FY 2014 Final Data Table 17 - Average Monthly Mean Family Co-payment as a Percent of Family Income

Publication Date: November 1, 2016
Current as of:
State/Territories Families with $0 Income; Headed by a Child; In Protective Services; Invalid CoPay or Income (Category A) (Percent of Families) Families with $0 CoPay (and not in Category A) (Percent of Families) Families with CoPay > $0 (and not in Category A) (Percent of Families) Total of All Families (Percent of Families) Including Families with $0 CoPay (Mean CoPay as a Percent of Income) Excluding Families with $0 CoPay (Mean CoPay as a Percent of Income)

Alabama

15% 12% 73% 100% 5% 6%
Arkansas 51% 37% 11% 100% 2% 6%
California 4% 63% 34% 100% 1% 4%
Colorado 25% 10% 65% 100% 10% 12%
Connecticut 5% 6% 90% 100% 4% 5%
Delaware 15% 31% 54% 100% 5% 7%
District of Columbia 38% 14% 49% 100% 3% 3%
Florida 27% 0% 73% 100% 6% 6%
Georgia 10% 5% 85% 100% 8% 9%
Guam 9% 27% 64% 100% 6% 9%
Hawaii 4% 12% 84% 100% 10% 12%
Idaho 11% 0% 89% 100% 9% 9%
Illinois 6% 4% 90% 100% 5% 5%
Indiana 4% 68% 27% 100% 2% 7%
Iowa 16% 47% 38% 100% 2% 5%
Kansas 13% 14% 73% 100% 4% 5%
Kentucky 8% 17% 75% 100% 6% 7%
Louisiana 9% 3% 88% 100% 9% 9%
Maine 10% 5% 85% 100% 7% 7%
Maryland 20% 24% 55% 100% 7% 10%
Massachusetts 31% 15% 54% 100% 7% 9%
Michigan 22% 15% 63% 100% 2% 3%
Minnesota 2% 30% 67% 100% 2% 3%
Mississippi 45% 12% 43% 100% 16% 20%
Missouri 32% 13% 55% 100% 5% 6%
Montana 22% 0% 78% 100% 4% 4%
Nebraska 29% 55% 16% 100% 2% 8%
Nevada 15% 33% 51% 100% 3% 4%
New Hampshire 9% 0% 91% 100% 7% 7%
New Jersey 12% 36% 52% 100% 3% 5%
New Mexico 4% 12% 84% 100% 4% 5%
New York 6% 40% 55% 100% 3% 6%
North Carolina 13% 4% 83% 100% 8% 8%
North Dakota 13% 0% 87% 100% 4% 4%
Northern Mariana Islands 10% 27% 64% 100% 3% 5%
Ohio 3% 3% 94% 100% 5% 5%
Oklahoma 30% 17% 53% 100% 6% 8%
Oregon 16% 5% 79% 100% 10% 10%
Pennsylvania 15% 0% 85% 100% 7% 7%
Puerto Rico 16% 61% 24% 100% 1% 4%
Rhode Island 10% 33% 56% 100% 3% 4%
South Carolina 14% 25% 61% 100% 4% 6%
South Dakota 24% 44% 32% 100% 5% 11%
Tennessee 2% 66% 32% 100% 3% 8%
Texas 22% 3% 75% 100% 8% 8%
Utah 6% 4% 90% 100% 5% 5%
Vermont 42% 28% 30% 100% 3% 6%
Virgin Islands 12% 78% 10% 100% 0% 1%
Virginia 42% 9% 50% 100% 8% 9%
Washington 11% 0% 89% 100% 5% 5%
West Virginia 8% 12% 80% 100% 4% 5%
Wisconsin 15% 1% 84% 100% 6% 6%
Wyoming 10% 5% 84% 100% 8% 8%
National 15% 20% 64% 100% 5% 6%

Data as of: 23-JUNE-2016

Notes applicable to this report:

  1. The source for this table is ACF-801 data for FY 2014.
  2. All percentages are based on "adjusted" numbers of families and children, unless otherwise indicated. These "adjusted" numbers represent the number funded through CCDF only (which includes Federal Discretionary, Mandatory, and Matching Funds; TANF transfers to CCDF; and State Matching and Maintenance of Effort Funds). The "adjusted" number is the raw or "unadjusted" number reported by the State multiplied by its pooling factor, as reported on the ACF-800. This report takes this factor into consideration in calculating the "adjusted" numbers or percentages.
  3. All States provide an actual unadjusted count of families served each month. For States reporting full population data, the number of child records reported each month were directly counted. However, for States that only submit samples, the ratio of children-to-families was determined each month from the samples and then multiplied by the reported number of families to obtain an estimate of the unadjusted number of children served each month. The unadjusted average number of families and children was obtained from the monthly numbers in the FY, as reported on the ACF-801 summary (header) record.
  4. A "0%" indication often means the value is less than 0.5% rather than actually zero. In a few instances, the sum of the categories may not appear to add up to exactly 100% because of rounding.
  5. At the time of publication, Iowa had submitted 10 months of ACF-801 data and Ohio had submitted 11 months. All other States and Territories had submitted the full 12 months of data.
  6. The "Mean CoPay/Income" columns exclude families with zero income because dividing by zero is undefined.
  7. The column labeled as "Category A" includes: families with zero income; families in Protective Services or families headed by a child; and families with invalid income or copay.
  8. The "Families with $0 Copay …" category is the percentage of families that had a $0 co-payment and were not in Category A, divided by the count of all families. The sum of these three categories is 100%.
  9. The results shown under "Mean Copay/Income" feature two different statistics, "Including" and "Excluding" $0 copay. The data analyzed for the "Including Families with $0 CoPay" category includes all families except those families in the "Category A" data, i.e. the total minus the Category A data. The data analyzed for "Excluding Families with $0 CoPay" includes only those families in the category "Families with CoPay >$0 (and not in Category A)." Alternatively, the data used for "Excluding Families with $0 CoPay" is all the family data minus those families in Category A and minus those families with $0 CoPay.
  10. The National weighted values were determined by multiplying each State's average co-payment/income percentage by the adjusted number of children in each State, summing across the States and then dividing by the adjusted number of children served for the Nation.