King County DCHS strengthens financial oversight with new policies, launches Provider Training Series

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

King County Department of Community and Human Services (DCHS) has officially implemented several new policies and procedures to strengthen financial stewardship and oversight of public dollars. 

The department is launching a Provider Trainings Series to better prepare and support small community-based providers.

“DCHS is taking action to be stronger stewards of public dollars,” said Acting DCHS Director Dr. Susan McLaughlin. “We’re creating a blueprint for King County, and I couldn’t be prouder of all the progress we’ve made over the last several months.”

The new policies and procedures are in direct response to the King County Auditor’s Recommendations 7 and 8, and include: 
  • Enforcement of current Terms and Conditions involving subcontract review and approval 
  • General invoice verification and processing 
  • When contract amendments are required 
  • Managing stipend, incentive, and cash value cards 
  • Addressing over or underspend for contracts using the hybrid payment model 
  • Contract termination process 
  • Eligibility standards and minimum requirements for contractors 
  • Managing documentation related to contracts and invoices 

The department’s provider training series aims to give contracted providers the foundational knowledge needed to effectively manage public dollars. The trainings include: 
  • Financial Management & Best Practices (Required for all contractors that hold a multiyear contract—18 months or longer—per King County Ordinance 19978
  • DCHS Contracting Overview 
  • DCHS Fiscal Contract Compliance
These latest efforts build off the work the department has undertaken over the last several months. To learn more, visit the King County DCHS Fiscal Stewardship Webpage.


1 comments:

Anonymous,  April 1, 2026 at 4:32 AM  

Kind of disturbing something like this isn't already in place

Post a Comment

We encourage the thoughtful sharing of information and ideas. We expect comments to be civil and respectful, with no personal attacks or offensive language. We reserve the right to delete any comment.

ShorelineAreaNews.com
Facebook: Shoreline Area News
Twitter: @ShorelineArea
Daily Email edition (don't forget to respond to the Follow.it email)

  © Blogger template The Professional Template II by Ourblogtemplates.com 2009

Back to TOP