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The Child and Adult Care Food Program

Administrative Reviews & Successful Corrective Action. The Child and Adult Care Food Program. playing a vital and integral role in improving the overall quality of care and daily nutritional health of participants. Administrative Review Basics. Formal “full” reviews

december
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The Child and Adult Care Food Program

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  1. Administrative Reviews & Successful Corrective Action The Child and Adult Care Food Program playing a vital and integral role in improving the overall quality of care and daily nutritional health of participants

  2. Administrative Review Basics • Formal “full” reviews • At least once every 3 years • Announced or unannounced • Duration: 1-5 days…or longer • Record review and observation • In addition: • Technical assistance visits • Follow-up reviews • Record reviews

  3. Are You Ready? • Eligibility and Approval • License(s) or alternate approval documents • Fire inspection reports & HACCP checklists • Certified Food Safety Manager • Adult day care approval • Subsidy program statements (for-profit centers only) • IRS Letter of Determination (non-profit organizations) • CACFP Permanent Agreement & Policy Statement • CACFP Excel file

  4. Are You Ready? • Participant Records • Complete & classified Enrollment Form / IES for every participant (n/a for at-risk) • Individual Plan of Care (adult day care only) • Complete & accurate MEL for each month (n/a for at-risk) • Head Start certification / enrollment (if Head Start) • Daily attendance records • Sign-in/sign-out sheets (day care homes and centers only)

  5. Are You Ready? • Meal records • (Point-of-service) meal count records • Dated daily menus • Infant / Child / Adult • Child Nutrition (CN) labels / Product Formulation Statements (if needed) • Medical Substitution Forms • Soymilk Request Forms • Infant Food & Formula Notification (if enrolling infants)

  6. Are You Ready? • Additional Records • Prior year records • Three years after last paid claim of fiscal year • Staff training documentation • Annual Civil Rights Documentation • “…And Justice for All” poster (visibly posted) • “Building for the Future” flyer (visibly posted)

  7. Are You Ready? • Financial Records • Itemized invoices and receipts • Payroll records (if using funds for labor) • Time & attendance records (if using funds for labor) • Copies of submitted claims • Ledger, balance sheet, financial tracking, etc.

  8. Are You Ready? • Food Service Management Company Records • Invitation for Bids / Request for Proposals • Submitted bids / proposals • Contract and contract renewals • Delivery slips

  9. Are You Ready? • Sponsoring Organization Records • Facility / Provider Agreements • Facility Staff / Provider Training Documentation • Budget and Budget Approval • Monitoring forms • 3 per facility per year • No more than 6 months in between visits • At least 2 unannounced • At least 1 unannounced visit includes meal observation

  10. After an Administrative Review • Exit conference – discuss preliminary findings • Administrative Review Findings Letter • Finding / Corrective Action / Due Date • Observation / Recommendation • Fiscal action Note: fiscal action may be appealed but not findings • Return signed letter – specify repayment plan • Corrective Action Plan • Written plan • Supporting documentation

  11. Successful Corrective Action • Timely • Pay attention to deadline - usually 30 days • Completely and permanently corrects finding • Demonstrate viability, capability and accountability

  12. Successful Corrective Action • Successful Corrective Action Plan (CAP): • States the finding/problem • Details procedures to address problem • Includes who, what, when, and where • Specifies personnel who will implement procedure • Describes how procedures will be implemented • Provides a timeline for implementation • States where CAP documentation will be saved

  13. State the Problem • What was the finding? • Use the wording and/or number from the administrative review findings letter • Not a time for excuses • Example: “Finding 1A: Meal counts were not being taken at the point of service. The number of meals prepared was being recorded as the meal count.”

  14. Detail the Procedures • What will you do to comply with CACFP requirements? • Be specific and detailed • Include when the procedures will be used • Specify who will be using the procedures

  15. Detail the Procedures • Example: “Corrective Action Plan 1A: The lead teacher in each classroom will use the CACFP Point-of-Service Form to record meal counts at the point of service. The form will be prepared each Monday morning with the dates for the week and the names of the children in the classroom. Names will be added if new children enroll or move into the class. After the children are seated and receive a complete meal, including milk at breakfast and lunch, the lead teacher will mark an “X” in the column for the meal (breakfast, lunch, or snack) by the name of each child who is eating. Children who are present but not eating a complete meal provided by the center will be marked with an “O.” If a child is absent, the box will be left blank.”

  16. Specify the Personnel • Who is in charge? • State who will implement, monitor and enforce the new procedure • Example: “The director, Ms. Smith, has trained the lead teachers on using the new form. She will collect the Point-of-Service forms from each classroom on Friday afternoons after PM snack. She will check the forms to make sure they are filled out correctly. She will double check the totals from each room for each week, then add them up for each month. This will be reported on the claim. Ms. Smith will also observe the meal count procedures in each room at least once per month.”

  17. Describe Implementation • How will staff or parents know about the new procedure? • Training • Handbook • Website • Personal assistance • Example: “The director, Ms. Smith, has trained the lead teachers on using the new form. The procedures will be filed in the CACFP Procedures binder.”

  18. Provide a Timeline • When is the procedure being implemented? • Be specific – provide dates • Be reasonable • Example: “The training was held on Friday, June 1st during a staff development day. Teachers were given the Point of Service Form to begin using on Monday, June 4th.”

  19. State Where the CAP is Saved • Where will you keep the CAP on file? • Administrative review documents and responses should be saved with current FY records. • Policies and procedures should not be lost when staff leave or after 3 fiscal years. • Example: “The CAP will be filed with the administrative review findings letter in the CACFP FY12 binder. The meal count procedures and the Point of Service Form will be saved in the CACFP computer file and in the CACFP Procedures binder.”

  20. Implement the CAP • Follow the stated procedures and implementation plan • Submit supporting documentation to prove that the plan was implemented • Ex. Income Eligibility Statements to show correct classifications • Ex. Master Enrollment List to show correct maintenance • Ex. Menus that comply with meal pattern • Ex. Training documentation to prove staff were trained

  21. Implement the CAP • Maximum of 90 days to finalize and implement CAP • Meet benchmarks for long-term CAP’s • Ex: Retention of prior-year records • Permanently maintain new procedures • Be prepared for a follow-up review

  22. The End

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