yes, When you play $1.00 for a chance of getting Millions,that is hoping  on getting something for nothing, a dollar is nothing at this time  

End of comments
Subscribe to this news story
Guest