
1. Program Definition and Services
Residential Care Services in South Carolina provide 24-hour non-institutional, community-integrated living arrangements for children and adults with intellectual/developmental disabilities (I/DD), behavioral health challenges, or complex age-related needs. The program aims to foster independent living skills and maximize autonomy while ensuring safe, continuous supervision.
- In-Home Personal Care: Skill-building and therapeutic care executed directly within the residential setting (Residential Habilitation, Intensive Independent Living Skill Development, Personal Care Assistance with ADLs, and Crisis/Behavioral Support plan execution)
- Residential Personal Care: Structural facility accommodations, nutrition, and environmental safety management (24-Hour Behavioral Supervision, On-Call Health Coordination, Transportation Planning for employment or day programs, and Nutritious Meal/Dietary Management)
2. Regulations
The program is governed by the following regulations:
- South Carolina Department of Disabilities and Special Needs (SCDDSN) Residential Habilitation Standards
- South Carolina Department of Public Health (SCDPH) Regulation 61-84 (Standards for Licensing Community Residential Care Facilities)
- South Carolina Code of Laws 44-7-2910 et seq. (Criminal Record Checks of Direct Care Staff)
- South Carolina Code of Laws 43-35-5 et seq. (Omnibus Adult Protection Act)
- Federal HCBS Settings Final Rule (42 CFR 441.301)
3. Licensing or Certification
Providers operating a community group home, supervised apartment cluster, or assisted living environment for two or more unrelated individuals must secure a Community Residential Care Facility (CRCF) License from the South Carolina Department of Public Health (SCDPH).
4. Responsible State Agency
The South Carolina Department of Public Health (SCDPH) handles facility healthcare quality licensing, physical plant inspections, and environmental sanitation. The South Carolina Department of Disabilities and Special Needs (SCDDSN) manages the specialized residential habilitation provider enrollment pipeline, while the South Carolina Department of Health and Human Services (SCDHHS) controls final Medicaid waiver contract issuance and funding allocations.
5. Application Process
The application process involves a strict multi-agency track. Providers must first secure local zoning/fire approvals and pass a physical inspection by SCDPH to receive their CRCF facility license. Next, the agency applies for programmatic credentialing through the SCDDSN Provider Portal for Residential Habilitation code endorsement. Finally, the approved entity enrolls through the electronic SCDHHS Medicaid Provider Enrollment System to establish billing codes.
6. Required Documentation
To satisfy licensing and enrollment compliance protocols, providers must submit:
- State Business Registration and a valid SCDPH CRCF Facility License
- Active South Carolina Board of Long Term Health Care Administrators license for the designated facility administrator
- Residential Operations Policy & Procedure Manual (covering staff-to-client ratios, medication administration, individual care plan [ICP] frameworks, and evacuation maps)
- Certified South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED) background clearances and SC DSS Central Registry child/adult abuse checks for all employees
- Proof of broad commercial general liability, professional liability, and workers' compensation insurance policies
7. Timeline for Approval
The end-to-end credentialing loop encompassing property structural modifications, SCDPH health inspections, SCDDSN programmatic vetting, and final SCDHHS Medicaid system enrollment typically spans 4 to 7 months.
8. Pre-Application Process
Before filing state documents, prospective providers must complete foundational business setups. This includes registering their corporate entity with the South Carolina Secretary of State, acquiring or leasing an appropriate residential property meeting local safety and ADA rules, employing a licensed CRCF administrator, purchasing liability insurance, and obtaining a federal EIN along with an Organizational Type 2 NPI.
9. Pre-Application Training
The state mandates specific operational and compliance onboarding. Facility administrators must hold an active professional license from the state long-term care board, which requires passing comprehensive regulatory exams. Additionally, all Direct Support Professionals (DSPs) must complete modules covering Abuse, Neglect, and Exploitation (ANE) Prevention, Person-Centered Habilitation Planning, Medication Technician/Assistance training, and Crisis De-escalation Techniques.
10. Additional Notes
- Providers must ensure that residential environments meet strict staffing ratios: at least one staff member for every 8 residents during peak daytime hours, and one for every 30 residents during non-peak nighttime hours (with staff remaining awake in facilities with more than 8 beds)
- All residential care modifications, skill-building services, and shift logs must be executed directly by the certified agency's employed personnel
- Staff background clearances must be verified through SLED at hire and systematically re-screened every three years
- Providers must maintain comprehensive daily shift logs and individual care plans (ICPs), capturing specific goal achievements and tracking all services to ensure compliance with federal Olmstead and HCBS community integration benchmarks
Why Choose Waiver Consulting Group?
Starting or expanding your Medicaid waiver-funded agency can feel overwhelming, but it doesn't have to be. At Waiver Consulting Group, we simplify the process by guiding you through licensing, compliance, provider enrollment, policies & procedures, and regulato
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