AB 274, as amended, Bonilla. Child care and development services.
(1) The Child Care and Development Services Act, administered by the State Department of Education, provides that children up to 13 years of age are eligible, with certain requirements, for child care and development services. The act requires the department to contract with local contracting agencies to provide for alternative payment programs, and authorizes alternative payment programs for services provided in licensed centers and family day care homes and for other types of programs that conform to applicable law.
This bill would require child care providers authorized to provide services pursuant to those provisions to submit to the alternative payment program a monthly attendance record or invoice for each child who received services that documentsbegin delete certified needs andend delete
hours of care providedbegin insert based on need certified by the alternative payment program. The bill would specify the meaning of “attendance” for purposes of reimbursement to providers through an alternative payment end insertbegin insertprogramend insert. The bill would require the monthly attendance record or invoicebegin delete to be signed byend deletebegin insert to include the dates and times of attendance, and would require verification of attendance to be made by single signature, under penalty of perjury, of bothend insert the parent or guardian of the child receiving services and the child care providerbegin delete once per month to attest that the child’s attendance is accurately reflected. The bill would
require that the verification be made by signature and signed, as of the end of each month and under penalty of perjury, by both the parent or guardian and the child care providerend delete. By expanding the scope of the crime of perjury, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program. The bill would require alternative payment providers to accept the monthly attendance record or invoice as documentation of thebegin delete certified need andend delete hours of care provided.
The bill would also authorize alternative payment programs and providers to maintain records electronically, including, but not limited to, child immunization records.
(2) Existing law authorizes the Superintendent of Public Instruction to enter into and execute local contractual agreements with any public or private entity or agency for the delivery of child care and development services related to the delivery of child care and development services or the furnishing of property, facilities, personnel, supplies, equipment, and administrative services related to the delivery of child care development services.
This bill would require the department, on and afterbegin delete January 1, 2016end deletebegin insert the date on which the Superintendent determines that the Financial Information System for California has been implemented within the departmentend insert, at the request of a contractor, to request the Controller to make payments via direct deposit by electronicbegin delete fundend deletebegin insert fundsend insert transfer, as
specified.
(3) The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: yes.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
begin insertSection 8208 of the end insertbegin insertEducation
Codeend insertbegin insert is amended
2to read:end insert
As used in this chapter:
4(a) “Alternative payments” includes payments that are made by
5one child care agency to another agency or child care provider for
6the provision of child care and development services, and payments
7that are made by an agency to a parent for the parent’s purchase
8of child care and development services.
9(b) “Alternative payment program” means a local government
10agency or nonprofit organization that has contracted with the
11department pursuant to Section 8220.1 to provide alternative
12payments and to provide support services to parents and providers.
13(c) “Applicant or contracting agency” means a school district,
14community college district,
college or university, county
15superintendent of schools, county, city, public agency, private
16nontax-exempt agency, private tax-exempt agency, or other entity
17that is authorized to establish, maintain, or operate services
18pursuant to this chapter. Private agencies and parent cooperatives,
19duly licensed by law, shall receive the same consideration as any
20other authorized entity with no loss of parental decisionmaking
21prerogatives as consistent with the provisions of this chapter.
22(d) “Assigned reimbursement rate” is that rate established by
23the contract with the agency and is derived by dividing the total
24dollar amount of the contract by the minimum child day of average
25daily enrollment level of service required.
26(e) begin insert(1)end insertbegin insert end insert “Attendance” means the number of children present at
27a child care and development facilitybegin delete. “Attendance,” forend deletebegin insert
where
28services are provided.end insert
29begin insert(2)end insertbegin insert end insertbegin insertForend insert purposes of reimbursement,begin insert attendanceend insert includes excused
30absencesbegin delete byend deletebegin insert ofend insert children because of illness, quarantine, illness or
31quarantine of their parent, family emergency, or to spend time with
32a parent or other relative as required by a court of law or that is
33clearly in the best interest of the child.
34(3) For purposes of reimbursement to providers through an
35alternative payment program, attendance includes any of the
36following:
37(A) The hours of service provided that are broadly consistent
38with certified hours of need.
P4 1(B) For families with variable schedules, the actual days and
2hours of attendance up to the maximum certified hours.
3(C) In the case of license-exempt providers that provide
4part-time services, the actual days and hours of
attendance.
5(4) For purposes of reimbursement to providers through an
6alternative payment program, contractors shall not be required
7to track absences.
