ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.
This is a class action challenging several aspects of the Minnesota Department of Public Welfare’s treatment of “lump-sum” income in administering the jointly funded federal-state Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) program established by the Social Security Act, 42 U:S.C. § 601 et seq. The defendant, Leonard Levine, who was sued in his capacity as Commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Public Welfare (DPW), raises two issues on appeal: whether the District Court1 erred in holding that the defendant failed to give advance notice of its changed lump-sum policy as required by federal regulations, and whether the District Court’s order that the defendant provide plaintiff-class members with notice relief similar to that in Quern v. Jordan, 440 U.S. 332, 99 S.Ct. 1139, 59 L.Ed.2d 358 (1979), is inappropriate here or in conflict with the state sovereign immunity established by the Eleventh Amendment. Named plaintiff Kathryn Jenkins also appeals, arguing that the District Court erred in considering itself barred by the Eleventh Amendment from enjoining the defendant from recouping payments made to Jenkins that were inconsistent with the new lump-sum rule.
We affirm the District Court’s decision that the defendant failed to provide advance notice of the changed lump-sum policy adequate to meet federal requirements. We conclude that defendant Levine’s arguments concerning Quern notice have been in part rendered moot while this appeal was pending, and that, to the extent that they are not moot, they are without merit. Finally, we agree with Kathryn Jenkins that the injunctive relief she seeks does not violate the Eleventh Amendment,
I. BACKGROUND
A. The Lump-Sum Rule
Lump-sum income is income from a nonrecurring source, such as a gift, inheritance, or, in some cases, an insurance settlement. 45 C.F.R. § 233.20(a)(3)(ii)(F); DPW Instructional Bulletin # 82-3, Attachment 13. Generally, the amount of money to which a family is entitled under the AFDC program is determined by deducting the family’s income, if any, from a state-determined standard of need for a family of its size. Until 1981, when an AFDC recipient received a lump sum that caused the recipient’s income to exceed his or her standard of need, the recipient was ineligible for benefits in the month of receipt. However, as soon thereafter as the lump sum was exhausted, it was no longer considered available income, and the recipient again became eligible for benefits.
Then, in the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1981 (OBRA), Congress, concerned that this practice did not encourage AFDC beneficiaries to use lump-sum income on ordinary living expenses, amended the Social Security Act to require participating states to adopt a stricter lump-sum policy. See Report of the Committee on the Budget, S.Rep. No. 97-139, 97th Cong., 1st Sess. 505 (1981), reprinted in 1981 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 396, 771; Faught v. Heckler, 736 F.2d 1235, 1236-37 (8th Cir.1984). The amendment provided that a lump-sum payment to an AFDC recipient would be considered income available to the recipient for the month of receipt and for a specific number of succeeding months, rendering the recipient ineligible for those months. 42 U.S.C. § 602(a)(17). The total number of months [292]*292of ineligibility is calculated by dividing the lump sum by the recipient's standard of need. Id.; 45 C.F.R. § 233.20(a)(3)(ii)(F).2 For example, if a family with a $500 per month standard of need received a $2,000 lump sum, and no other countable income, it would be ineligible for AFDC benefits for four months. Through this mechanism Congress hoped to force recipients to use their lump sum in the same manner as they would have used AFDC benefits.3
DPW responded to the 1981 amendment by adopting the lump-sum policy challenged here. On September 18,1981, DPW sent a letter outlining the new lump-sum policy and other changes wrought by OBRA to persons then receiving AFDC. The letter indicated that the lump-sum rule would go into effect on October 1, 1981; however, as a result of litigation, the rule did not actually become effective until February 1, 1982. DPW adopted a policy of providing AFDC applicants and recipients an oral explanation of the lump-sum rule when they reported receipt of a lump sum or when their circumstances indicated that receipt of a lump sum was likely.
