Passed by the Senate April 27, 2013 YEAS 38   BRAD OWEN ________________________________________ President of the Senate Passed by the House April 23, 2013 YEAS 58   FRANK CHOPP ________________________________________ Speaker of the House of Representatives | I, Hunter G. Goodman, Secretary of the Senate of the State of Washington, do hereby certify that the attached is SECOND SUBSTITUTE SENATE BILL 5595 as passed by the Senate and the House of Representatives on the dates hereon set forth. HUNTER G. GOODMAN ________________________________________ Secretary | |
Approved May 21, 2013, 3:01 p.m. JAY INSLEE ________________________________________ Governor of the State of Washington | May 21, 2013 Secretary of State State of Washington |
State of Washington | 63rd Legislature | 2013 Regular Session |
READ FIRST TIME 03/01/13.
AN ACT Relating to child care reform; adding a new section to chapter 43.215 RCW; creating new sections; and providing an expiration date.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1 A new section is added to chapter 43.215 RCW
to read as follows:
(1) The standards and guidelines described in this section are
intended for the guidance of the department and the department of
social and health services. They are not intended to, do not, and may
not be relied upon to create a right or benefit, substantive or
procedural, enforceable at law by a party in litigation with the state.
(2) When providing services to parents applying for or receiving
working connections child care benefits, the department must provide
training to departmental employees on professionalism.
(3) When providing services to parents applying for or receiving
working connections child care benefits, the department of social and
health services has the following responsibilities:
(a) To return all calls from parents receiving working connections
child care benefits within two business days of receiving the call;
(b) To develop a process by which parents receiving working
connections child care benefits can submit required forms and
information electronically by June 30, 2015;
(c) To notify providers and parents ten days before the loss of
working connections child care benefits; and
(d) To provide parents with a document that explains in detail and
in easily understood language what services they are eligible for, how
they can appeal an adverse decision, and the parents' responsibilities
in obtaining and maintaining eligibility for working connections child
care.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 2 (1)(a) A legislative task force on child
care improvements for the future is established with members as
provided in this subsection.
(i) The president of the senate shall appoint two members from each
of the two largest caucuses of the senate.
(ii) The speaker of the house of representatives shall appoint two
members from each of the two largest caucuses in the house of
representatives.
(iii) The president of the senate and the speaker of the house of
representatives shall appoint fifteen members representing the
following interests:
(A) The department of early learning;
(B) The department of social and health services;
(C) The early learning advisory committee;
(D) Thrive by five;
(E) Private pay child care consumers;
(F) Child care consumers receiving a subsidy;
(G) Family child care providers;
(H) Child care center providers;
(I) Exempt child care providers;
(J) The collective bargaining unit representing child care
providers;
(K) School-age child care providers;
(L) Child care aware;
(M) The Washington state association of head start and the early
childhood education and assistance program;
(N) The early learning action alliance; and
(O) Puget Sound educational service district.
(b) The task force shall choose its cochairs from among its
legislative leadership. The members of the majority party in each
house shall convene the first meeting.
(2) The task force shall address the following issues:
(a) The creation of a tiered reimbursement model that works for
both consumers and providers and provides incentives for quality child
care across communities;
(b) The development of recommendations and an implementation plan
for expansion of the program referred to in RCW 43.215.400 to include
a mixed delivery system that integrates community-based early learning
providers, including but not limited to family child care, child care
centers, schools, and educational services districts. Recommendations
shall include:
(i) Areas of alignment and conflicts in restrictions and
eligibility requirements associated with early learning funding and
services;
(ii) A funding plan that blends and maximizes existing resources
and identifies new revenue and other funding sources; and
(iii) Incentives for integrating child care and preschool
programming to better serve working families;
(c) The development of recommendations for market rate
reimbursement to allow access to high quality child care; and
(d) The development of recommendations for a further graduation of
the copay scale to eliminate the cliff that occurs at subsidy cut off.
(3) Staff support for the task force must be provided by the senate
committee services and the house of representatives office of program
research.
(4) The task force shall report its findings and recommendations to
the governor and the appropriate committees of the legislature no later
than December 31, 2013.
(5) This section expires July 1, 2014.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 3 (1) The legislature finds that the Aclara
group report on the eligibility requirements for working connections
child care which came from the pedagogy of lean management and focused
on identifying and eliminating nonvalue added work should be followed.
The legislature further finds that, following some of the
recommendations in the report, would result in simplifying and
streamlining the child care system to improve access and customer
service without decreasing the program's integrity.
(2) By December 1, 2013, the department and the department of
social and health services shall accomplish the following:
(a) Eliminate the current custody/visitation policy and design a
subsidy system that is flexible and accounts for small fluctuations in
family circumstances;
(b) Create broad authorization categories so that relatively minor
changes in parents' work schedule does not require changes in
authorization;
(c) Establish rules to specify that parents who receive working
connections child care benefits and participate in one hundred ten
hours or more of approved work or related activities are eligible for
full-time child care services; and
(d) Clarify and simplify the requirement to count child support as
income.