Ill. Admin. Code tit. 89, § 50.1210 - Intentional Program Violations and Fraud
a) Child care providers whose employees are
covered by a collective bargaining agreement with DHS shall refer to the
relevant agreement, rather than the procedure outlined in this
Section.
b) An intentional program
violation occurs when:
1) Parents or other
relatives knowingly provide false or misleading statements, or engage in
misrepresentation, concealment, or withholding of relevant facts or
information; or
c) An intentional program violation may
include, but is not limited to:
1) Providing
false employment information, including concealing employment or neglecting to
report change in employment or job loss;
2) Providing false information regarding
wages or other income;
3)
Misrepresenting or failing to disclose household membership;
4) Falsifying eligibility documentation or
information;
5) Claiming child care
assistance for care provided by an ineligible provider;
6) Claiming child care assistance for care
provided by an eligible provider without the authority to do so;
7) Misrepresenting the amount of child care
needed or used;
8) Falsifying
sign-in/sign-out records;
9)
Inaccurate reporting of child care provider licensing status;
10) Failure to disclose child care provider
relationship to the children or the location at which care is
provided;
11) Billing for days of
care that were not provided;
12)
Failure to comply with required Health and Safety training requirements as
stated in 45 CFR
98.41 and 89 Ill. Adm. Code
50.830;
13) Failure to comply with licensing or
monitoring requirements as stated in 89 Ill. Adm. Code 406, 407 and 408;
or
14) Failure to establish and
comply with a repayment plan for an improper payment.
d) For the purposes of this Part, fraud is
defined as an offense committed by any person or persons who scheme to deceive,
falsify, conceal, create, or cover up material facts to receive child care
benefits or to financially gain or profit from the Child Care Assistance
Program. The offense must be committed willfully and knowingly. Examples of
fraud include, but are not limited to:
1)
Manufacturing paystubs, income information, school registration, grades, or
educational schedules;
2) Creating
fictitious children;
3) Creating
fictitious child care settings; or
4) Creating and participating in a
conspiracy/scheme with other parents or other relatives and/or child care
providers to defraud the State for financial gain.
Notes
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