In 1984, Congress again amended 42 U.S.C. § 602(a)(17), giving states the option of recalculating the period of ineligibility caused by receipt of a lump sum in three situations: where an event occurs during a month of ineligibility that, had the family been receiving benefits, would have changed the amount of aid payable that month (e.g., the state standard of need increases); where the income has become unavailable for reasons beyond the family’s control (e.g., theft of the lump sum); and where the family incurs medical expenses. Pub.L. No. 98-369, § 2632(a), 98 Stat. 494, 1141 (1984). DPW has exercised this option, effective August 1985.
B. District Court Proceedings
The plaintiffs filed this action in July 1983. They challenged both the substance of the lump-sum rule and the adequacy of the defendant’s advance notice of the rule. Defendant Levine filed a third-party complaint against Margaret Heckler, Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), claiming that HHS’s lump-sum regulations are partially invalid but that DPW was constrained to comply with them or forfeit federal funding.
On December 11,1984, the District Court ruled on the plaintiffs’ motion for class certification and the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment. 598 F.Supp. 1035 (D.Minn.1984). The Court certified a plaintiff class consisting of individuals in Minnesota otherwise eligible for AFDC who [293]*293had been or would be found ineligible for AFDC for a set number of months under the lump-sum rule, and whose lump sum had or would become unavailable before their ineligibility expired. Id. at 1041. Turning to the summary-judgment motions, the Court first rejected the plaintiffs’ claim that the new lump-sum policy violated the Social Security Act, specifically 42 U.S.C. § 602(a)(7),4 because under it DPW presumed that a lump sum was available to the recipient for a predetermined number of months, rather than considering whether the lump sum was actually available to the recipient. The District Court concluded that when Congress enacted the 1981 amendment, it had determined to depart from the general practice of considering only available income; it decided to force AFDC recipients to budget their lump sum for use on necessary living expenses by requiring that the lump sum be considered available whether or not it is expended before the ineligibility period expires. 598 F.Supp. at 1049. The District Court further held that the plaintiffs’ other challenges to the substance of the lump-sum rule, based on the Equal Protection and Due Process Clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments, were also without merit. Id. at 1052-55.5
However, the District Court agreed with the plaintiffs that the defendant had failed to provide adequate advance notice of the lump-sum rule, violating 45 C.F.R. § 206.-10(a)(2)(i). The Court interpreted this regulation to require advance written notice to AFDC recipients of the lump-sum rule’s operation. The District Court concluded that the defendant’s only written notice of the rule, its September 18, 1981 letter, did not provide adequate notice of the new policy even to those who received it. It found the defendant’s failure to comply with the regulation even more clearly established for class members who were not AFDC recipients in September 1981, and who had therefore received no written notice of the lump-sum policy. 598 F.Supp. at 1049-52.6
As a remedy for these violations, the District Court ordered the defendant to provide two kinds of notice relief. First, the defendant was ordered to mail current AFDC recipients “publicity” notices explaining the mechanics of the lump-sum rule, and to include this explanation in the information provided AFDC applicants and in the materials given recipients at their semi-annual reevaluations. 598 F.Supp. at 1055. Second, the District Court, citing Quern v. Jordan, 440 U.S. 332, 99 S.Ct. 1139, 59 L.Ed.2d 358 (1979), ordered Levine to mail notices to class members whose benefits had been terminated under the lump-sum rule and in violation of the federal notice regulation to inform them of the result of the federal litigation and to inform them that they could apply to DPW for corrective payments. 598 F.Supp. at 1055.
On April 11, 1985, the District Court issued a second opinion, responding to motions by the defendant for reconsideration of its earlier opinion and order. 605 F.Supp. 1242 (D.Minn.1985). Levine contended that Kathryn Jenkins, the only named plaintiff argued to have standing to [294]*294raise the publicity-notice issue,7 did not in fact have such standing because she had received DPW’s September 1981 letter. The District Court disagreed, citing the inadequacies it had found in the notice provided by the September 1981 letter. 605 F.Supp. at 1246-47. The District Court reiterated its position that 45 C.F.R. § 206.-10(a)(2)(i) required advance written notice of the new policy, and its conclusion that Quern notice relief was proper and consistent with Eleventh Amendment requirements. 605 F.Supp. at 1247-49. Finally, the District Court granted Levine’s motion for reconsideration in one respect: the Court ordered HHS, the third-party defendant, to pay the federal share of any benefits paid to class members as a result of the Court’s decision. Id. at 1249-50.8
In May 1985, Levine appealed to this Court and moved the District Court to stay the portion of its December 10 and April 11 orders concerning Quern notice relief. The District Court denied this motion in June 1985. Civ. No. 4-83-579 (D.Minn. June 13,1985). The State did not request a stay from this Court.
