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Michigan Did Not Effectively Monitor Home Heating Benefits Provided Under the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program

Issued on  | Posted on  | Report number: A-01-22-02502

Why OIG Did This Audit

  • From October 2019 through September 2022, Michigan received approximately $240 million in Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) funding to provide heating assistance to eligible households through its Home Heating Credit (HHC) program.
  • Funding for LIHEAP increased rapidly in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and rising energy prices. Prior OIG work found that States did not always adequately monitor the organizations that administer LIHEAP on their behalf.
  • The rapid increase in LIHEAP funding combined with prior audit findings increases the risk of fraud and abuse in LIHEAP. We performed this audit to determine whether Michigan monitored the administration of its HHC program for compliance with Federal and State LIHEAP requirements.

What OIG Found

Because Michigan did not effectively monitor its HHC program, it was unaware that approximately $25 million in benefits were processed and paid without being reviewed. In addition, Michigan:

  • was unaware that credits were not prorated for part-year residents as required,
  • did not ensure that quarterly monitoring reviews of HHC payments were done in a timely manner, and

did not ensure that high risk payments were included in quarterly monitoring reviews. As a result, Michigan did not detect overpayments of $26,763.

What OIG Recommends

We made six recommendations, including that the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services refund $26,763 to the Federal Government and assess the risk of payment errors associated with HHC benefits that were processed and paid without being reviewed. The full recommendations are in the report.

Michigan did not indicate concurrence or nonconcurrence with our recommendations; however, it agreed with our findings and outlined actions that it has taken and plans to take to address our recommendations.

25-A-01-074.01 to ACF - Open Unimplemented
Update expected on 12/24/2025
We recommend that the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services take corrective action for the 17 improper payments in our sample of 90 HHC applications by refunding $26,763 to the Federal Government for the 15 HHC benefit overpayments.

25-A-01-074.02 to ACF - Open Unimplemented
Update expected on 12/24/2025
We recommend that the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services take corrective action for the 17 improper payments in our sample of 90 HHC applications by paying $264 in additional HHC benefits to the 2 HHC applicants that received underpayments.

25-A-01-074.03 to ACF - Open Unimplemented
Update expected on 12/24/2025
We recommend that the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services revise the interagency agreement to require MI Treasury to notify MI DHHS of any changes in procedures for processing HHC payments, including edits to the Bridge system.

25-A-01-074.04 to ACF - Open Unimplemented
Update expected on 12/24/2025
We recommend that the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services determine the feasibility of reprocessing the approximately 118,000 HHC applications paid while the Bridge system edits were turned off, or work with OCS to develop a statistical sampling methodology to obtain information about the extent of payment errors that were made while the Bridge system edits were turned off and take appropriate action to correct them.

25-A-01-074.05 to ACF - Open Unimplemented
Update expected on 12/24/2025
We recommend that the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services revise its Home Heating Credit Audit Process to incorporate a risk-based approach that includes high-risk HHC applications, such as those with high dollar payments and out-of-State mailing addresses, and require and maintain documentation to support findings identified and corrective actions taken during the monitoring process.

25-A-01-074.06 to ACF - Open Unimplemented
Update expected on 12/24/2025
We recommend that the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services adhere to the interagency agreement's requirements and timeframes for quarterly monitoring.

25-A-01-074.07 to ACF - Open Unimplemented
Update expected on 12/24/2025
We recommend that the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services test the HHC program data it receives from MI Treasury via the data warehouse to confirm that the data are complete and accurate before reporting HHC program information to ACF.

View in Recommendation Tracker