Bill Text: FL S1234 | 2010 | Regular Session | Engrossed


Bill Title: Child Care Facilities/Licensing Standards [SPSC]

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)

Status: (Failed) 2010-04-30 - Died in Messages [S1234 Detail]

Download: Florida-2010-S1234-Engrossed.html
 
CS for CS for SB 1234                            First Engrossed 
20101234e1 
1                        A bill to be entitled 
2         An act relating to licensing standards for child care 
3         facilities; providing a short title; amending s. 
4         402.305, F.S.; providing minimum licensing 
5         requirements for window blinds and other window 
6         coverings; requiring child care facilities to retrofit 
7         window blinds, window coverings, pull cords, or inner 
8         cords by a specified date in order to eliminate cords 
9         that pose a risk of strangulation; providing a 
10         definition; authorizing the Department of Children and 
11         Family Services to provide certain information 
12         regarding window blinds and window coverings; 
13         authorizing the department to adopt rules; amending s. 
14         402.302, F.S.; revising and providing definitions; 
15         providing for certain household children to be 
16         included in calculations regarding the capacity of 
17         licensed family day care homes and large family child 
18         care homes; providing conditions for supervision of 
19         household children of operators of family day care 
20         homes and large family child care homes; amending s. 
21         402.318, F.S.; revising advertising requirements 
22         applicable to child care facilities; providing 
23         penalties; providing an effective date. 
24 
25  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 
26 
27         Section 1. This act may be cited as the “John F. Serrano, 
28  Rachel Lou Napier, and Alexandra Ali Safety and Accountability 
29  Act.” 
30         Section 2. Subsection (5) of section 402.305, Florida 
31  Statutes, is amended to read: 
32         402.305 Licensing standards; child care facilities.— 
33         (5) PHYSICAL FACILITIES.—Minimum standards shall include 
34  requirements for building conditions, indoor play space, outdoor 
35  play space, napping space, bathroom facilities, food preparation 
36  facilities, outdoor equipment, and indoor equipment. 
37         (a) Because of the nature and duration of drop-in child 
38  care, outdoor play space and outdoor equipment shall not be 
39  required for licensure; however, if such play space and 
40  equipment are provided, then the minimum standards shall apply 
41  to drop-in child care. With respect to minimum standards for 
42  physical facilities of a child care program for school-age 
43  children which is operated in a public school facility, the 
44  department shall adopt the State Uniform Building Code for 
45  Public Educational Facilities Construction as the minimum 
46  standards, regardless of the operator of the program. The 
47  Legislature intends that if a child care program for school-age 
48  children is operated in a public school, the program need not 
49  conform to standards for physical facilities other than the 
50  standards adopted by the Commissioner of Education. 
51         (b) Minimum requirements for licensure of a child care 
52  facility shall prohibit the use or installation of window blinds 
53  or other window coverings that have long dangling cords, pull 
54  cords, or inner cords capable of forming a loop and which 
55  thereby pose a risk of strangulation to young children. Window 
56  blinds and other window coverings that have been manufactured or 
57  properly retrofitted in a manner that eliminates long dangling 
58  cords, pull cords, inner cords, or the formation of loops that 
59  pose a risk of strangulation are not prohibited under this 
60  subsection. Cordless window blinds are recommended and are in 
61  compliance with this subsection. 
62         1. When developing and periodically reviewing minimum 
63  licensing requirements related to the safety and installation of 
64  window blinds and other window coverings in child care 
65  facilities, the department shall review and take into 
66  consideration the recommendations of the United States Consumer 
67  Product Safety Commission. 
68         2. Child care facilities must properly retrofit existing 
69  window blinds, window coverings, pull cords, or inner cords in 
70  accordance with this paragraph by January 1, 2011. For purposes 
71  of this subparagraph, “properly retrofit” means to modify in a 
72  manner that eliminates long dangling cords or the formation of 
73  inner or outer cord loops that pose a risk of child 
74  strangulation. 
75         3. The department may provide information regarding 
76  reduced-cost or no-cost options for retrofitting or replacing 
77  unsafe window blinds and window coverings. 
78         4.The department shall adopt rules to administer these 
79  requirements. 
80         Section 3. Section 402.302, Florida Statutes, is amended to 
81  read: 
82         402.302 Definitions.—As used in this chapter, the term: 
83         (1) “Child care” means the care, protection, and 