The District Court issued a fourth opinion in November 1985, this time ruling on the plaintiffs' motions for contempt and for supplemental relief. 621 F.Supp. 509 (D.Minn.1985). The District Court refused to cite Levine for contempt, but ordered modifications in the DPW-prepared lump-sum rule publicity notices and Quern notices, upholding objections made by the plaintiffs. Id. at 511-13, 514-15. The District Court also refused on Eleventh Amendment grounds to declare that class members who spent their lump sum before receiving notification of the new rule are entitled to corrective payments from DPW. Id. at 515. Lastly, the Court denied Kathryn Jenkins’s request that it order the defendant to cease efforts to recoup AFDC benefits paid her during her lump-sum rule ineligibility period. Jenkins’s AFDC benefits were continued by DPW during this period pending Jenkins’s administrative appeal of her termination under the lump-sum rule. Id. at 513-14. Levine characterizes these payments as “overpayments” caused by agency error, and seeks to recoup them by withholding one per cent, of Jenkins’s AFDC benefits each month. See Minn. Stat. § 256.73, subd. 6. The District Court refused to enjoin this recoupment because it believed that to do so would violate the Eleventh Amendment. 621 F.Supp. at 513-14. Jenkins’s appeal from this order was consolidated with Levine’s appeal.
II. NOTICE OF THE LUMP-SUM RULE
Defendant Levine contends that advance written notice of the lump-sum rule was not required by federal regulation. Levine further argues that even if some written notice were necessary, DPW’s September 18, 1981 letter fulfilled this requirement. We disagree with the defendant on both points.
A. Advance Written Notice
The regulation interpreted by the District Court to require advance written notice states:
Applicants shall be informed about the eligibility requirements and their rights and obligations under the program. Under this requirement individuals are given information in written form, and orally as appropriate about coverage, conditions of eligibility, scope of the program, and related services available, and [295]*295the rights and responsibilities of applicants for and recipients of assistance. Specifically developed bulletins or pamphlets explaining the rules regarding eligibility and appeals in simple, understandable terms are publicized and available in quantity.
45 C.F.R. § 206.10(a)(2)(i). (Emphasis added). It is not disputed that this regulation applies to the lump-sum rule, since the rule clearly involves a “condition of eligibility.” Instead, the issue here is what sort of notice the regulation mandates, and, as the District Court correctly observed, the few cases that discuss 45 C.F.R. § 206.-10(a)(2)(i) provide little guidance on this point. See 598 F.Supp. at 1050 and cases cited therein.
Levine’s position is that the notice regulation is satisfied by DPW’s policy of informing an AFDC recipient of the lump-sum rule and its operation when the recipient reports receiving or appears likely to receive a lump sum. He characterizes the language of the notice regulation as “quite general,” maintaining that its purpose is to inform new applicants of the availability of the AFDC program. Appellant’s Brief at 24. The new lump-sum rule, the defendant concludes, presents a case in which oral notice is “appropriate,” and in which written notice is therefore unnecessary.9
We begin our consideration of the question by noting that, as the District Court observed, 605 F.Supp. at 1247, the language of the regulation seems plainly to require written notice in all cases. The regulation states that individuals are to be provided information “in written form, and orally as appropriate” (emphasis added), not, as defendant Levine seems to argue, “in written form, or orally as appropriate.” The regulation on its face contemplates that in appropriate cases oral notice will be given as a supplement to written notice, not that it represents an alternative to written notice. Id.
Even were it true that oral notice may replace written notice in appropriate cases, we agree with the District Court that, if the notice regulation is to serve its purpose, the oral notice provided by the defendant cannot be considered “appropriate” notice.
