Skip to Content

Service Coordination: A Guide for Families
Part 4 - County Service Coordination Mechanism


 

 
 

NAVIGATION MENU


 

(Graphical version of this page)

Site Map / External Links

Search this Site: 

You are here:  OLRS Home   >  OLRS Publications   >  OLRS Publications Listed by Topic   >  Service Coordination: A Guide for Families   >  Part 4 - County Service Coordination Mechanism
 
 

PAGE CONTENT

Service Coordination: A Guide for Families
Part 4 - County Service Coordination Mechanism

What is the county service coordination mechanism?

Important! The county service coordination mechanism is your county's way to get services to children and families in a way that is simple and organized. Your county's FCFC must write a plan for its county service coordination mechanism. Family members who are on the county FCFC help to write this plan.

What must the county service coordination mechanism include?

The county service coordination mechanism must specify:

Does the FCFC have to follow the county mechanism?

Important! Your FCFC has to do what the county service coordination mechanism says. The FCFC must develop the individual family service coordination plans according to the standards of the county service coordination mechanism.

Do families have a say in how the county mechanism works?

The county FCFC includes three family members. Important! These family members help to write the county service coordination mechanism and have a voice in how service coordination works in each county.

You can talk with the members of the FCFC and tell them your ideas about how to get county agencies to work together as a team to get services for children. If you are a family member who is on the FCFC, you should talk with other families to learn their ideas and then give those ideas to the other FCFC members.

The following are selected parts of county service coordination mechanisms that work to support families and children.

Return to top