HOUSE BILL REPORT
ESSB 5806
As Passed House - Amended:
April 13, 2005
Title: An act relating to child care services.
Brief Description: Requiring child care agencies to provide additional information to parents.
Sponsors: By Senate Committee on Human Services & Corrections (originally sponsored by Senators Kohl-Welles, Hargrove, Rasmussen and Jacobsen).
Brief History:
Children & Family Services: 3/30/05, 3/31/05 [DPA].
Floor Activity:
Passed House - Amended: 4/13/05, 96-0.
Brief Summary of Engrossed Substitute Bill (As Amended by House) |
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HOUSE COMMITTEE ON CHILDREN & FAMILY SERVICES
Majority Report: Do pass as amended. Signed by 7 members: Representatives Kagi, Chair; Roberts, Vice Chair; Walsh, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Darneille, Dickerson, Haler and Pettigrew.
Minority Report: Do not pass. Signed by 2 members: Representatives Hinkle, Ranking Minority Member; and Dunn.
Staff: Cynthia Forland (786-7152).
Background:
The Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS) is required to license agencies
providing care for children outside of their homes as identified by state law. The purpose of
this licensing requirement is to assure the users of those agencies, their parents, the
community at large, and the agencies themselves that adequate minimum standards are
maintained by all agencies caring for children in order to safeguard the health, safety, and
well-being of those children receiving care.
The following are included in the agencies identified in state law as subject to licensing by
the DSHS:
Child Care Resource and Referral agencies in the state assist parents in accessing child care
by providing information on licensed child care and child care subsidy programs. They also
facilitate the licensing process for child care providers and generate public awareness of child
care issues.
State law requires the establishment of a nonprofit, joint underwriting association for daycare
insurance. Any daycare licensee may apply to the joint underwriting association to purchase
daycare insurance, and the association is required to offer a policy with liability limits of at
least $1,000 per occurrence.
State law also empowers associations meeting specified criteria to create and operate
self-insurance plans to provide general liability coverage to member child daycare centers
who choose to subscribe to the plans.
Summary of Amended Bill:
Access to Information:
The DSHS is required to establish and maintain a toll-free telephone number and an
interactive web-based system through which persons may obtain information regarding child
daycare centers and family daycare providers. This number must be available 24 hours a day
for persons to request information. The DSHS is required to respond to recorded messages
left at the number within two business days. The number must be published in reasonably
available printed and electronic media. The number must be easily identifiable as a number
through which persons may obtain information regarding child daycare centers and family
daycare providers.
Through the established toll-free telephone line, the DSHS is required to provide information
to callers about the following:
Beginning in January 2006, the DSHS is required to print the established toll-free number on
the face of new licenses issued to child daycare centers and family daycare providers.
Every child daycare center and family daycare provider is required to prominently post the
following items, clearly visible to parents and staff:
The DSHS is required to disclose, upon request, the receipt, general nature, and resolution or
current status of all complaints on record with the DSHS, after the effective date of the bill,
against a child daycare center or family daycare provider that result in an enforcement action.
It is provided that the provisions of the bill relating to the toll-free telephone number and
interactive web-based system for providing information regarding child daycare centers and
family daycare providers, the posting of specified information by daycare providers, and the
disclosure of information by the DSHS concerning complaints against daycare providers
resulting in an enforcement action must not be construed to require the disclosure of any
information that is exempt from public disclosure under chapter 42.17 RCW.
Inspection Reports and Enforcement Actions:
"Enforcement action" is defined as denial, suspension, revocation, modification, or
nonrenewal of a license or assessment of civil monetary penalties pursuant to state law for
licenses issued pursuant to chapter 74.15 RCW and RCW 74.13.031.
Every child daycare center and family daycare provider is required to have readily available
for review by the DSHS, parents, and the public a copy of each inspection report and notice
of enforcement action received by the center or provider from the DSHS for the past three
years for reports and notices received on or after the effective date of the bill.
The DSHS is required to make available to the public during business hours all inspection
reports and notices of enforcement actions involving child daycare centers and family daycare
providers consistent with chapter 42.17 RCW relating to information disclosure. The DSHS
is required to include in the inspection report a statement of the corrective measures taken by
the center or provider.
In addition to or in lieu of an enforcement action being taken, the DSHS may place a child
daycare center or family daycare provider on nonreferral status if the center or provider has
failed or refused to comply with chapter 74.15 RCW or rules adopted thereunder or an
enforcement action has been taken. The nonreferral status may continue until the DSHS
determines that no enforcement action is appropriate or a corrective action plan has been
successfully concluded.