84  supervision of a child, for a period of less than 24 hours a day 
85  on a regular basis, which supplements parental care, enrichment, 
86  and health supervision for the child, in accordance with his or 
87  her individual needs, and for which a payment, fee, or grant is 
88  made for care. 
89         (2) “Child care facility” includes any child care center or 
90  child care arrangement which provides child care for more than 
91  five children unrelated to the operator and which receives a 
92  payment, fee, or grant for any of the children receiving care, 
93  wherever operated, and whether or not operated for profit. The 
94  following are not included: 
95         (a) Public schools and nonpublic schools and their integral 
96  programs, except as provided in s. 402.3025; 
97         (b) Summer camps having children in full-time residence; 
98         (c) Summer day camps; 
99         (d) Bible schools normally conducted during vacation 
100  periods; and 
101         (e) Operators of transient establishments, as defined in 
102  chapter 509, which provide child care services solely for the 
103  guests of their establishment or resort, provided that all child 
104  care personnel of the establishment are screened according to 
105  the level 2 screening requirements of chapter 435. 
106         (3) “Child care personnel” means all owners, operators, 
107  employees, and volunteers working in a child care facility. The 
108  term does not include persons who work in a child care facility 
109  after hours when children are not present or parents of children 
110  in Head Start. For purposes of screening, the term includes any 
111  member, over the age of 12 years, of a child care facility 
112  operator’s family, or person, over the age of 12 years, residing 
113  with a child care facility operator if the child care facility 
114  is located in or adjacent to the home of the operator or if the 
115  family member of, or person residing with, the child care 
116  facility operator has any direct contact with the children in 
117  the facility during its hours of operation. Members of the 
118  operator’s family or persons residing with the operator who are 
119  between the ages of 12 years and 18 years shall not be required 
120  to be fingerprinted but shall be screened for delinquency 
121  records. For purposes of screening, the term shall also include 
122  persons who work in child care programs which provide care for 
123  children 15 hours or more each week in public or nonpublic 
124  schools, summer day camps, family day care homes, or those 
125  programs otherwise exempted under s. 402.316. The term does not 
126  include public or nonpublic school personnel who are providing 
127  care during regular school hours, or after hours for activities 
128  related to a school’s program for grades kindergarten through 
129  12. A volunteer who assists on an intermittent basis for less 
130  than 40 hours per month is not included in the term “personnel” 
131  for the purposes of screening and training, provided that the 
132  volunteer is under direct and constant supervision by persons 
133  who meet the personnel requirements of s. 402.305(2). Students 
134  who observe and participate in a child care facility as a part 
135  of their required coursework shall not be considered child care 
136  personnel, provided such observation and participation are on an 
137  intermittent basis and the students are under direct and 
138  constant supervision of child care personnel. 
139         (4) “Department” means the Department of Children and 
140  Family Services. 
141         (5) “Drop-in child care” means child care provided 
142  occasionally in a child care facility in a shopping mall or 
143  business establishment where a child is in care for no more than 
144  a 4-hour period and the parent remains on the premises of the 
145  shopping mall or business establishment at all times. Drop-in 
146  child care arrangements shall meet all requirements for a child 
147  care facility unless specifically exempted. 
148         (6) “Evening child care” means child care provided during 
149  the evening hours and may encompass the hours of 6:00 p.m. to 
150  7:00 a.m. to accommodate parents who work evenings and late 
151  night shifts. 
152         (7) “Family day care home” means an occupied residence in 
153  which child care is regularly provided for children from at 
154  least two unrelated families and which receives a payment, fee, 
155  or grant for any of the children receiving care, whether or not 
156  operated for profit. Household children under 13 years of age, 
157  when on the premises of the family day care home or on a field 
158  trip with children enrolled in child care, shall be included in 
159  the overall capacity of the licensed home. A family day care 
160  home shall be allowed to provide care for one of the following 
161  groups of children, which shall include household those children 
162  under 13 years of age who are related to the caregiver: 
163         (a) A maximum of four children from birth to 12 months of 
164  age. 
165         (b) A maximum of three children from birth to 12 months of 
166  age, and other children, for a maximum total of six children. 
