CS/CS/HB 139

1
A bill to be entitled
2An act relating to child care facilities; amending s.
3402.281, F.S.; revising the criteria for a child care
4facility, large family child care home, or family day care
5home to obtain and maintain a designation as a Gold Seal
6Quality Care provider; amending s. 402.302, F.S.; revising
7and providing definitions; providing for certain household
8children to be included in calculations regarding the
9capacity of licensed family day care homes and large
10family child care homes; providing conditions for
11supervision of household children of operators of family
12day care homes and large family child care homes; amending
13s. 402.318, F.S.; revising advertising requirements
14applicable to child care facilities; providing penalties;
15amending s. 411.01, F.S.; conforming a cross-reference;
16providing an effective date.
17
18Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
19
20     Section 1.  Paragraph (c) of subsection (4) of section
21402.281, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
22     402.281  Gold Seal Quality Care program.-
23     (4)  In order to obtain and maintain a designation as a
24Gold Seal Quality Care provider, a child care facility, large
25family child care home, or family day care home must meet the
26following additional criteria:
27     (c)  The child care provider must not have been cited for
28the same class III violation, as defined by rule, three or more
29times and failed to correct the violation within 1 year after
30the date of each citation, within the 2 years preceding its
31application for designation as a Gold Seal Quality Care
32provider. Commission of the same class III violation three or
33more times and failure to correct within the required time
34during a 2-year period may shall be grounds for termination of
35the designation as a Gold Seal Quality Care provider until the
36provider has no class III violations for a period of 1 year.
37     Section 2.  Section 402.302, Florida Statutes, is amended
38to read:
39     402.302  Definitions.-As used in this chapter, the term:
40     (1)  "Child care" means the care, protection, and
41supervision of a child, for a period of less than 24 hours a day
42on a regular basis, which supplements parental care, enrichment,
43and health supervision for the child, in accordance with his or
44her individual needs, and for which a payment, fee, or grant is
45made for care.
46     (2)  "Child care facility" includes any child care center
47or child care arrangement which provides child care for more
48than five children unrelated to the operator and which receives
49a payment, fee, or grant for any of the children receiving care,
50wherever operated, and whether or not operated for profit. The
51following are not included:
52     (a)  Public schools and nonpublic schools and their
53integral programs, except as provided in s. 402.3025;
54     (b)  Summer camps having children in full-time residence;
55     (c)  Summer day camps;
56     (d)  Bible schools normally conducted during vacation
57periods; and
58     (e)  Operators of transient establishments, as defined in
59chapter 509, which provide child care services solely for the
60guests of their establishment or resort, provided that all child
61care personnel of the establishment are screened according to
62the level 2 screening requirements of chapter 435.
63     (3)  "Child care personnel" means all owners, operators,
64employees, and volunteers working in a child care facility. The
65term does not include persons who work in a child care facility
66after hours when children are not present or parents of children
67in a child care facility. For purposes of screening, the term
68includes any member, over the age of 12 years, of a child care
69facility operator's family, or person, over the age of 12 years,
70residing with a child care facility operator if the child care
71facility is located in or adjacent to the home of the operator
72or if the family member of, or person residing with, the child
73care facility operator has any direct contact with the children
74in the facility during its hours of operation. Members of the
75operator's family or persons residing with the operator who are
76between the ages of 12 years and 18 years are not required to be
77fingerprinted but must be screened for delinquency records. For
78purposes of screening, the term also includes persons who work
79in child care programs that provide care for children 15 hours
80or more each week in public or nonpublic schools, family day
81care homes, or programs otherwise exempted under s. 402.316. The
82term does not include public or nonpublic school personnel who
83are providing care during regular school hours, or after hours
84for activities related to a school's program for grades
85kindergarten through 12. A volunteer who assists on an
86intermittent basis for less than 10 hours per month is not
87included in the term "personnel" for the purposes of screening
88and training if a person who meets the screening requirement of
89s. 402.305(2) is always present and has the volunteer in his or
90her line of sight. Students who observe and participate in a
91child care facility as a part of their required coursework are
92not considered child care personnel, provided such observation
93and participation are on an intermittent basis and a person who
94meets the screening requirement of s. 402.305(2) is always
95present and has the student in his or her line of sight.
96     (4)  "Child welfare provider" means a licensed child-caring
97or child-placing agency.
98     (5)  "Department" means the Department of Children and
99Family Services.
