NYC Associate Benefits Opportunity Specialist (ABOS) EXAM
QUESTIONS AND CORRECT VERIFIED SOLUTIONS LATEST
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NYC Associate Benefits Opportunity Specialist (ABOS) Exam – Comprehensive Prep Guide
The ABOS exam is a rigorous, computer-based multiple-choice civil service test for supervisory
roles within NYC's Human Resources Administration (HRA) . Passing the exam is mandatory for
permanent appointment in the ABOS title .
Exam Coverage Summary (20 Lines)
1. Public Assistance Programs – Cash Assistance (TANF), Safety Net Assistance, SNAP,
Medicaid basics
2. Eligibility Determination – Income/resource tests, household composition, categorical
eligibility
3. Supervision & Leadership – Coaching BOS staff, performance evaluations, delegating
caseloads
4. Application Processing – Intake interviews, documentation verification, recertification
deadlines
5. Fair Hearings & Appeals – Client appeal rights, OTDA hearing requests, Notice of
Decision requirements
6. Work Requirements – Employment program compliance, sanctions for noncompliance,
ABAWD rules
7. Immigration & Benefits – Qualified non-citizen eligibility, sponsor deeming, 5-year bar
8. Verification Standards – Acceptable proofs (identity, income, residency, shelter
expenses)
9. Fraud Prevention – Detecting fraudulent documents, reporting discrepancies, integrity
violations
10. Case Management – Documenting case actions, updating changes, timely processing
11. Homelessness Prevention – Shelter allowances, anti-eviction planning, homeless
applicant procedures
12. Client Rights – Due process, confidentiality, reasonable accommodations, interpreter
services
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13. Emergency Assistance – One-Shot Deals, expedited SNAP, HEAP eligibility, emergency
housing
14. Reporting Deadlines – 10-day change reporting, recertification timelines, missed
interview procedures
15. Program Differences – TANF vs. Safety Net, SNAP vs. Cash Assistance, Medicaid spend-
down
16. Staff Development – Training on policy updates (HVN/HB), identifying training needs via
audits
17. Record Audits – Monthly case audits, detecting errors, corrective action planning
18. Community Resources – Fair Fares NYC, child care vouchers, Homebase services, CAS
referrals
19. Ethics & Confidentiality – HIPAA compliance, unauthorized information sharing,
professional boundaries
20. Mathematical Reasoning – Calculating benefit amounts, applying disregards, shelter
deductions
COMPREHENSIVE PRACTICE QUESTIONS WITH RATIONALES
Questions 1-50 – Public Assistance Programs & Eligibility
1. A single mother with two children applies for Cash Assistance. She reports no income and is
unemployed. What is the most appropriate first step?
A) Approve the application immediately
B) Schedule an eligibility interview and request required documentation
C) Deny the application pending employment verification
D) Refer the applicant to a job training program
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Answer: B) Schedule an eligibility interview and request required documentation
Rationale: Before eligibility can be determined, an interview must be conducted and required
documentation (identity, residency, income) must be obtained and verified . Approving without
verification is procedurally incorrect. Denial is premature without a determination.
**2. A client receiving TANF reports she has started a part-time job earning $500/month. What
should the ABOS do?**
A) Terminate cash assistance immediately
B) Adjust the benefit amount based on the new income using disregards
C) Ignore the income unless it exceeds $1,000
D) Reduce the benefit by exactly $500
Answer: B) Adjust the benefit amount based on the new income using disregards
Rationale: TANF benefits are reduced as earned income increases, but earned income
disregards apply. The ABOS must recalculate the benefit using the proper disregards .
Termination is not automatic. Dollar-for-dollar reduction is incorrect because disregards apply.
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3. The primary federal funding source for cash assistance to families with dependent children
is:
A) SNAP
B) TANF
C) SSDI
D) Medicaid
Answer: B) TANF
Rationale: TANF (Temporary Assistance for Needy Families) is the federal block grant that funds
state and local cash assistance programs for families with children . SNAP is nutrition assistance.
SSDI is disability insurance. Medicaid is healthcare.
4. A client applies for Safety Net Assistance (SNA). What is a key difference between TANF and
Safety Net?
A) Safety Net requires U.S. citizenship
B) Safety Net provides assistance to single adults and childless couples not eligible for TANF
C) TANF has no time limit
D) Safety Net does not require residency