Whenever a child daycare center or family daycare provider is placed on nonreferral status,
the DSHS is required to provide written notification to the child daycare center or family
daycare provider.
The DSHS is required to notify appropriate public and private Child Care Resource and
Referral agencies of the DSHS' decision to take an enforcement action against a child daycare
center or family daycare provider or place or remove a child daycare center or family daycare
provider on nonreferral status.
Insurance Requirement:
Every licensed child daycare center is required to provide to the DSHS, at the time of
licensure or renewal and at any inspection, proof that the licensee has daycare insurance as
defined in state law or is self-insured pursuant to state law.
Every licensed child daycare center, including initial and probationary licensees, is required
to comply with the following requirements:
Liability limits must be the same as set forth in state law for daycare insurance.
The DSHS may deny an agency a license or suspend, revoke, modify, or not renew a license
as provided in state law if the licensee fails to maintain in full force and effect the insurance
required under the bill.
A child daycare center that is licensed as of the effective date of the bill is not required to be
in compliance with the insurance requirement until the time of renewal of the license or until
January 1, 2006, whichever is sooner.
Every licensed family daycare provider is required, at the time of licensure or renewal, to
provide:
Family daycare providers may choose to opt out of the requirement to have daycare or other
applicable insurance but must provide written notice of their insurance status to parents.
Any licensed family daycare provider that provides proof to the DSHS that the licensee has
daycare insurance or other applicable insurance, is required to comply with the following
requirements:
Liability limits must be the same as set forth in state law for daycare insurance.
The DSHS may deny an agency a license or suspend, revoke, modify, or not renew a license
as provided in state law if the licensee fails to notify the DSHS when coverage has been
terminated.
A family daycare provider that is licensed as of the effective date of the bill is not required to
be in compliance with the insurance requirement until the time of renewal of the license or
until January 1, 2006, whichever is sooner.
Noncompliance or compliance with the provisions of the bill concerning insurance
requirements for child daycare centers and family daycare providers must not constitute
evidence of liability or nonliability in any injury litigation.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Effective Date of Amended Bill: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.
Testimony For: (In support) This bill is a compilation of three different bills that have been
introduced in recent years. One basis of the bill is the greater demand for child care and the
difficulty in ensuring that we have an adequate supply of licensed, quality child care. It is
critical for parents to be able to make informed choices, to make sure that the daycare
provider is one that will be high quality and one that will be concerned for the best interest
and the safety and the well-being of the child. A second basis of the bill is the importance
that daycare providers, particularly family home providers, be able to conduct their business
without an enormous amount of regulation imposed upon them. This bill would provide
parents with the ability to access information about enforcement and licensing actions that
have taken place in the most reasonable way without putting too many demands on the
provider. The bill provides an opt-out measure so that family daycare providers do not have
to have liability insurance as long as the parents know that that is the case. The purpose of
the liability insurance requirement is to make sure that we have the best child care possible
being provided.
Parents should have access to information to find out what child care is the best for their
children so that they can make informed decisions. This compilation of bills comes out of a
great, urgent need for access to information. Insurance is already required by many child care
institutions, including Head Start, the state's Early Childhood Education and Assistance
Program (ECEAP), and the military child care program, since insurance has become
extremely cheap. Twenty states require liability insurance, and have shown marked
improvement in the quality of child care. The insurance industry would provide another layer
of oversight. Information available through the toll-free line should include information from
the Department of Health, Child Protective Services, and child care licensing.
(With amendments) Most centers have insurance and see it as a smart way to go about their
business. Most family child care homes have insurance through their homeowners' policies.
This is a really logical thing, if you are going to engage in a kind of business where there are
kids and liability, to have some kind of protection for yourself, your home, your children.
Insurance has not always been available and affordable. That is why there is a pool in the
Office of the Insurance Commissioner for family child care. The compromise in the bill
allows family child care not to have insurance but they have to inform the parents that they do
not have insurance. That will really drive most family homes to get insurance. It is
appropriate that only actual enforcement actions are required to be posted. The opt-out
language in the bill for the insurance requirement for family homes is not as clear as it might
be.
Testimony Against: None.
Persons Testifying: (In support) Senator Kohl-Welles, prime sponsor; Nikki Goel; and Stu
Jacobson, Washington Parents for Safe Child Care.
(With amendments) Lonnie Johns-Brown, The Collaborative.