322.2 Citizenship

An eligible U.S. citizen is a individual who:          55 Pa. Code § 150.1 (a)    55 Pa. Code § 150.1(b) (1)

  NOTE:  This includes children born in the U.S. to non-citizen parents who are living in the U.S. either lawfully or unlawfully.

NOTE:  The Child Citizenship Act of 2000 allows a child who was born outside of the U.S. to get a certificate of naturalization      Pub  Law 106-395   

 if the following conditions are met:

 

322.21 Primary-Level Proof of Citizenship

The following documents may be used as primary-level proof of citizenship and identity.        

    42 USC § 1320b-7(d)     42 CFR § 435.407(a)   Public Law 109-171 Sec 6036

     NOTE:  A Memorandum of Understanding between the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Public Welfare has been revised to grant permission to verify the status of naturalized citizens through the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) program. The CAO must have the Alien Registration Number (A#) of the naturalized citizen to confirm the individual’s status. However, Form G-845S, Document Verification Request, cannot be used as proof of U.S. citizenship. The individual must cooperate in getting a copy of the Naturalization Certificate or in submitting other proof of U.S. citizenship along with identity documentation. With confirmation of the individual’s naturalized citizenship status through SAVE, the individual may be authorized for MA if he or she meets all other criteria for eligibility. (See Supplemental Handbook, Chapter 740, SAVE Procedures.)

322.22 Secondary-Level Proof of Citizenship

The following documents may be used as secondary-level proof of citizenship (but not identity):      42 CFR § 435.407(b)

NOTE:  The applicant or recipient must present an original document to be copied. The copy must be kept in the case record

NOTE:  A child’s birth certificate may not be used as proof of citizenship for a parent whose name, date of birth and place of birth are listed on the birth certificate.

NOTE:  A certification of birth (Form FS-545 or DS-1350) or replacement of a Consular Report of Birth (FS-240) may be obtained by writing to:

U.S. Department of State
Vital Records Section
Passport Services
1111 19th Street, NW, Suite 510
Washington, DC 20522-1705

A written request must be notarized and include a copy of a valid photo ID of the individual requesting it. The written request must include the following:

    NOTE:  Neither card is issued at this time, but either form that used to be issued is still valid.

NOTE:  This card is issued by the DHS to identify U.S. citizen members of the Texas Band of Kickapoos living near the U.S./Mexican border.

   NOTE:  This card was issued to individuals who were born in the Northern Mariana Islands before November 4, 1986 and were collectively naturalized as U.S. citizens. This card is no longer issued, but those that were previously issued are still valid.

NOTE: The adoption decree must show the child’s name and U.S. place of birth. When an adoption is not finalized and the state in which the child was born will not release a birth certificate before the final adoption, a statement from a state-approved adoption agency that shows the child’s name and U.S. place of birth is acceptable. The adoption agency must state that the source of the place of birth information is an original birth certificate.

322.23 Third-Level Proof of Citizenship

The following papers can be used as third-level proof of citizenship:           42 CFR § 435.407(c)

  NOTE:  The CAO will not accept souvenir birth certificates issued by the hospital.

Caution: In questionable cases (for example, where the child’s religious record was recorded near a U.S. international border and the child may have been born outside the U.S.), the state must confirm the religious record or have proof that the mother was in the U.S. at the time of birth.

  NOTE:  Entries in a family Bible are not considered religious records.

  NOTE:  Persons over 65 years of age may have this type of early school record showing a U.S. place of birth and the parents’ information.

 

322.24 Fourth-Level Proof of Citizenship

  NOTE:  Fourth level evidence of citizenship is the least reliable proof and must be used only rarely (such as when no higher-level documents are available).

42 CFR § 435.407(d)

The following papers can be used as fourth-level proof of citizenship:

   NOTE:  An immunization record cannot be used as proof of U.S. citizenship.

Affidavits may be used only when the state is unable to get proof of citizenship from other documents. When affidavits are used as proof of citizenship, the following rules apply:

  NOTE:  Naturalized citizens may use affidavits.

   NOTE:  An individual may not use affidavits to prove both citizenship and identity. He or she must choose one or the other.

 

322.25 Primary-Level Proof of Nationality

The following documents are accepted as primary-level proof of nationality (but not identity):       42 CFR § 435.407 (b) (1)(i)(ii)(iii)

The CAO must copy any documents used to prove citizenship and make those copies a permanent part of the case record.

       NOTE:  See Appendix B for sample citizenship identification cards.

 

 

Updated February 14, 2012, Replacing October 26, 2008