The direct answer is NOT SPECIFICALLY.
Many companies have affiliations with state agencies, but that term is a bit vague.
If the company in question has the state logo or seal on it, then you probabaly have a 'state job'.
most companies affiliated with whatever state, have contracts with the state for specific services or products.
I have a friend who is a quadriplegiac. A number of the people who work with him and help him get out of bed in the morning work for a service company that provided attendants to match his physical needs. They are trained and certified for that job according to state requirements, but they are employed by the company and not nthe state.
In Ohio, where I am, there are contrected companies who care for the needs of someone like my friend. They are called MCOs or Managed Care/Master Care Organisations. People who work for these companies are not employees of the State of Ohio, they are employees of the MCO.
In essence; the MCO has a service contract with the state-They provide a service and bill the state for the service according to the guidelines the bstate specifices in its code identity book.
The people who actually do the work, bill the MCO in the same way. This way, the State of Ohio pays for contractor services from a company and they get one big bill, without any collection of individuals to screw things up
Client-to-aide- to-MCO-to State- and backward at billing.
This dumps all the headaches in payroll on the MCO and not the state directly.
2007-06-03 16:46:32
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answer #1
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answered by jimdragontech 5
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