We think it crucial that AFDC recipients receive some form of advance notice of the changed policy towards lump sums and its operation.10 Without advance notice, an AFDC beneficiary is unlikely to budget a lump sum according to the new rule’s rigid formula. AFDC recipients live at a subsistence level; they are likely to have unpaid bills and basic needs not entirely met by AFDC. Thus, an AFDC recipient faces considerable pressure to make use of a lump sum as soon as it is received. 598 F.Supp. at 1051. In addition, it is important to remember that before the new rule was adopted, lump-sum recipients could reapply for benefits as soon as their lump sum was exhausted. Thus, a lump-sum recipient without notice of the new rule is very likely to spend most or all of a lump sum before learning of the rule’s strict budgeting requirements, particularly when the recipient is familiar with the prior poli[296]*296cy.11 Consequently, the net result of failing to give adequate advance notice of the new lump-sum rule is to frustrate the very goal Congress sought to further in enacting the rule: encouraging recipients to budget lump sums so that they serve to replace the family’s monthly AFDC check.
The importance of advance notice is heightened by the fact that the effects of the lump-sum rule on an AFDC recipient can be peculiarly drastic. In general, the AFDC program’s income- and asset-related eligibility requirements reduce or cut off eligibility only if the resource is actually available to the recipient. However, the new lump-sum rule diverges from the norm, cutting off eligibility without regard, except in very limited circumstances,12 to whether the lump sum is actually available. Thus, under the operation of most eligibility requirements, there is no point at which a family will not have either the basic support provided by the AFDC program or other financial resources that equal or surpass the AFDC standard of need. In contrast, under the lump-sum rule, where a family exhausts its lump sum before its ineligibility period expires, the family may well be left for months with insufficient resources to provide for basic necessities. To impose this situation on a family that had no advance notice of the new lump-sum rule and operated on the altogether reasonable assumption that the old policy still governed would be truly Kafkaesque.13
We are therefore of the view that it is not “appropriate” within the meaning of 45 C.F.R. § 206.10(a)(2)(i) to adopt a notice policy that does not inform recipients in advance of the new lump-sum rule and its operation. We turn to consider whether the oral-notice practices advocated by defendant Levine measure up to this concern. DPW’s policy is not to provide all recipients with advance oral notice of the rule, but is instead to give oral notice only to individuals who report receiving a lump sum or who appear likely to their caseworker to receive a lump sum. There are, as the District Court observed, 605 F.Supp. at 1247-48, several deficiencies in this policy. First, 45 C.F.R. § 206.10(a)(2)(i) requires uniform dissemination of eligibility information to all recipients, rather than permitting notice only to recipients believed by their caseworker to need the information. Second, DPW’s oral-notice policies do not reasonably assure that an AFDC recipient who gets a lump sum will have advance notice of the new rule. While recipients deemed likely to receive a lump sum may receive advance notice of the rule, it is not always possible for the recipient or his or her caseworker to anticipate the receipt of a lump sum. Even a highly competent caseworker may wrongly determine that receipt of a lump sum is not likely, forget to provide notice of the rule, or be tardy in doing so. Therefore, it is not surprising [297]*297that some recipients are not advised of the new rule until they report their lump sum, or, in some instances, until they receive a termination-of-benefits n See 598 F.Supp. at 1050. As demonstrated above, notice provided at either of these points will likely come too late.14 Finally, we also share the District Court’s concern that “oral notice would be very hard to prove or disprove.” 605 F.Supp. at 1247.
Levine rejoins that face-to-face oral explanations are a more effective means of communicating information about technical AFDC requirements than are written explanations. This may well be true, but it does not speak to the problem of lump-sum recipients who receive no advance oral notice under DPW’s policy. Therefore, this is at best an argument that general written notice of the rule should be supplemented by the oral notice provided under DPW’s policy, or, alternatively, that every recipient should be contacted by DPW and provided with advance oral notice. The latter alternative would prove a far greater strain on administrative resources than would advance written notice, and the defendant would likely find it correspondingly less appealing.
