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Kalamazoo County MDHHS office honored for 100 percent accuracy
November 13, 2015
For Immediate Release: November 13, 2015
KALAMAZOO, Mich. – The Kalamazoo County office of the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services is being recognized today for achieving a 100 percent accuracy rate when making federal food assistance payments to low-income families and individuals.
The local office is one of only two in the six-state Midwest region to have 100 percent accuracy rates for fiscal year 2014. The other is in Wisconsin.
Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Minnesota and Wisconsin are part of the U.S. Food and Nutrition Service’s Midwest Regional Office.
State Rep. Jon Hoadley and MDHHS Business Service Center Director Kathy Miller are presenting the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) Excellence Award to local office staff members during a ceremony today.
The 100 percent accuracy rate means the county office issued no underpayments or overpayments in food assistance dollars for a sample of cases reviewed by the MDHHS Office of Quality Assurance. A county must have paid at least $10 million in food assistance and had at least 30 cases sampled to be eligible for the award.
The award recognizes local county assistance offices that provide exemplary service and accuracy. Offices such as the one in Kalamazoo County are credited with embracing the SNAP mission – “To increase food security and to reduce hunger by providing children and low-income individuals with food, a healthy diet and nutrition education.”
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