8(f) “Capital outlay” means the amount paid for the renovation
9and repair of child care and development facilities to comply with
10state and local health and safety standards, and the amount paid
11for the state purchase of relocatable child care and development
12facilities for lease to qualifying contracting agencies.
13(g) “Caregiver” means a person who provides direct care,
14supervision, and guidance to children in a child care and
15development facility.
16(h) “Child care and
development facility” means a residence or
17building or partbegin delete thereofend deletebegin insert of a residence or buildingend insert in which child
18care and development services are provided.
19(i) “Child care and development programs” means those
20programs that offer a full range of services for children from
21infancy to 13 years of age, for any part of a day, by a public or
22private agency, in centers and family child care homes. These
23programs include, but are not limited to, all of the following:
24(1) General child care and development.
25(2) Migrant child care and development.
26(3) Child care provided by
the California School Age Families
27Education Program (Article 7.1 (commencing with Section 54740)
28of Chapter 9 of Part 29 of Division 4 of Title 2).
29(4) California state preschool program.
30(5) Resource and referral.
31(6) Child care and development services for children with
32exceptional needs.
33(7) Family child care home education network.
34(8) Alternative payment.
35(9) Schoolage community child care.
36(j) “Child care and development services” means those services
37designed to meet a wide variety of needs of children and their
38families, while their parents or guardians
are working, in training,
39seeking employment, incapacitated, or in need of respite. These
40services may include direct care and supervision, instructional
P5 1activities, resource and referral programs, and alternative payment
2arrangements.
3(k) “Children at risk of abuse, neglect, or exploitation” means
4children who are so identified in a written referral from a legal,
5medical, or social service agency, or emergency shelter.
6(l) “Children with exceptional needs” means either of the
7following:
8(1) Infants and toddlers under three years of age who have been
9determined to be eligible for early intervention services pursuant
10to the California Early Intervention Services Act (Title 14
11(commencing with Section 95000) of the Government Code) and
12its implementing regulations. These children include an infant or
13toddler with a
developmental delay or established risk condition,
14or who is at high risk of having a substantial developmental
15disability, as defined in subdivision (a) of Section 95014 of the
16Government Code. These children shall have active individualized
17family service plans, shall be receiving early intervention services,
18and shall be children who require the special attention of adults in
19a child care setting.
20(2) Children 3 to 21 years of age, inclusive, who have been
21determined to be eligible for special education and related services
22by an individualized education program team according to the
23special education requirements contained in Part 30 (commencing
24with Section 56000) of Division 4 of Title 2, and who meet
25eligibility criteria described in Section 56026 and, Article 2.5
26(commencing with Section 56333) of Chapter 4 of Part 30 of
27Division 4 of Title 2, and Sections 3030 and 3031 of Title 5 of the
28California Code of Regulations. These children
shall have an active
29individualized education program, shall be receiving early
30intervention services or appropriate special education and related
31services, and shall be children who require the special attention of
32adults in a child care setting. These children include children with
33intellectual disabilities, hearing impairments (including deafness),
34speech or language impairments, visual impairments (including
35blindness), serious emotional disturbance (also referred to as
36emotional disturbance), orthopedic impairments, autism, traumatic
37brain injury, other health impairments, or specific learning
38disabilities, who need special education and related services
39consistent with Section 1401(3)(A) of Title 20 of the United States
40Code.
P6 1(m) “Closedown costs” means reimbursements for all approved
2activities associated with the closing of operations at the end of
3each growing season for migrant child development programs
4only.
5(n) “Cost” includes, but is not limited to, expenditures that are
6related to the operation of child care and development programs.
7“Cost” may include a reasonable amount for state and local
8contributions to employee benefits, including approved retirement
9programs, agency administration, and any other reasonable program
10operational costs. “Cost” may also include amounts for licensable
11facilities in the community served by the program, including lease
12payments or depreciation, downpayments, and payments of
13principal and interest on loans incurred to acquire, rehabilitate, or
14construct licensable facilities, but these costs shall not exceed fair
15market rents existing in the community in which the facility is
16located. “Reasonable and necessary costs” are costs that, in nature
17and amount, do not exceed what an ordinary prudent person would
18incur in the conduct of a competitive business.
19(o) “Elementary school,” as contained in former Section 425 of
20Title 20 of the United States Code (the National Defense Education
21Act of 1958, Public Law 85-864, as amended), includes early
22childhood education programs and all child development programs,
23for the purpose of the cancellation provisions of loans to students
24in institutions of higher learning.