Indeed, defendant Levine argues that to require written notice here will impose an administratively unworkable requirement on DPW. The defendant contends that because the lump-sum rule and other eligibility rules are highly susceptible to change, it will be forced, under the District Court’s ruling, to issue a steady stream of written notices. He adds that numerous eligibility rules, including the lump-sum rule, actually wind up affecting relatively small numbers of people. However, the Secretary of HHS, during a notice and comment period on 45 C.F.R. § 206.10(a)(2)(i) in 1978, rejected an administrative inconvenience argument like the defendant’s, stating:
Although eligibility conditions change as a result of change in law, it is expected that even as instructional material is made available to agency staff regarding program eligibility changes, an informational flyer could also be prepared for public dissemination.
48 Fed.Reg. 6950 (February 17, 1978), cited in 598 F.Supp. at 1051 n. 13. We therefore conclude that when the notice regulation was adopted, the balance between administrative convenience and AFDC recipients’ need for notice was struck in favor of providing notice.
Levine also argues that his belief that the notice regulation does not require written notice here is supported by the Secretary of HHS’s responses to interrogatories posed to her by the defendant during this case. However, in none of her answers did the Secretary state that written notice is unnecessary, or that it is not necessary to provide all recipients with advance information about the lump-sum rule.15 The Secretary did say that a state may elect to inform AFDC applicants and recipients of eligibility through methods other than “specially developed pamphlets or bulletins,” A-105, but did not say that alternative forms of notice need not be written. Moreover, even were we to read the Secretary’s answers to indicate that written notice is unnecessary, we would for a combination of reasons be unable to accept her view. First, because her statements concerning the regulation were made in the course of this litigation, rather than some more neutral setting {e.g., in the course of rulemaking), we believe her interpretation would be entitled to relatively less deference. Additionally, such an interpretation conflicts with the plain language of the rule, and would deprive the rule of much of its significance in this context, supra pp. 295-97.
[298]*298In short, we agree with the District Court that 45 C.F.R. § 206.10(a)(2)(i) by its terms requires advance written notice and admits of oral notice only as a supplement, and that, if this notice regulation is to serve its purpose fully, it must require effective written notice to all AFDC recipients and applicants of the lump-sum rule, a rule which requires advance notice to achieve its underlying purpose and which can have drastic consequences for those to whom it is applied.
B. The September 1981 Letter
Defendant Levine asserts that DPW provided adequate advance written notice of the lump-sum rule when it mailed AFDC recipients its September 18, 1981 letter. The letter, which discussed 19 changes in the AFDC program resulting from OBRA, contained a paragraph discussing the new lump-sum rule.
As the District Court pointed out, 598 F.Supp. at 1050, members of the plaintiff class who were not on the welfare rolls when this letter was sent out did not receive it or any other written notice of the lump-sum rule. For these class members, it is clear without further inquiry that the defendant failed to fulfill his notice obligations under 45 C.F.R. § 206.10(a)(2)(i). The question, then, is whether the September 1981 letter provided the requisite notice to those class members who were AFDC recipients when the letter was mailed. We share the District Court’s view that the letter was “incomplete and confusing,” and therefore inadequate. 605 F.Supp. at 1246.
There were several deficiencies in the notice provided by the letter. First, and most important, the letter did not adequately explain the mechanics of the lump-sum rule and their inflexible operation. The letter states that under the new rule, where a family receives a lump sum that causes its income to exceed the relevant AFDC limit,
the family will be ineligible for the month in which the lump sum was received (and possibly for a number of following months), whether or not the money is spent before the period of ineligibility has gone by.16
A-69.
This description, in stating that the lump sum may “possibly” render the recipient ineligible for a number of months in addition to the month of receipt, provides no indication of how strict and inexorable the rule’s budgeting requirements are. The recipient is not advised of the chief feature of the rule — that it allows him or her little leeway to use a lump sum as anything other than a replacement for monthly AFDC benefits, since it imposes ineligibility for a predetermined period equal to the lump sum divided by the recipient’s monthly standard of need. As established in Section II. A. of this opinion, notice of this aspect of the rule is crucial, particularly since it represents a dramatic departure from prior policy. The letter could have explained this feature with little extra effort and without unduly lengthening or complicating its discussion of the rule.17
[299]*299A further shortcoming of the letter arises from the fact that while it indicated that the rule would become effective October 1,1981, the rule was not actually implemented until February 1, 1982. No followup letter was sent to report or explain this change. Recipients who got lump sums during the October-February interregnum received the lenient treatment called for under the old rule. At least for these persons, because the letter was ultimately inaccurate in reporting the rule’s effectiveness date, it provided inadequate notice.
