HB 139

1
A bill to be entitled
2An act relating to child care facilities; amending s.
3402.302, F.S.; revising and providing definitions;
4providing for certain household children to be included in
5calculations regarding the capacity of licensed family day
6care homes and large family child care homes; providing
7conditions for supervision of household children of
8operators of family day care homes and large family child
9care homes; amending s. 402.318, F.S.; revising
10advertising requirements applicable to child care
11facilities; providing penalties; authorizing a cause of
12action against an unlicensed or unregistered individual if
13certain advertising requirements are not met; authorizing
14the award of attorney's fees and costs under certain
15conditions; amending s. 411.01, F.S.; conforming a cross-
16reference; providing an effective date.
17
18Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
19
20     Section 1.  Section 402.302, Florida Statutes, is amended
21to read:
22     402.302  Definitions.-As used in this chapter, the term:
23     (1)  "Child care" means the care, protection, and
24supervision of a child, for a period of less than 24 hours a day
25on a regular basis, which supplements parental care, enrichment,
26and health supervision for the child, in accordance with his or
27her individual needs, and for which a payment, fee, or grant is
28made for care.
29     (2)  "Child care facility" includes any child care center
30or child care arrangement which provides child care for more
31than five children unrelated to the operator and which receives
32a payment, fee, or grant for any of the children receiving care,
33wherever operated, and whether or not operated for profit. The
34following are not included:
35     (a)  Public schools and nonpublic schools and their
36integral programs, except as provided in s. 402.3025;
37     (b)  Summer camps having children in full-time residence;
38     (c)  Summer day camps;
39     (d)  Bible schools normally conducted during vacation
40periods; and
41     (e)  Operators of transient establishments, as defined in
42chapter 509, which provide child care services solely for the
43guests of their establishment or resort, provided that all child
44care personnel of the establishment are screened according to
45the level 2 screening requirements of chapter 435.
46     (3)  "Child care personnel" means all owners, operators,
47employees, and volunteers working in a child care facility. The
48term does not include persons who work in a child care facility
49after hours when children are not present or parents of children
50in a child care facility. For purposes of screening, the term
51includes any member, over the age of 12 years, of a child care
52facility operator's family, or person, over the age of 12 years,
53residing with a child care facility operator if the child care
54facility is located in or adjacent to the home of the operator
55or if the family member of, or person residing with, the child
56care facility operator has any direct contact with the children
57in the facility during its hours of operation. Members of the
58operator's family or persons residing with the operator who are
59between the ages of 12 years and 18 years are not required to be
60fingerprinted but must be screened for delinquency records. For
61purposes of screening, the term also includes persons who work
62in child care programs that provide care for children 15 hours
63or more each week in public or nonpublic schools, family day
64care homes, or programs otherwise exempted under s. 402.316. The
65term does not include public or nonpublic school personnel who
66are providing care during regular school hours, or after hours
67for activities related to a school's program for grades
68kindergarten through 12. A volunteer who assists on an
69intermittent basis for less than 10 hours per month is not
70included in the term "personnel" for the purposes of screening
71and training if a person who meets the screening requirement of
72s. 402.305(2) is always present and has the volunteer in his or
73her line of sight. Students who observe and participate in a
74child care facility as a part of their required coursework are
75not considered child care personnel, provided such observation
76and participation are on an intermittent basis and a person who
77meets the screening requirement of s. 402.305(2) is always
78present and has the student in his or her line of sight.
79     (4)  "Child welfare provider" means a licensed child-caring
80or child-placing agency.
81     (5)  "Department" means the Department of Children and
82Family Services.
83     (6)  "Drop-in child care" means child care provided
84occasionally in a child care facility in a shopping mall or
85business establishment where a child is in care for no more than
86a 4-hour period and the parent remains on the premises of the
87shopping mall or business establishment at all times. Drop-in
88child care arrangements shall meet all requirements for a child
89care facility unless specifically exempted.
90     (7)  "Evening child care" means child care provided during
91the evening hours and may encompass the hours of 6:00 p.m. to
927:00 a.m. to accommodate parents who work evenings and late-
93night shifts.
