By order of Sheriff Darren Weekly, Stage 1 Fire Restrictions are in place for unincorporated areas of Douglas County. Ordinance No. O-012-004 restricts open fires, open burning and the use of fireworks in the unincorporated areas of Douglas County.
By order of Sheriff Darren Weekly, Stage 1 Fire Restrictions are in place for unincorporated areas of Douglas County. Ordinance No. O-012-004 restricts open fires, open burning and the use of fireworks in the unincorporated areas of Douglas County.
Douglas County administers many essential safety net programs, such as food assistance (SNAP), child care assistance (CCAP), Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), and Medicaid, that help individuals and families meet basic needs during difficult times.
Douglas County Human Services is committed to delivering this support accurately, fairly, and with strong accountability– starting from the moment someone applies for assistance.
Douglas County applies a higher level of quality control during the eligibility determination process than many other jurisdictions.
Every public assistance program begins with a detailed application. Trained eligibility technicians review each application, conduct interviews when required, and verify details using multiple systems before determining eligibility.
Staff are trained to interpret federal and state regulations, not simply rely on automated tools. This approach helps ensure benefits are issued accurately and fairly from the start.
A percentage of every eligibility worker’s case load is consistently peer reviewed, helping prevent errors and improper payments. The investigations team also conducts proactive pre-certification investigations when information appears questionable, stopping issues early without delaying eligible residents.
Applications that are determined to require additional review are referred to the Program Integrity team and assigned to an investigation technician within 48 hours. In other counties across the state, long investigation queues prevent the resolution of cases for years. Here in Douglas County, the vast majority of investigations are resolved in just a couple of months.
Investigations focus on fact-finding, so the appropriate decisions can be made. Many cases involve unintentional errors that are corrected through education and working with applicants to correct the issue.
When fraudulent cases are severe enough to warrant a criminal filing, they are sent to the 23rd Judicial District, who conducts swift and fair investigations and sentencings.
These rigorous quality control methods are exemplified each month when a percentage of cases from each public assistance program are reviewed by the state. The results of the reviews are reported as “error rates,” the percentage of cases reviewed where errors related to eligibility or benefits issued were identified. Douglas County is a consistent top performer with error rates between 0 and 4% that are often the lowest of the 11 largest counties in Colorado.
Of the 275 cases the Douglas County Program Integrity team investigated across all public assistance programs in 2025, only 66 were deemed to have reported intentionally incorrect information. Of the roughly 45,000 residents in Douglas County who receive public benefits, that’s a less than 0.1% fraud rate.
Through Nov. 2025, thanks to Douglas County’s rigorous investigation processes and dedicated staff, $246,011 in funds were recovered from fraudulent cases and returned to taxpayers. Only two cases were severe enough to warrant a criminal filing with the 23rd Judicial District.