We therefore hold that 45 C.F.R. § 206.-10(a)(2)(i) required the defendant to provide AFDC recipients with advance written notice of the lump-sum rule, and that the September 1981 letter did not constitute such notice.
III. QUERN NOTICE
The second issue raised by the defendant on appeal is whether the Quern notice relief ordered by the District Court was proper. Levine argues that Quern notice is inappropriate here for two reasons: First, he contends that notice to class members that they might apply to the State of Minnesota for corrective payments was improper and, citing Green v. Mansour, — U.S. -, 106 S.Ct. 423, 88 L.Ed.2d 371 (1985), an Eleventh Amendment violation, because, he argues, class members would in no event actually be able to obtain corrective payments. His position is that 45 C.F.R. § 233.20(a)(13)(ii), which governs recovery of overpayments and correction of underpayments, does not permit corrective payments to recipients who failed to meet eligibility requirements but were harmed by inadequate notice. He adds that, at any rate, corrective payments would be an improper remedy for inadequate notice because they would constitute a “windfall” to recipients and would result in the continuation of benefits at a level exceeding that authorized by Congress. Levine’s second argument is that the District Court’s order exceeds Eleventh Amendment constraints to the extent that the order itself creates a “substantive right” to corrective payments.
We conclude that the first of the defendant’s arguments was rendered moot before this appeal was argued. Counsel reported to us at argument that the Quern notices were mailed out in November 1985. Therefore, so far as the propriety of sending this notice is concerned, there remains no live controversy between Levine and the plaintiffs on which a federal court could grant relief.
The defendant’s second argument is not moot, since its thrust is that the Quern notice order not only ordered notice, but also established a right in class members to corrective payments from the State. While this argument remains live, it is not difficult to resolve. The District Court explicitly and repeatedly stated that it was not ordering the defendant to pay retroactive benefits to AFDC members, correctly observing that under Edelman v. Jordan, 415 U.S. 651, 94 S.Ct. 1347, 39 L.Ed.2d 662 (1974), this would be barred by the Eleventh Amendment. See 598 F.Supp. at 1055; 605 F.Supp. at 1248-49; Opinion of June 13, 1985, slip op. at 3; 621 F.Supp. at 515. Instead, the notice approved by the District Court merely informs plaintiff-class members of the federal lawsuit’s resolution and of the fact that they may apply for corrective benefits from DPW. See Quern, 440 U.S. at 347-48, 99 S.Ct. at 1148-49. This notice will not lead inevitably to the payment of retroactive benefits; for example, a notice recipient may decide not to apply to DPW for corrective benefits, or may be held ineligible by DPW for corrective payments because he or she received actual notice of the lump-sum rule before spending any of it.18 Here, as in Quern, [300]*300“the chain of causation” between the District Court’s notice order and the payment of state funds for retroactive benefits “is by no means unbroken; it contains numerous missing links, which can be supplied, if at all, only by the State and members of the plaintiff class and not by a federal court.” Id. at 347, 99 S.Ct. at 1148. We therefore hold that the District Court’s Quern notice order withstands this Eleventh Amendment challenge. Any actual payments made will be the choice of the State. They are not compelled by the order of the District Court.
