SUBJECT: |
CLARIFICATION OF A FAMILY HOME PROVIDER CHILD CARE POLICY
MANUAL REVISION #01
SECTIONS 1215.010.00 AND 1215.010.05 REFERENCE: FAMILY SUPPORT AND CHILDREN’S DIVISIONS |
DISCUSSION: |
This memorandum clarifies when a family home child care
provider must be licensed and when they may claim license exempt
status. In addition, this memorandum outlines necessary
procedures when a registered family home provider exceeds the legal
capacity of children in care and when a registered family home provider
pursues licensure.
DEFINITION OF A FAMILY HOME PROVIDER A Family Home provider is a child care provider who cares for children in the provider’s own home. These providers may be:
Providers in this category may keep any number of children who are related to them, up to and including the third degree of relationship (grandchildren, nieces/nephews). Any child in the provider’s care who is not related within the third degree, or unrelated entirely must be counted in the provider’s total number of unrelated children. REQUIREMENTS FOR FAMILY HOME PROVIDERS Licensed Providers Providers that care for five to ten children in the provider’s home must be licensed as a Family Home provider through the Department of Health and Senior Services (DHSS)/Bureau of Child Care. Once licensure is established, the provider must complete a Family Home Child Care Contract before payment from the Department of Social Services can be issued. This will be discussed in further detail later in this memorandum. License-exempt Providers One type of license-exempt provider is a license-exempt family home provider that cares for no more than four children that are unrelated to the provider. This provider may be a neighbor, grandparent, aunt, uncle or adult sibling (not living in the child’s home) of the child care family. At no time can a license exempt provider, requesting subsidy payments, be a sibling by blood, marriage or adoption who is living in the home of the child in care or a parent to the child in care. Exemption from child care licensure is based on statute RsMO 210.211, subsection (1,) which states that “care provided to four or less unrelated children is exempt from licensure”. FSD policy is based, in part, on the DHSS, Bureau of Child Care, regulations, which further delineates this issue.
In order for license-exempt providers to receive payment from the
Department of Social Services, the provider must meet FSD and DHSS
requirements, which include:
License-exempt family
home providers may not:
Staff may not authorize
additional unrelated children to license-exempt family home (FOL)
providers when the provider already cares for four unrelated children.
If the provider or parent state that one or more of the children
already in their care are related to the provider, request proof of the
provider’s relationship to the child. Relationship between the
provider and the child in care exists for any blood relative including
those of half-blood, step, adopted, and first cousins. Verify the
relationship using standard verification methods such as birth and
death certificates or hospital records, which are discussed in Child
Care policy,
1210.005.05,
Relationship Of The Applicant To The Child.
Proof of the provider’s relationship to the child(ren) in care must be
requested any time the provider or the parent states that the child is
related to the provider.
Staff
must use the Comment screen, attached to the Child Authorization screen
(FM30/CCAUTH), to record the explanation and method of verification of
the provider’s relationship to any related child authorized to them for
payment.
Once relationship of a specific provider to the child is documented in
the Comments section of the Child Authorization screen, that
relationship does not need to be reverified.
COUNTY ACTION FOR ACTIVE ELIGIBILITY UNITS WITH CHILDREN AUTHORIZED TO
AN “FOL” PROVIDER:
When a family re-applies for child care assistance, review the total
number of children authorized to the “FOL” provider assigned to the
family by accessing the “View Authorizations” screen (FM52).
When an “FOL” provider’s child authorizations listed on FM52
exceed
four children, staff is instructed to check for relationship using the
following guidelines:
Do not close any child
authorizations solely based on your review of the View Authorizations
(FM52) screen.
Inform any new parent/s wishing to use the services of a provider whose
authorizations for unrelated children exceed four, that their child/ren
may not be authorized for care and refer them to the local Child Care
Resource and Referral agency. Although an eligible family may not be
able to access their child care benefits because of a provider’s
non-compliance, do not close the family’s eligibility solely because
their selected provider is not valid.
When documentation verifies that children in the provider’s care are
related to the provider, the provider may have additional unrelated
children authorized to them as long as the total number of unrelated
children does not exceed four.
STEPS TO TAKE WHEN A REGISTERED FAMILY HOME PROVIDER CARES FOR MORE
THAN FOUR UNRELATED CHILDREN:
If proof of relationship is not submitted or does not establish
relationship, notify the provider and the eligible families that they
must determine if they wish to continue services with this provider or
select another provider. The provider and families must determine
which children may remain in the provider’s care. Families
that must seek alternative child care arrangements are to be referred
to their local Child Care Resource and Referral agency. At no time
shall FSD staff decide which families must make new care arrangements
in order to access benefits.
When relationship does not exist or neither party (family or provider)
submits proof of relationship of the children to the provider, the
family and provider must have advance written notification that subsidy
payments will end.
For providers that do not comply after all efforts have been made by
the agency, staff is instructed to begin the process of closing the
provider’s registration. NOTE: Staff must make every effort
to obtain appropriate and thorough documentation of relationship before
determining an “FOL” provider is out of compliance and closing the
child care provider’s registration.
1. Send the attached provider notice to the provider informing them
that their registration will be closed at the end of
ten business days due to capacity non-compliance.
This notice gives the provider advance notice that their registration
is closing. The provider is not eligible for a hearing on this decision
or to have their registration continued pending further
investigation. You may add the names of the eligible families,
whose children are in care with this provider, to the bottom of the
provider’s notice for your future reference. (The Provider Advance
notice
is attached.)
2. Send the attached family notice to the families with children in
care with this provider informing them that they will not be able to
access their child care benefits unless the provider complies in ten
business days from the date on the notice. (The Parent Advance
notice
is attached.) The notice also informs the family that they
are responsible for the entire cost of care once the provider’s
registration is closed and refers them to the their local Child Care
Resource and Referral agency for help locating another provider.
3. When the provider or family has not submitted proof of relationship
prior to notice expiration, close the provider registration the day
after the deadline date on the provider’s advance notice.
4. Send the
attached
closing letters to families and providers that
informs them that DSS no longer pays for child care services because of
a capacity non-compliance issue.
REGISTERED PROVIDERS PURSUING LICENSURE
When a registered family home provider pursues licensure, either from a
licensing referral due to non-compliance or independently, the provider
must care for no more than four unrelated children while their license
is in pending status in order to continue receiving payment from
DSS. If the provider is already caring for four unrelated
children, no new unrelated children may be authorized to the provider
during this process.
When licensure is approved, the local office contract designee must
send a Daycare Contract, specific to the facility type assigned by
DHSS, to the provider for completion. The facility type is
located on the MOHSAIC site on the DSS Intranet. When the MOHSAIC
information indicates that the license is ACTIVE, the provider is
eligible to enter into a contract with DSS. The contract begin
date may be the same as the license begin date in MOHSAIC. (See
IM Memorandum-# 201
(2001) for more information about MOHSAIC).
Once the licensed provider returns the completed contract to the local
FSD office, write the date received on the contract. Prior to
submitting the contract to Central Office:
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NECESSARY ACTION: |
Attachments:
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