COLUMBUS, Ohio (Statehouse News Bureau) — Gov. Mike DeWine defended the state’s existing safeguards currently vetting child care centers Monday afternoon, amid viral accusations of fraud at facilities getting federal and state funding.

By: Sarah Donaldson | Statehouse News Bureau
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (Statehouse News Bureau) — Gov. Mike DeWine defended the state’s existing safeguards currently vetting child care centers Monday afternoon, amid viral accusations of fraud at facilities getting federal and state funding.

His comments came after President Donald Trump’s administration froze federal dollars from going out to all 50 states as it investigates an alleged benefits fraud scheme in Minnesota. The freeze could interfere with services in about eight weeks in Ohio if funding disbursements don’t resume before then, DeWine said.
Last Wednesday, dozens of GOP state lawmakers wrote a letter asking Auditor of State Keith Faber to look into Ohio for similar benefits fraud being committed.
Faber said in an interview with the Statehouse News Bureau on Saturday his office began that in early December, when stories first surfaced in Minnesota. He is concerned, he said, about a flood of unsubstantiated claims leading nowhere.
“We don’t want to go on a witch hunt, we don’t want chase down things that aren’t real,” Faber said. “But look, I would rather people err on the side of reporting and giving us the information to go back and verify and track that down.”
DeWine encouraged Ohioans to continue to report cases of child care fraud here.