IV. ENJOINING DPW RECOUPMENT
The final issue before us is whether Kathryn Jenkins is entitled to an injunction against the defendant’s efforts to recoup AFDC payments made to Jenkins during her period of ineligibility under the lump-sum rule. In October 1983, Jenkins’s family received and spent a lump sum without having received adequate notice of the lump-sum rule. See supra n. 11; 598 F.Supp. at 1050; 605 F.Supp. at 1246-47. In November 1983, Jenkins was notified that because of the lump-sum rule, her October and November benefits would be considered “overpayments,” and her family would be ineligible for further AFDC benefits until May 1984. Jenkins filed a timely state administrative appeal of this decision, and her benefits were continued pending the appeal. Because the final administrative decision was issued after Jenkins’s ineligibility period expired, her family’s AFDC benefits were not interrupted. Instead, the Jenkins family has been charged with an “overpayment” of $5,464.00 for the ineligibility period. The defendant seeks to recoup this sum by withholding one per cent, of Jenkins’s benefits each month until the full amount has been recovered. See 45 C.F.R. § 233.20(a)(13); Minn. Stat. § 256.-73, subd. 6.
The District Court, though it found that the defendant’s failure to provide adequate notice rendered application of the lump-sum rule to her improper, concluded that it would violate the Eleventh Amendment to enjoin the defendant’s efforts to recover the alleged overpayment to Jenkins. The defendant argues that, in addition to this state-sovereign-immunity obstacle, the relief Jenkins desires is also unavailable because federal regulations indicate that inadequate notice does not warrant the remedy of permitting a recipient to keep an overpayment. We conclude that an injunction against recoupment is fully consistent with the Eleventh Amendment and is a proper remedy for the defendant’s violation of the federal notice regulation.
Prospective, equitable relief is a long-recognized exception to Eleventh Amendment immunity. See Ex Parte Young, 209 U.S. 123, 28 S.Ct. 441, 52 L.Ed. 714 (1908). However, the District Court reasoned that to enjoin the defendant’s recoupment efforts would be inconsistent with the Eleventh Amendment as interpreted in Edel-man v. Jordan, supra, because it would reduce “the public fisc of the State of Minnesota ... in the amount of one percent of plaintiff’s monthly benefit.” 621 F.Supp. at 514. Yet, as Edelman makes clear, a remedy against a state ordered by a federal court does not violate the Eleventh Amendment simply because it will have fiscal consequences for the state treasury. 415 U.S. at 667-68, 94 S.Ct. at 1358. Instead, the point of Edelman is that the key to whether a remedy violates the Eleventh Amendment is whether “[i]t requires payment of state funds, not as a necessary consequence of compliance in the future with a substantive federal-question determination, but as a form of compensation” for the state’s past breach of a legal duty. Id. at 668, 94 S.Ct. at 1358. The Eleventh Amendment bars “retroactive award[s] of money relief” that, whether they are labeled equitable relief or damage awards, are “in practical effect indistinguishable ... from an award of damages against the State.” Id.
An injunction against the defendant’s re-coupment efforts would not run afoul of [301]*301these strictures, because DPW has already paid Jenkins the money at issue, the benefit payments it characterizes as over-payments. The remedy would not be a retroactive award of damages against the State, since it would not require the State to make compensatory payments to. Jenkins. Instead, the defendant would simply be ordered to cease efforts to take back funds that it previously paid Jenkins at its own instance, rather than that of a federal court. In contrast, the Eleventh Amendment would bar ordering the defendant to repay any portion of Jenkins’s benefits that it has already recovered; further, had Jenkins not continued to receive benefits during her administrative appeal, the Eleventh Amendment would prohibit ordering the defendant to make corrective payments for months in which Jenkins received no benefits. In both of these examples, ordering the defendant to make payments would constitute ordering the state to pay damages — to make compensatory payments for the State’s past legal wrongs. Here, the defendant would not be ordered to make compensation, but to refrain from recovering compensation already made.