100     (6)  "Drop-in child care" means child care provided
101occasionally in a child care facility in a shopping mall or
102business establishment where a child is in care for no more than
103a 4-hour period and the parent remains on the premises of the
104shopping mall or business establishment at all times. Drop-in
105child care arrangements shall meet all requirements for a child
106care facility unless specifically exempted.
107     (7)  "Evening child care" means child care provided during
108the evening hours and may encompass the hours of 6:00 p.m. to
1097:00 a.m. to accommodate parents who work evenings and late-
110night shifts.
111     (8)  "Family day care home" means an occupied residence in
112which child care is regularly provided for children from at
113least two unrelated families and which receives a payment, fee,
114or grant for any of the children receiving care, whether or not
115operated for profit. Household children under 13 years of age,
116when on the premises of the family day care home or on a field
117trip with children enrolled in child care, shall be included in
118the overall capacity of the licensed home. A family day care
119home shall be allowed to provide care for one of the following
120groups of children, which shall include household those children
121under 13 years of age who are related to the caregiver:
122     (a)  A maximum of four children from birth to 12 months of
123age.
124     (b)  A maximum of three children from birth to 12 months of
125age, and other children, for a maximum total of six children.
126     (c)  A maximum of six preschool children if all are older
127than 12 months of age.
128     (d)  A maximum of 10 children if no more than 5 are
129preschool age and, of those 5, no more than 2 are under 12
130months of age.
131     (9)  "Household children" means children who are related by
132blood, marriage, or legal adoption to, or who are the legal
133wards of, the family day care home operator, the large family
134child care home operator, or an adult household member who
135permanently or temporarily resides in the home. Supervision of
136the operator's household children shall be left to the
137discretion of the operator unless those children receive
138subsidized child care through the School Readiness Program
139pursuant to s. 411.0101 to be in the home.
140     (10)  "Indoor recreational facility" means an indoor
141commercial facility which is established for the primary purpose
142of entertaining children in a planned fitness environment
143through equipment, games, and activities in conjunction with
144food service and which provides child care for a particular
145child no more than 4 hours on any one day. An indoor
146recreational facility must be licensed as a child care facility
147under s. 402.305, but is exempt from the minimum outdoor-square-
148footage-per-child requirement specified in that section, if the
149indoor recreational facility has, at a minimum, 3,000 square
150feet of usable indoor floor space.
151     (11)(9)  "Large family child care home" means an occupied
152residence in which child care is regularly provided for children
153from at least two unrelated families, which receives a payment,
154fee, or grant for any of the children receiving care, whether or
155not operated for profit, and which has at least two full-time
156child care personnel on the premises during the hours of
157operation. One of the two full-time child care personnel must be
158the owner or occupant of the residence. A large family child
159care home must first have operated as a licensed family day care
160home for 2 years, with an operator who has had a child
161development associate credential or its equivalent for 1 year,
162before seeking licensure as a large family child care home.
163Household children under 13 years of age, when on the premises
164of the large family child care home or on a field trip with
165children enrolled in child care, shall be included in the
166overall capacity of the licensed home. A large family child care
167home shall be allowed to provide care for one of the following
168groups of children, which shall include household those children
169under 13 years of age who are related to the caregiver:
170     (a)  A maximum of 8 children from birth to 24 months of
171age.
172     (b)  A maximum of 12 children, with no more than 4 children
173under 24 months of age.
174     (12)(11)  "Local licensing agency" means any agency or
175individual designated by the county to license child care
176facilities.
177     (13)(12)  "Operator" means any onsite person ultimately
178responsible for the overall operation of a child care facility,
179whether or not he or she is the owner or administrator of such
180facility.
181     (14)(13)  "Owner" means the person who is licensed to
182operate the child care facility.
183     (15)(14)  "Screening" means the act of assessing the
184background of child care personnel and volunteers and includes,
185but is not limited to, employment history checks, local criminal
186records checks through local law enforcement agencies,
187fingerprinting for all purposes and checks in this subsection,
188statewide criminal records checks through the Department of Law
189Enforcement, and federal criminal records checks through the
190Federal Bureau of Investigation.
191     (16)(15)  "Secretary" means the Secretary of Children and
192Family Services.
193     (17)(16)  "Substantial compliance" means that level of
194adherence which is sufficient to safeguard the health, safety,
195and well-being of all children under care. Substantial
196compliance is greater than minimal adherence but not to the
197level of absolute adherence. Where a violation or variation is
198identified as the type which impacts, or can be reasonably
199expected within 90 days to impact, the health, safety, or well-
200being of a child, there is no substantial compliance.
