Appendix D: Documentation of Citizenship, Nationality, and Identity

Primary-Level Documentation of Citizenship or Nationality and Identity

The following are accepted as primary-level documentation of citizenship or nationality and identity. All of these documents have a photograph of the individual named in the document.

NOTE:  A Memorandum of Understanding between the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the Department of Public Welfare has been revised to grant permission to verify the status of naturalized citizens through Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE). The CAO will need the alien registration number (A#) of the naturalized citizen to verify 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 papers. Once the individual has confirmation of naturalized citizenship status through SAVE, the individual will be approved for MA if he or she is eligible in all other ways. (See Supplemental Handbook Chapter 740, SAVE Procedures.)

NOTE:  If an individual does not have any of the above, the individual must provide proof of citizenship or nationality and proof of identity.

Secondary-Level Documentation of Citizenship or Nationality

The following are accepted as Secondary- Level Documentation of Citizenship (but not Identity):

The applicant or recipient must present an original document to be photocopied. A photocopy of the birth certificate should be kept in the case record.

NOTE:  For a Certification of Birth (Form FS-545 or DS-1350) or replacement of a Consular Report of Birth (Form FS-240) write 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 valid photo identification of the requester. The written request must include the following:

Neither card is currently issued, but either form that was issued in the past is still valid.

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.

This card was issued by the DHS to collectively naturalized citizens of the U.S. who were born in the Northern Mariana Islands before November 4, 1986. This card is no longer issued, but those that were issued in the past are still valid.

The adoption decree must show the child’s name and U.S. place of birth. In situations where 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 in the certification that the source of the place-of-birth information is an original birth certificate.

Third-Level Documentation of Citizenship or Nationality (Not Identity)

The following are accepted as third-level documentation of citizenship (Not Identity):

NOTE: For children under 16, the document must have been created near the time of birth or five years before the date of application. Do not accept souvenir birth certificates issued by the hospital.

The record must be an official record recorded with the religious organization, such as a baptismal certificate.

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 verify the religious record or document that the mother was in the U.S. at the time of birth.

Entries in a family Bible are not considered religious records.

The school record must show the name of the child, the date of admission to the school, the date of birth, a U.S. place of birth, and the names and places of birth of the applicant’s parents.

Applicants or recipients over 65 years of age may have this type of early school record showing a U.S. place of birth along with the parents’ information.

Fourth-Level Documentation of Citizenship or Nationality (Not Identity)

The following are accepted as fourth-level documentation of citizenship (Not Identity):

NOTE:  Fourth-level evidence of citizenship is documentary evidence that is the least reliable type of proof. Fourth-level evidence should be used only rarely (when no other higher-level documents are available).

NOTE:  An immunization record is not considered a medical record for the purposes of establishing U.S. citizenship.

NOTE:  Naturalized citizens are permitted to use the affidavit process.

NOTE:  An individual may not use affidavits as documentation of both citizenship and identity. The individual must choose one or the other.

Primary-Level Documentation of Nationality (Not Identity)

The following documents are accepted as primary-level documentation of nationality (Not Identity):

Secondary-Level Documentation of Identity

The following are documents that are acceptable as secondary-level documentation of identity:

NOTE:  These documents cannot be used as proof of citizenship or nationality.

NOTE:  States may accept identity documents that have recently expired as long as there is no reason to believe that the document does not match the individual.

NOTE:  Do not accept a Canadian driver’s license.

NOTE:  Do not accept a voter’s registration card.

NOTE:  These documents can only be used as proof of identity if they have not been used to establish the individual’s citizenship, and the applicant submitted secondary-level or third-level citizenship documentation—not fourth-level documentation. (See Section 322.21, Primary Level Proof of Citizenship.)

NOTE:  A combination of three or more of these documents must show the same evidence and must not conflict with each other. The documents must be originals or certified copies.  

NOTE:  The actual form must be in the case record. The Bureau of Child Support Enforcement (BCSE) will provide a certified copy of the PA/CS 611 with a written request, a fax request, or a telephone call from the CAO. The CAO should try to get other forms of ID before using the acknowledgement of paternity form.

NOTE:  Currently these are the only two acceptable data matches with other agencies. PACSES is not an acceptable data match.

NOTE:  Social Security cards and MA 112s received from hospitals are not acceptable proof of identity for MA.

Exception: Identity affidavits may occasionally be used for children age 16–18 when they cannot get school ID cards or driver’s licenses before the age of 18.

NOTE: The affidavit may be signed by a parent who is an illegal alien. The CAO will ask for proof of identity for the illegal parent. If the parent cannot provide it, the affidavit will still be accepted.

NOTE:  If the parent, guardian, or caretaker relative is unwilling or unable to sign the affidavit, a representative of the county may sign the affidavit when legal custody has been transferred to the Children and Youth Agency or when the child is court-ordered to placement through the Juvenile Probation Office.

NOTE:  The caseworker may witness the affidavit at a face-to-face interview but will not act as a witness for a mailed-in affidavit.

Updated February 14, 2012, Replacing October 29, 2008