Our analysis is not altered by the fact that the mechanism that the defendant has elected to use to effect this recovery is that of withholding a portion of Jenkins's AFDC benefits each month. It is true that the injunction under consideration would force the defendant to make larger payments to Jenkins each month than he would make if allowed to reduce her benefits in order to recoup his prior payments to her. Nonetheless, such payments are not damages; they do not compensate Jenkins for the State’s past legal deficiencies. Rather, they are “a necessary consequence of compliance in the future” with the determination that the defendant provided inadequate notice of the lump-sum rule. The defendant cannot make an “end run” around a federal court’s ability to order that the State not take money away from Jenkins by accomplishing recovery through paying her less AFDC benefits than she normally would receive.19
Having disposed of the Eleventh Amendment objection to enjoining defendant Levine’s recoupment efforts, we take up the defendant’s assertion that permitting Jenkins to retain benefits paid her during her ineligibility period is barred by federal regulations. The defendant first argues that the payments to Jenkins were “over-payments,” as defined in 45 C.F.R. § 233.-20(a)(13)(i), because Jenkins has accurately been determined ineligible for the benefits under the lump-sum rule. He continues that 45 C.F.R. § 233.20(a)(13) directs states to recover overpayments, and does not permit states to forego recovery even where the overpayment is the result of agency error rather than recipient misconduct. Therefore, the defendant concludes, while Jenkins bears no fault in causing her overpayment, the defendant is nonetheless entitled to recover it.
The fundamental flaw in this argument occurs in its first step: the payments to Jenkins cannot be considered an overpayment, because the defendant, having failed to provide adequate notice to Jenkins of the lump-sum rule, cannot properly invoke it against her. By failing to comply [302]*302with the notice regulation, DPW failed to institute a legal change in its eligibility rules. See Kimble v. Solomon, 599 F.2d 599, 604 (4th Cir.), cert. denied, 444 U.S. 950, 100 S.Ct. 422, 62 L.Ed.2d 320 (1979). Jenkins’s case must be governed by the prior policy towards lump sums, and under that policy she was eligible for most or all of the benefits the defendant wishes to recoup.20
The defendant also asserts that corrective payments are an improper remedy for inadequate notice because the payments would be a “windfall” to recipients and would continue benefits at a level greater than that desired by Congress, citing Foggs v. Block, 722 F.2d 933, 941 (1st Cir.1983), rev’d on other grounds sub nom. Atkins v. Parker, 472 U.S. 115, 105 S.Ct. 2520, 86 L.Ed.2d 81 (1985).
We find Foggs distinguishable from the present case. Foggs involved a due-process challenge to a state’s failure to notify each food-stamp recipient individually of the reduction in that recipient’s benefits that would result from a statutory change in benefit-calculation methods. The Court found it an adequate remedy to order the State to review its files to ensure that each recipient’s benefits had been accurately recalculated. 722 F.2d at 941. At issue here is not individualized notice of the effect of the new rule upon each recipient, but advance notice of a rule change and the new rule’s general operation. Our concern is not that such advance notice was necessary to prevent erroneous application of the lump-sum rule, but that without adequate advance notice recipients could not be expected to budget their lump sum as Congress intended, and would be left without funds to pay for necessities. Permitting retention of ineligibility-period payments by lump-sum recipients who, like Jenkins, spent their lump sums in the belief that the old rule was still in force is hardly granting them a “windfall.” Other circuit courts have found it proper where the state has provided inadequate notice of changed standards to recipients to order the restoration of benefits under the previously governing standard, see Buckhanon v. Percy, 708 F.2d 1209, 1216 (7th Cir.1983), cert. denied, 465 U.S. 1025, 104 S.Ct. 1281, 79 L.Ed.2d 684 (1984), Kimble v. Solomon, 599 F.2d 599 (4th Cir.1979), cert. denied, 444 U.S. 950, 100 S.Ct. 422, 62 L.Ed.2d 320 (1979), and we agree.
We conclude that an injunction barring the defendant from recouping the payments made to Jenkins during her ineligibility period would be consistent with the Eleventh Amendment, and would, moreover, be an appropriate remedy in this case.
V. CONCLUSION
We hold that the defendant failed to provide recipients advance written notice of the lump-sum rule required by the federal notice regulation, that the defendant’s challenge to the Quern notice order is in part moot, and in all other regards without merit, and that an injunction against the defendant’s efforts to recoup payments made to Kathryn Jenkins is consistent with the Eleventh Amendment and a proper remedy. The decision of the District Court is affirmed in part and reversed in part, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.