94     (8)  "Family day care home" means an occupied residence in
95which child care is regularly provided for children from at
96least two unrelated families and which receives a payment, fee,
97or grant for any of the children receiving care, whether or not
98operated for profit. Household children under 13 years of age,
99when on the premises of the family day care home or on a field
100trip with children enrolled in child care, shall be included in
101the overall capacity of the licensed home. A family day care
102home shall be allowed to provide care for one of the following
103groups of children, which shall include household those children
104under 13 years of age who are related to the caregiver:
105     (a)  A maximum of four children from birth to 12 months of
106age.
107     (b)  A maximum of three children from birth to 12 months of
108age, and other children, for a maximum total of six children.
109     (c)  A maximum of six preschool children if all are older
110than 12 months of age.
111     (d)  A maximum of 10 children if no more than 5 are
112preschool age and, of those 5, no more than 2 are under 12
113months of age.
114     (9)  "Household children" means children who are related by
115blood, marriage, or legal adoption to, or who are the legal
116wards of, the family day care home operator, the large family
117child care home operator, or an adult household member who
118permanently or temporarily resides in the home. Supervision of
119the operator's household children shall be left to the
120discretion of the operator unless those children receive
121subsidized child care to be in the home.
122     (10)  "Indoor recreational facility" means an indoor
123commercial facility which is established for the primary purpose
124of entertaining children in a planned fitness environment
125through equipment, games, and activities in conjunction with
126food service and which provides child care for a particular
127child no more than 4 hours on any one day. An indoor
128recreational facility must be licensed as a child care facility
129under s. 402.305, but is exempt from the minimum outdoor-square-
130footage-per-child requirement specified in that section, if the
131indoor recreational facility has, at a minimum, 3,000 square
132feet of usable indoor floor space.
133     (11)(9)  "Large family child care home" means an occupied
134residence in which child care is regularly provided for children
135from at least two unrelated families, which receives a payment,
136fee, or grant for any of the children receiving care, whether or
137not operated for profit, and which has at least two full-time
138child care personnel on the premises during the hours of
139operation. One of the two full-time child care personnel must be
140the owner or occupant of the residence. A large family child
141care home must first have operated as a licensed family day care
142home for 2 years, with an operator who has had a child
143development associate credential or its equivalent for 1 year,
144before seeking licensure as a large family child care home.
145Household children under 13 years of age, when on the premises
146of the large family child care home or on a field trip with
147children enrolled in child care, shall be included in the
148overall capacity of the licensed home. A large family child care
149home shall be allowed to provide care for one of the following
150groups of children, which shall include household those children
151under 13 years of age who are related to the caregiver:
152     (a)  A maximum of 8 children from birth to 24 months of
153age.
154     (b)  A maximum of 12 children, with no more than 4 children
155under 24 months of age.
156     (12)(11)  "Local licensing agency" means any agency or
157individual designated by the county to license child care
158facilities.
159     (13)(12)  "Operator" means any onsite person ultimately
160responsible for the overall operation of a child care facility,
161whether or not he or she is the owner or administrator of such
162facility.
163     (14)(13)  "Owner" means the person who is licensed to
164operate the child care facility.
165     (15)(14)  "Screening" means the act of assessing the
166background of child care personnel and volunteers and includes,
167but is not limited to, employment history checks, local criminal
168records checks through local law enforcement agencies,
169fingerprinting for all purposes and checks in this subsection,
170statewide criminal records checks through the Department of Law
171Enforcement, and federal criminal records checks through the
172Federal Bureau of Investigation.
173     (16)(15)  "Secretary" means the Secretary of Children and
174Family Services.
175     (17)(16)  "Substantial compliance" means that level of
176adherence which is sufficient to safeguard the health, safety,
177and well-being of all children under care. Substantial
178compliance is greater than minimal adherence but not to the
179level of absolute adherence. Where a violation or variation is
180identified as the type which impacts, or can be reasonably
181expected within 90 days to impact, the health, safety, or well-
182being of a child, there is no substantial compliance.
183     (18)(17)  "Weekend child care" means child care provided
184between the hours of 6 p.m. on Friday and 6 a.m. on Monday.
185     Section 2.  Section 402.318, Florida Statutes, is amended
186to read:
187     402.318  Advertisement.-
188     (1)  A No person, as defined in s. 1.01(3), may not shall
189advertise a child care facility, family day care home, or large
190family child care home without including within such
191advertisement the state or local agency license number or
192registration number of such facility or home. Violation of this
193subsection section is a misdemeanor of the first degree,
194punishable as provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083.