25(p) “Family child care home education network” means an entity
26organized under law that contracts with the department pursuant
27to Section 8245 to make payments to licensed family child care
28home providers and to provide educational and support services
29to those providers and to children and families eligible for
30state-subsidized child care and development services. A family
31child care home education network may also be referred to as a
32family child care home system.
33(q) “Health services” include, but are not limited
to, all of the
34following:
35(1) Referral, whenever possible, to appropriate health care
36providers able to provide continuity of medical care.
37(2) Health screening and health treatment, including a full range
38of immunization recorded on the appropriate state immunization
39form to the extent provided by the Medi-Cal Act (Chapter 7
40(commencing with Section 14000) of Part 3 of Division 9 of the
P7 1Welfare and Institutions Code) and the Child Health and Disability
2Prevention Program (Article 6 (commencing with Section 124025)
3of Chapter 3 of Part 2 of Division 106 of the Health and Safety
4Code), but only to the extent that ongoing care cannot be obtained
5utilizing community resources.
6(3) Health education and training for children, parents, staff,
7and providers.
8(4) Followup treatment through referral to appropriate health
9care agencies or individual health care professionals.
10(r) “Higher educational institutions” means the Regents of the
11University of California, the Trustees of the California State
12University, the Board of Governors of the California Community
13Colleges, and the governing bodies of any accredited private
14nonprofit institution of postsecondary education.
15(s) “Intergenerational staff” means persons of various
16generations.
17(t) “Limited-English-speaking-proficient and
18non-English-speaking-proficient children” means children who
19are unable to benefit fully from an English-only child care and
20development program as a result of either of the following:
21(1) Having used a language other
than English when they first
22began to speak.
23(2) Having a language other than English predominantly or
24exclusively spoken at home.
25(u) “Parent” means a biological parent, stepparent, adoptive
26parent, foster parent, caretaker relative, or any other adult living
27with a child who has responsibility for the care and welfare of the
28child.
29(v) “Program director” means a person who, pursuant to Sections
308244 and 8360.1, is qualified to serve as a program director.
31(w) “Proprietary child care agency” means an organization or
32facility providing child care, which is operated for profit.
33(x) “Resource and referral programs” means programs that
34provide information to parents, including referrals and
coordination
35of community resources for parents and public or private providers
36of care. Services frequently include, but are not limited to: technical
37assistance for providers, toy-lending libraries, equipment-lending
38libraries, toy- and equipment-lending libraries, staff development
39programs, health and nutrition education, and referrals to social
40services.
P8 1(y) “Severely disabled children” are children with exceptional
2needs from birth to 21 years of age, inclusive, who require intensive
3instruction and training in programs serving pupils with the
4following profound disabilities: autism, blindness, deafness, severe
5orthopedic impairments, serious emotional disturbances, or severe
6intellectual disabilities. “Severely disabled children” also include
7those individuals who would have been eligible for enrollment in
8a developmental center for handicapped pupils underbegin insert
formerend insert
9 Chapter 6 (commencing with Section 56800) of Part 30 of Division
104 of Title 2 as it read on January 1, 1980.
11(z) “Short-term respite child care” means child care service to
12assist families whose children have been identified through written
13referral from a legal, medical, or social service agency, or
14emergency shelter as being neglected, abused, exploited, or
15homeless, or at risk of being neglected, abused, exploited, or
16homeless. Child care is provided for less than 24 hours per day in
17child care centers, treatment centers for abusive parents, family
18child care homes, or in the child’s own home.
19(aa) (1) “Site supervisor” means a person who, regardless of
20his or her title, has operational program responsibility for a child
21care and development program at a single site. A site supervisor
22shall hold a permit
issued by the Commission on Teacher
23Credentialing that authorizes supervision of a child care and
24development program operating in a single site. The Superintendent
25may waive the requirements of this subdivision if the
26Superintendent determines that the existence of compelling need
27is appropriately documented.
28(2) For California state preschool programs, a site supervisor
29may qualify under any of the provisions in this subdivision, or
30may qualify by holding an administrative credential or an
31administrative services credential. A person who meets the
32qualifications of a program director under both Sections 8244 and
338360.1 is also qualified under this subdivision.
34(ab) “Standard reimbursement rate” means that rate established
35by the Superintendent pursuant to Section 8265.
36(ac) “Startup costs” means those expenses an
agency incurs in
37the process of opening a new or additional facility before the full
38enrollment of children.
P9 1(ad) “California state preschool program” means part-day and
2full-day educational programs for low-income or otherwise
3disadvantaged three- and four-year-old children.
