What Is Audit Dd Number On Driver 39;s License

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Mandy Geise

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Aug 5, 2024, 7:10:44 AM8/5/24
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NoI cannot. In my experience cops have a special radar that knows when I have left my license at home accidentally, so it never fails that I get stopped and ticketed. In my estimation, $10 and some of my time beats $200 plus a report that goes to my insurance company.

Yes, we listen when it is appropriate, but standing in line for a short time is not an onerous task. It is simply part of adult life. Instead, you want anyone to be able to get a copy of your license by just saying they are you over the Internet. All they would need is that number. That is not wise.


You also seem willing to risk a $200 fine and a mark on your driving record rather than spending $10 and an hour of your time. Unless you are extremely well-paid this does not seem to be worth it. It is a sign of not looking at the ramifications of your desire.


I have not qualified you as irresponsible and lazy. Instead, you have qualified yourself as short-sighted and possibly self-centered. You may not like the system as it stands, but the American way and the smart way is to follow the system as it is until you have enough power, votes, or fellow travelers to get it changed to something different.


Not sure how it is in your area, but I spoke to a few people around here and found that the mid-morning is probably the best time to go since people are at work. The first time I went at 3 PM and the line was almost out the door. I went back at about 10 or 11 AM the next day, and I only had to wait about 10 minutes.


Not an answer to the question, but I would say in the future, make a scan of your license (and other important documents) and keep the files encrypted and locked up tight somewhere safe on a trusty site or flash drive.


hey im going threw the same thing but im in the military and was on deployment and my wallet got stole and they told me i had to come in to the DPS office which i cant cuz of right now im in florida doing training i even considered flying to texas BUT i really cant! they dont understand man that DPS sucks in texas! so yea basically what i got from them was i gotta come in and do it it what im planning now is somehow just get another license here in florida


I have absolutly no idea if every dps has the same # or not, but if they do, do you know anyone who renewed/received a license from your dps? I am in the same boat right now, and had the same fabulous idea since I recently moved as well, but can not test my theory because my family is out of town. Sorry I am not much more help, hope it works out for ya.


And just for the record, I TOTALLY agree that berating and admonishing while never bothering to try and answer the original question is not helpful at all. And I am not a kid or a teenager, I am a grown mother of two adult children, and for convenience sake, I would LOVE to know the answer to this.


The Illinois Department of Human Services, Division of Developmental Disabilities (IDHS/DDD) is revising the enrollment and billing procedures for Home-Based Services (HBS) Non-Medical Transportation provided by persons using a privately-owned vehicle. Due to changes in the enrollment process with the implementation of the IMPACT Medicaid provider enrollment system, the Division is providing clarification regarding the various transportation provider types eligible to enroll as an HBS Non-Medical Transportation provider. Information about the billing process and what constitutes an adequate audit trail is included in this bulletin.


Non-Medical Transport (service code 55T) is an available service option for adults in the home-based services (AHBS) program. If a participant chooses to utilize this service, it must be purchased through the participant's monthly cost limit. Non-Medical Transportation services can be used to help persons gain access to waiver and community activities, services and resources as specified in the Personal Plan. This service should not be duplicative of other services in the Waiver. For example, it can't be used for transportation to and from medical appointments or to or from any community day services or supported employment programs because these services are accounted for in other areas in the Waiver. Whenever possible, transportation services should be provided by family, neighbors, friends or community agencies who can provide this service without charge.


There are three transportation provider types who are eligible to enroll as a DD waiver provider for transportation services based on the screening and enrollment requirements established by the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services (HFS). An explanation of the transportation provider types, enrollment requirements and billing process for each provider type is list below.


The Division of Developmental Disabilities is required to review billings selected via a statistically valid random sample of individuals receiving waiver services. It is the provider's responsibility to take steps to ensure the accuracy of their bills. Dates of service, number of miles, and the program(s) being billed must be accurate. The service provider is responsible for submitting complete and accurate billings. These records must be kept on file to establish an audit trail for individuals receiving Medicaid waiver community-based services and must be maintained for at least six years from the date of service.


Does anyone have any experience of sending on a BRC audit report to customers? As far as I was concerned we pass (at a certain level and get a certificate), or fail (and get a list of actions to follow up). It seems some of our commercial people anticipate sending out the report too; is that normal? Thanks.


Many customers request a copy of the audit report as well as a copy of the certificate as part of their due diligence. If it saves a customer audit then IMO it's well worth it...unless you've got something to hide.



Regards,

Simon


Dear D-D,



Well, it's either Yes, No or compromise.



There was previously an analogous thread here on the appropriate response to a request for one's complete company HACCP plan. Created a very polarised collection of all 3 of the above plus various +/- comments similar (and some much stronger) to previous post.



Some companies / subsidiaries hv a group policy to allow observation of such items for visitors to the source location (ie option 3rd). Other people seem to just love to distribute all their internal "secrets" away.



Overall, people were (IMO) surprisingly uncaring of maybe finding all their dirty washing aired on the IT, etc. Of course, if you hv achieved perfection, perhaps you will cheerfully risk an Icarus.



I suppose it comes down to leverage blended with risk evaluation. You can guess where i stand.



Rgds / Charles.C


Many customers request a copy of the audit report as well as a copy of the certificate as part of their due diligence. If it saves a customer audit then IMO it's well worth it...unless you've got something to hide.



Regards,

Simon




I think the request comes for a couple of reasons.

Firstly, we have for years been telling customers we are working towards BRC accreditation but never delivered. I have now set a date for it and we will see how it goes. Inherently, our products are low risk and non-hazardous so I am hoping... If we pass (even a 'C') I will not mind sharing the report but if we fail and have to share it, that is going to be a different situation.

The other reason is that we had another 3rd party interim audit earlier this year and while we technically 'passed' we had a number of corrective actions, two of which were raised as 'Critical', though both were easy fixes. That report was distributed to some customers so probably raised some doubts.

I was just wondering what other experiences were with this; it doesn't sound like a common request.


I think the request comes for a couple of reasons.

Firstly, we have for years been telling customers we are working towards BRC accreditation but never delivered. I have now set a date for it and we will see how it goes. Inherently, our products are low risk and non-hazardous so I am hoping... If we pass (even a 'C') I will not mind sharing the report but if we fail and have to share it, that is going to be a different situation.

The other reason is that we had another 3rd party interim audit earlier this year and while we technically 'passed' we had a number of corrective actions, two of which were raised as 'Critical', though both were easy fixes. That report was distributed to some customers so probably raised some doubts.

I was just wondering what other experiences were with this; it doesn't sound like a common request.




I personally do not believe in giving out audit reports as they are confidential documents. I would be happy to give out a copy of the certificate and this would inform them that you have addressed all the criteria required to achieve BRC accreditation.



Regards


My only worry is the posibility of your customer "to over react" is high if they don't have sufficient understanding of your processes to fully comprehend and place appropriate perspective on what an audit report says.



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