Legal Question in Administrative Law in California

welfare rules®ulations

In 1993 i recieved homeless assistance. In 1997 or 1998 alaw was pass,that you could only get homeless, once in a life time. In 2003&4. I asked for assistance and was told i recieved it, and thats my once in a life time.I don't under stand how it applies to . It's like in 1996, they pass a law, saying if you committ murder you'll get life. I committed murder in 1994 ,how will it apply to me. Only if i committed murder after 1996.


Asked on 11/17/04, 4:06 pm

1 Answer from Attorneys

Bryan Whipple Bryan R. R. Whipple, Attorney at Law

Re: welfare rules®ulations

The principle you raise is the Constitutional prohibition against so-called "ex post facto" laws, and they are certainly unconstitutional if they act to take away rights you already have, such as the right to be out of prison.

However -- I believe this is true -- a law that creates a benefit CAN have limiting criteria that relate to a prior condition or previously-received benefit. For example, a reduction in the capital-gains tax passed in 2002 can selectively apply to assets bought in 1998 and before, but not those bought in 1999. Also, there are other laws that limit the benefit to once in a lifetime.

So, I think the law you're referring to would pass constitutional muster. The reason is that it doesn't selectively take away a right; rather, it selectively disqualifies folks from a benefit. That's a major logical distinction.

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Answered on 11/19/04, 11:59 am


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