167         (c) A maximum of six preschool children if all are older 
168  than 12 months of age. 
169         (d) A maximum of 10 children if no more than 5 are 
170  preschool age and, of those 5, no more than 2 are under 12 
171  months of age. 
172         (8) “Household children” means children who are related by 
173  blood, marriage, or legal adoption to, or who are the legal 
174  wards of, the family day care home operator, the large family 
175  child care home operator, or an adult household member who 
176  permanently or temporarily resides in the home. Supervision of 
177  the operator’s household children shall be left to the 
178  discretion of the operator unless those children receive 
179  subsidized child care to be in the home. 
180         (9)(8) “Large family child care home” means an occupied 
181  residence in which child care is regularly provided for children 
182  from at least two unrelated families, which receives a payment, 
183  fee, or grant for any of the children receiving care, whether or 
184  not operated for profit, and which has at least two full-time 
185  child care personnel on the premises during the hours of 
186  operation. One of the two full-time child care personnel must be 
187  the owner or occupant of the residence. A large family child 
188  care home must first have operated as a licensed family day care 
189  home for 2 years, with an operator who has had a child 
190  development associate credential or its equivalent for 1 year, 
191  before seeking licensure as a large family child care home. 
192  Household children under 13 years of age, when on the premises 
193  of the large family child care home or on a field trip with 
194  children enrolled in child care, shall be included in the 
195  overall capacity of the licensed home. A large family child care 
196  home shall be allowed to provide care for one of the following 
197  groups of children, which shall include household those children 
198  under 13 years of age who are related to the caregiver: 
199         (a) A maximum of 8 children from birth to 24 months of age. 
200         (b) A maximum of 12 children, with no more than 4 children 
201  under 24 months of age. 
202         (10)(9) “Indoor recreational facility” means an indoor 
203  commercial facility which is established for the primary purpose 
204  of entertaining children in a planned fitness environment 
205  through equipment, games, and activities in conjunction with 
206  food service and which provides child care for a particular 
207  child no more than 4 hours on any one day. An indoor 
208  recreational facility must be licensed as a child care facility 
209  under s. 402.305, but is exempt from the minimum outdoor-square 
210  footage-per-child requirement specified in that section, if the 
211  indoor recreational facility has, at a minimum, 3,000 square 
212  feet of usable indoor floor space. 
213         (11)(10) “Local licensing agency” means any agency or 
214  individual designated by the county to license child care 
215  facilities. 
216         (12)(11) “Operator” means any onsite person ultimately 
217  responsible for the overall operation of a child care facility, 
218  whether or not he or she is the owner or administrator of such 
219  facility. 
220         (13)(12) “Owner” means the person who is licensed to 
221  operate the child care facility. 
222         (14)(13) “Screening” means the act of assessing the 
223  background of child care personnel and volunteers and includes, 
224  but is not limited to, employment history checks, local criminal 
225  records checks through local law enforcement agencies, 
226  fingerprinting for all purposes and checks in this subsection, 
227  statewide criminal records checks through the Department of Law 
228  Enforcement, and federal criminal records checks through the 
229  Federal Bureau of Investigation. 
230         (15)(14) “Secretary” means the Secretary of Children and 
231  Family Services. 
232         (16)(15) “Substantial compliance” means that level of 
233  adherence which is sufficient to safeguard the health, safety, 
234  and well-being of all children under care. Substantial 
235  compliance is greater than minimal adherence but not to the 
236  level of absolute adherence. Where a violation or variation is 
237  identified as the type which impacts, or can be reasonably 
238  expected within 90 days to impact, the health, safety, or well 
239  being of a child, there is no substantial compliance. 
240         (17)(16) “Weekend child care” means child care provided 
241  between the hours of 6 p.m. on Friday and 6 a.m. on Monday. 
242         Section 4. Section 402.318, Florida Statutes, is amended to 
243  read: 
244         402.318 Advertisement.—No person, as defined in s. 1.01(3), 
245  shall advertise or publish an advertisement for a child care 
246  facility, family day care home, or large family child care home 
247  without including within such advertisement the state or local 
248  agency license number or registration number of such facility or 
249  home. Violation of this section is a misdemeanor of the first 
250  degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083. 
251         Section 5. This act shall take effect July 1, 2010. 
feedback