201     (18)(17)  "Weekend child care" means child care provided
202between the hours of 6 p.m. on Friday and 6 a.m. on Monday.
203     Section 3.  Section 402.318, Florida Statutes, is amended
204to read:
205     402.318  Advertisement.-A No person, as defined in s.
2061.01(3), may not shall advertise a child care facility, family
207day care home, or large family child care home without including
208within such advertisement the state or local agency license
209number or registration number of such facility or home.
210Violation of this section is a misdemeanor of the first degree,
211punishable as provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083.
212     Section 4.  Paragraph (c) of subsection (5) of section
213411.01, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
214     411.01  School readiness programs; early learning
215coalitions.-
216     (5)  CREATION OF EARLY LEARNING COALITIONS.-
217     (c)  Program expectations.-
218     1.  The school readiness program must meet the following
219expectations:
220     a.  The program must, at a minimum, enhance the age-
221appropriate progress of each child in attaining the performance
222standards and outcome measures adopted by the Agency for
223Workforce Innovation.
224     b.  The program must provide extended-day and extended-year
225services to the maximum extent possible without compromising the
226quality of the program to meet the needs of parents who work.
227     c.  The program must provide a coordinated professional
228development system that supports the achievement and maintenance
229of core competencies by school readiness instructors in helping
230children attain the performance standards and outcome measures
231adopted by the Agency for Workforce Innovation.
232     d.  There must be expanded access to community services and
233resources for families to help achieve economic self-
234sufficiency.
235     e.  There must be a single point of entry and unified
236waiting list. As used in this sub-subparagraph, the term "single
237point of entry" means an integrated information system that
238allows a parent to enroll his or her child in the school
239readiness program at various locations throughout a county, that
240may allow a parent to enroll his or her child by telephone or
241through an Internet website, and that uses a unified waiting
242list to track eligible children waiting for enrollment in the
243school readiness program. The Agency for Workforce Innovation
244shall establish through technology a single statewide
245information system that each coalition must use for the purposes
246of managing the single point of entry, tracking children's
247progress, coordinating services among stakeholders, determining
248eligibility, tracking child attendance, and streamlining
249administrative processes for providers and early learning
250coalitions.
251     f.  The Agency for Workforce Innovation must consider the
252access of eligible children to the school readiness program, as
253demonstrated in part by waiting lists, before approving a
254proposed increase in payment rates submitted by an early
255learning coalition. In addition, early learning coalitions shall
256use school readiness funds made available due to enrollment
257shifts from school readiness programs to the Voluntary
258Prekindergarten Education Program for increasing the number of
259children served in school readiness programs before increasing
260payment rates.
261     g.  The program must meet all state licensing guidelines,
262where applicable.
263     h.  The program must ensure that minimum standards for
264child discipline practices are age-appropriate. Such standards
265must provide that children not be subjected to discipline that
266is severe, humiliating, or frightening or discipline that is
267associated with food, rest, or toileting. Spanking or any other
268form of physical punishment is prohibited.
269     2.  Each early learning coalition must implement a
270comprehensive program of school readiness services in accordance
271with the rules adopted by the agency which enhance the
272cognitive, social, and physical development of children to
273achieve the performance standards and outcome measures. At a
274minimum, these programs must contain the following system
275support service elements:
276     a.  Developmentally appropriate curriculum designed to
277enhance the age-appropriate progress of children in attaining
278the performance standards adopted by the Agency for Workforce
279Innovation under subparagraph (4)(d)8.
280     b.  A character development program to develop basic
281values.
282     c.  An age-appropriate screening of each child's
283development.
284     d.  An age-appropriate assessment administered to children
285when they enter a program and an age-appropriate assessment
286administered to children when they leave the program.
287     e.  An appropriate staff-to-children ratio, pursuant to s.
288402.305(4) or s. 402.302(8) or (11)(7) or (8), as applicable,
289and as verified pursuant to s. 402.311.
290     f.  A healthy and safe environment pursuant to s.
291401.305(5), (6), and (7), as applicable, and as verified
292pursuant to s. 402.311.
293     g.  A resource and referral network established under s.
294411.0101 to assist parents in making an informed choice and a
295regional Warm-Line under s. 411.01015.
296
297The Agency for Workforce Innovation, the Department of
298Education, and early learning coalitions shall coordinate with
299the Child Care Services Program Office of the Department of
300Children and Family Services to minimize duplicating interagency
301activities pertaining to acquiring and composing data for child
302care training and credentialing.
303     Section 5.  This act shall take effect July 1, 2011.


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