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Serious Deficiency for Family Day Care Homes

This article highlights the serious implementation problems in the serious deficiency process for Family Day Care Home Providers and emphasizes the importance of addressing these issues. It discusses the findings of CCAP's review, the under-utilization of the process, and the need to target sponsors to ensure proper implementation. The consequences of failure to use the process appropriately and the steps involved in declaring serious deficiency are also discussed.

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Serious Deficiency for Family Day Care Homes

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  1. Serious Deficiency for Family Day Care Homes

  2. Why Is This Important? • Because over the years, we’ve seen that… • There are serious and substantiveproblems in the implementation of the serious deficiency process for Family Day Care Home Providers

  3. What Did CCAP Reveal? • In 80% of Sponsors: 1/5 of providers lacked up-to-date records on the day of the review • For some Sponsors: over 1/2 of provider’s records were not up-to-date

  4. The Results of the Targeted Management Evaluations (TMEs) • It appears that obvious cases of false claims, missing records, consistently absent providers, etc. are being virtually ignored • The serious deficiency process is being under-utilized

  5. TME Results Continued • Sponsors that do implement the SD process do so only for false claims • What usually constitutes “acceptable” corrective action for false claims: - “Try to do a better job keeping your daily records” - “Promise not to do it again” - “Prove you didn’t do it”

  6. Why Are We Targeting Sponsors? • The Office of the Inspector General has called into question the current funding structure of the family day care home component of CACFP simply because sponsors have a financial incentive to keep providers on the program

  7. The Importance of Serious Deficiency • Initiating the SD process is a serious step, but should not be reserved only for “hopeless” situations • Issuing a SD notice is not the end of the process, but the beginning of getting the problem resolved

  8. Consequences for Sponsors • Failure to use the serious deficiency process appropriately, in itself, can be a basis for the State Agency to declare your organization seriously deficient

  9. Discussion Question • Within your sponsorship, what do you consider to be a serious deficiency in a family day care home?

  10. Declaring Serious Deficiency The serious deficiency process: • Fully identify all aspects of the problem(s) • Cite non-compliance with specific regulatory citations, instructions or policies

  11. Corrective Action • Describe corrective action for a meaningful, long-term solution to the problem • Verify implementation of the corrective action and resolution of the problem

  12. Serious Deficiency Notification Sponsors SD notices must: • list regulatory requirements for elements of a complete notice • list regulatory requirements for corrective action timeframe • be sent to the State for inclusion on the SD list and for technical assistance (if necessary)

  13. Declaring SD vs. Terminating for Convenience • Terminating a provider for convenience is allowed but should NOT be used as a way to circumvent the serious deficiency process!

  14. The Example of Ms. I. WontdoitAghen • On 01/27/10, Look D. Other-Way, the SO, reviewed the provider. • Last review was May 2009 - provider was not home for the previous 3 unannounced visits • Provider declared SD in October 2009…CAP due 11/30/09

  15. Ms. I. WontdoitAghen • 01/27/10...CAP still not submitted • Provider had no meal count or attendance records for entire month • In March 2010, corrective action submitted and provider promises to be home and to keep proper records • Serious deficiency immediately rescinded

  16. How Do I Know When an SD Declaration is Necessary? Consider: • Frequency of non-compliance • Nature of the non-compliance • Isolated error or a broader systemic problem with the operations of the program

  17. Examples: Look at What’s Going on with the Provider • Day care home provider missing records for one day vs. 20 days • Provider not home once vs. multiple times • Meal component missing on the menu one day vs. many/all days • Child not in attendance claimed for one day vs. many months

  18. Other Factors to Consider Take certain factors into account: • Frequency/Severity of the problem • Provider’s time with the program • Provider’s English proficiency • Training

  19. Sponsor Discretion ≠ Optional • SO permitted to exercise some discretion with SDs • Too many cases of improper use or understanding of this discretion

  20. Absolute Requirements There is no discretion when it comes to: • Declaring a home seriously deficient for a false claim • 30-day corrective action deadline • Adjusting claims for disallowed meals

  21. Health and Safety Violations Examples of health & safety violations: • Fire code violations • Chemicals/cleaners in reach of children • Unsupervised children playing outside in the street

  22. Responses to Health & Safety Violations Remember to: • Communicate with licensing staff • Immediately initiate the SD • process once a health and safety violation occurs • Move to terminate if no corrective action is completed

  23. Let’s Quickly Review SD Regulations for Sponsors Homes: • Corrective action → 30 days • Suspensions for health/safety • May only appeal intent to terminate, not SD • Appeal hearings: In-person or an Administrative Review

  24. That’s All Folks! • Serious Deficiency Process Steps • Using the SD process correctly • Meaningful corrective action • Discretion • Serious deficiency notices • Health & Safety violations

  25. Questions? ?

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