December 31, 2025

(COLUMBUS, Ohio)—Ohio Governor Mike DeWine issued the following statement confirming anti-fraud measures currently in place to prevent fraud in Ohio’s publicly-funded childcare system:

“People are rightfully concerned about what is happening with state-funded childcare facilities in Minnesota.  These are the essential facts about what we do in Ohio:

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“There are almost 5,200 state-funded childcare facilities in Ohio.  With that number of facilities, there is certainly the potential for fraud. To counter that threat, Ohio does the following things, and has done them since the inception of DCY:

  1. “Ohio pays facilities based on attendance — not on enrollment — paying only for the days a child is in care. Paying based on attendance only uses taxpayer dollars when a child is actually physically at the childcare facility. The Biden Administration required all states to pay by enrollment by August 2026.  Ohio has not switched to paying by enrollment.  The Trump Administration is currently reviewing those requirements.
  2. “Since the creation of our Department of Children and Youth, they have verified attendance by requiring a personal identification number (PIN) with a photo confirmation or a location specific QR code;
  3. “The Department has a comprehensive review process of childcare programs that receive state dollars that includes a review of family eligibility, unannounced health and safety inspections, and financial management reviews.
  4. “The Department uses monthly cross-department data analytics to identify fraud, waste, and misuse of funds. They complete risk-based, data-driven, and referral-initiated monitoring reviews on monthly data and case specific concerns.
  5. “The Department encourages the public to send in tips on potential fraud. DCY has increased public transparency through a “Report Fraud” tool on the website to complement the dedicated program integrity mailbox and toll-free number. In calendar year 2025, DCY has received 124 referrals from the public.  Because of these referrals, over half of them (61) have resulted in programs being required to pay back overpayments to the State.  They have also resulted in DCY closing 12 programs.  Further, they found that 30 of the programs identified through the tips are operating in accordance with state and federal laws, while 21 are still in the final stages of review.

    “For example, DCY received a social media tipregarding a childcare facility in Columbus on State Route 161. This address has caused concern on social media because the Google Maps image of the address shows a tobacco shop and not a childcare facility.  After investigating the tip, DCY determined that the Google Maps image was from 2022.  The facility did not open as a daycare until earlier this year.  DCY inspected the facility in October of this year (the facility has not yet received public funds).
  6. “In addition to enforcing policies driven by data to verify attendance, ensure proper payments and to review and act on allegations of the misuse of taxpayer dollars, DCY has a process in place to clarify and enforce policies. For example, in June 2025, DCY began a PIN-sharing enforcement process. More than 65,000 families were reminded that PINs must never be shared with providers.  As a result, over 7,500 families reset their PINs.

    “In November 2025, DCY implemented payment category reforms.  The Department updated part-time hours from seven hours per week to 10 hours per week and full-time hours from 25 hours per week to 33 hours per week to ensure the full needs of the family were met by oneprovider whenever possible.  This helps to ensure that providers do not move children to get a full-time payment for one child and a part-time payment for another child for the same classroom “slot.” 

    “Further, in this past month, DCY closed a dual provider loophole.  The Department clarified that children may attend two providers only when care needs cannot be met by one.  As a result, DCY reviewed 1,200 cases and ended more than 900 authorizations.
  7. “The Department has previously identified additional safeguards that are scheduled to be implemented in January 2026 that include random monthly case reviews and targeted reviews for high risk practices.”