Bay State CAP is a "Consolidated Application Project"— a joint demonstration project of the Massachusetts DTA and the Social Security Administration (SSA) started in 2005.
When you apply for SSI— or when your SSI benefits are re-determined by SSA— the SSA Claims Representative should ask you if you want SNAP/food stamp benefits and then send this information to DTA electronically. DTA uses the information from your SSI application/ recertification to calculate your Bay State CAP benefits. 106 C.M.R. § 366.910.
For SSA to take a Bay State CAP application, you must be either filing an application for SSI or be an SSI recipient, and meet the following:
If you are applying for SSI benefits and your SSI will be approved within 30 days, SSA should take a Bay State CAP application. If your SSI case will take more than 30 days to process, (it often does), you may be better off applying for regular SNAP/food stamp benefits. You can apply for regular benefits at the Social Security office or DTA. See 3. Can I apply for food stamp/SNAP benefits at the local Social Security office?
If you need emergency food or cash benefits, you should apply at the DTA office. See 9. Can I get emergency SNAP/food stamp benefits? Once your SSI is approved, SSA should contact you and ask about SNAP/food stamp and Bay State CAP benefits.
Getting Bay State CAP can be easier than applying for regular SNAP/food stamps for a couple of important reasons:
Bay State CAP recipients often receive the same benefit amount as regular SNAP/food stamp benefits. Sometimes the regular SNAP can be higher— it depends on the amount of your shelter costs and if you have out-of-pocket medical expenses. MLRI's SNAP/ Food Stamps calculator will calculate both Bay State CAP and regular SNAP/food stamp benefits to see which is more.