4(ae) “Support services” means those services that, when
5combined with child care and development services, help promote
6the healthy physical, mental, social, and emotional growth of
7children. Support services include, but are not limited to: protective
8services, parent training, provider and staff training, transportation,
9parent and child counseling, child development resource and
10referral services, and child placement counseling.
11(af) “Teacher” means a person with the appropriate permit issued
12by the Commission on Teacher Credentialing who
provides
13program supervision and instruction that includes supervision of
14a number of aides, volunteers, and groups of children.
15(ag) “Underserved area” means a county or subcounty area,
16including, but not limited to, school districts, census tracts, or ZIP
17Code areas, where the ratio of publicly subsidized child care and
18development program services to the need for these services is
19low, as determined by the Superintendent.
20(ah) “Workday” means the time that the parent requires
21temporary care for a child for any of the following reasons:
22(1) To undertake training in preparation for a job.
23(2) To undertake or retain a job.
24(3) To undertake other activities that are essential to maintaining
25
or improving the social and economic function of the family, are
26beneficial to the community, or are required because of health
27problems in the family.
28(ai) “Three-year-old children” means children who will have
29their third birthday on or before the date specified of the fiscal
30year in which they are enrolled in a California state preschool
31program, as follows:
32(1) November 1 of the 2012-13 fiscal year.
33(2) October 1 of the 2013-14 fiscal year.
34(3) September 1 of the 2014-15 fiscal year and each fiscal year
35thereafter.
36(aj) “Four-year-old children” means children who will have
37their fourth birthday on or before the date specified of the fiscal
38year in which they are enrolled in a
California state preschool
39program, as follows:
40(1) November 1 of the 2012-13 fiscal year.
P10 1(2) October 1 of the 2013-14 fiscal year.
2(3) September 1 of the 2014-15 fiscal year and each fiscal year
3thereafter.
4(ak) “Local educational agency” means a school district, a
5county office of education, a community college district, or a
6school district on behalf of one or more schools within the school
7district.
Section 8221.5 is added to the Education Code, to read:
(a) Child care providers authorized to provide services
11pursuant to this article shall submit to the alternative payment
12program a monthly attendance record or invoice for each child
13who received services that documentsbegin delete certified needs andend delete hours
14of carebegin delete provided.end deletebegin insert provided based on need certified by the
15alternative payment program.end insert
16(b) The monthly attendance record or invoice shall begin deletebe signed begin insertinclude
the dates and times of attendance. Verification of
17by end delete
18attendance shall be made at the end of each month by single
19signature, under penalty of perjury, of both end insertthe parent or guardian
20of the child receiving services and the child care providerbegin delete once per
21month to attest that the child’s attendance is accurately reflected.
22The verification shall be made by signature and signed, as of the
23
end of each month of care and under penalty of perjury, by both
24the parent or guardian and the child care providerend delete
25(c) The monthly attendance recordbegin insert or invoiceend insert may be maintained
26by the child care provider in original format or electronically.
27(d) The alternative payment provider shall accept the monthly
28attendance record or invoice as documentation ofbegin delete the certified need the hours of care provided.
29andend delete
30(e) It is the intent of the Legislature, in enacting this section, to
31simplify
the attendance recording process. Therefore, the adoption
32of regulations to implement this section shall not be necessary.
Section 8227.3 is added to the Education Code, to read:
(a) Alternative payment programs and providers
36operating or providing services pursuant to this article may
37maintain records electronically, subject to compliance with
38necessary state and federal auditing requirements. Records that
39may be maintained electronically include, but are not limited to,
40the following:
P11 1(1) Child immunization records.
2(2) Parental job verification records.
3(3) Parent income verification.
4(4) Parent school or training verifications and attendance
5records.
6(b) Nothing in this section requires an alternative payment
7program to maintain records electronically.
Section 8262.3 is added to the Education Code, to read:
On and afterbegin delete January 1, 2016,end deletebegin insert the date on which the
11Superintendent determines that the Financial Information System
12for California (Fi$Cal Project) has been implemented within the
13department,end insert at the request of a contractor, for a contract executed
14by the department pursuant to Section 8262, the department shall
15request the Controller to make a payment via direct deposit by
16electronicbegin delete fundend deletebegin insert fundsend insert transferbegin insert
through the end insertbegin insertFi$Cal Projectend insert into the
17contractor’s account at the financial institution of the contractor’s
18choice.
No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
21Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
22 the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
23district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
24infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
25for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of
26the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within
27the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
28Constitution.
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