195     (2)  An individual or local licensing agency has a cause of
196action against an unlicensed or unregistered individual who
197violates subsection (1). The court shall award the prevailing
198party reasonable attorney's fees and costs incurred in
199connection with a claim filed under this section.
200     Section 3.  Paragraph (c) of subsection (5) of section
201411.01, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
202     411.01  School readiness programs; early learning
203coalitions.-
204     (5)  CREATION OF EARLY LEARNING COALITIONS.-
205     (c)  Program expectations.-
206     1.  The school readiness program must meet the following
207expectations:
208     a.  The program must, at a minimum, enhance the age-
209appropriate progress of each child in attaining the performance
210standards and outcome measures adopted by the Agency for
211Workforce Innovation.
212     b.  The program must provide extended-day and extended-year
213services to the maximum extent possible without compromising the
214quality of the program to meet the needs of parents who work.
215     c.  The program must provide a coordinated professional
216development system that supports the achievement and maintenance
217of core competencies by school readiness instructors in helping
218children attain the performance standards and outcome measures
219adopted by the Agency for Workforce Innovation.
220     d.  There must be expanded access to community services and
221resources for families to help achieve economic self-
222sufficiency.
223     e.  There must be a single point of entry and unified
224waiting list. As used in this sub-subparagraph, the term "single
225point of entry" means an integrated information system that
226allows a parent to enroll his or her child in the school
227readiness program at various locations throughout a county, that
228may allow a parent to enroll his or her child by telephone or
229through an Internet website, and that uses a unified waiting
230list to track eligible children waiting for enrollment in the
231school readiness program. The Agency for Workforce Innovation
232shall establish through technology a single statewide
233information system that each coalition must use for the purposes
234of managing the single point of entry, tracking children's
235progress, coordinating services among stakeholders, determining
236eligibility, tracking child attendance, and streamlining
237administrative processes for providers and early learning
238coalitions.
239     f.  The Agency for Workforce Innovation must consider the
240access of eligible children to the school readiness program, as
241demonstrated in part by waiting lists, before approving a
242proposed increase in payment rates submitted by an early
243learning coalition. In addition, early learning coalitions shall
244use school readiness funds made available due to enrollment
245shifts from school readiness programs to the Voluntary
246Prekindergarten Education Program for increasing the number of
247children served in school readiness programs before increasing
248payment rates.
249     g.  The program must meet all state licensing guidelines,
250where applicable.
251     h.  The program must ensure that minimum standards for
252child discipline practices are age-appropriate. Such standards
253must provide that children not be subjected to discipline that
254is severe, humiliating, or frightening or discipline that is
255associated with food, rest, or toileting. Spanking or any other
256form of physical punishment is prohibited.
257     2.  Each early learning coalition must implement a
258comprehensive program of school readiness services in accordance
259with the rules adopted by the agency which enhance the
260cognitive, social, and physical development of children to
261achieve the performance standards and outcome measures. At a
262minimum, these programs must contain the following system
263support service elements:
264     a.  Developmentally appropriate curriculum designed to
265enhance the age-appropriate progress of children in attaining
266the performance standards adopted by the Agency for Workforce
267Innovation under subparagraph (4)(d)8.
268     b.  A character development program to develop basic
269values.
270     c.  An age-appropriate screening of each child's
271development.
272     d.  An age-appropriate assessment administered to children
273when they enter a program and an age-appropriate assessment
274administered to children when they leave the program.
275     e.  An appropriate staff-to-children ratio, pursuant to s.
276402.305(4) or s. 402.302(8) or (11)(7) or (8), as applicable,
277and as verified pursuant to s. 402.311.
278     f.  A healthy and safe environment pursuant to s.
279401.305(5), (6), and (7), as applicable, and as verified
280pursuant to s. 402.311.
281     g.  A resource and referral network established under s.
282411.0101 to assist parents in making an informed choice and a
283regional Warm-Line under s. 411.01015.
284
285The Agency for Workforce Innovation, the Department of
286Education, and early learning coalitions shall coordinate with
287the Child Care Services Program Office of the Department of
288Children and Family Services to minimize duplicating interagency
289activities pertaining to acquiring and composing data for child
290care training and credentialing.
291     Section 4.  This act shall take effect July 1, 2011.


CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions.