CS for CS for CS for SB 1690                     First Engrossed
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       20261690e1
       
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to child care and early learning
    3         services; amending s. 402.306, F.S.; revising the
    4         information on child care required to be disseminated
    5         electronically to the community; amending ss. 402.313
    6         and 402.3131, F.S.; deleting the requirement that
    7         family child care homes and large family child care
    8         homes, respectively, provide specified information to
    9         parents each year; conforming provisions to changes
   10         made by the act; amending s. 402.316, F.S.; requiring
   11         that certain child care facilities exempt from
   12         licensure requirements meet certain minimum
   13         requirements; providing that failure to meet such
   14         minimum requirements results in the loss of the
   15         exemption from licensure; requiring a child care
   16         facility exempt from licensure requirements to include
   17         a specified statement on its website and in its
   18         promotional materials and facility-created documents
   19         and forms provided to families served by the child
   20         care facility; amending s. 627.70161, F.S.; changing
   21         the term “family day care home” to “family child care
   22         home”; providing legislative findings and intent
   23         relating to large family child care homes; defining
   24         the term “large family child care home”; prohibiting
   25         residential property insurance policies from providing
   26         coverage for liability for claims arising out of, or
   27         in connection with, the operations of large family
   28         child care homes; providing that insurers are under no
   29         obligation to defend against lawsuits covering such
   30         claims; providing exceptions; prohibiting insurers
   31         from denying, cancelling, or refusing to renew a
   32         policy for residential property insurance on the basis
   33         that the policyholders or applicants operate large
   34         family child care homes; providing exceptions;
   35         amending s. 1001.24, F.S.; revising the definition of
   36         the term “Department of Education direct-support
   37         organization”; creating s. 1002.821, F.S.; creating
   38         the Florida Child Care Fund for a specified purpose;
   39         requiring a Department of Education direct-support
   40         organization to administer the fund; requiring funds
   41         to be deposited into the Early Learning Fund;
   42         requiring legislative appropriations from the Child
   43         Care and Development Block Grant Trust Fund to be
   44         deposited into the Early Learning Fund; requiring that
   45         funds from state sources and interest earnings be
   46         accounted for separately; specifying uses for such
   47         funds; beginning on a specified date, requiring the
   48         Division of Early Learning to prepare, and the
   49         Department of Education to publish on its website, an
   50         annual report on the performance of the fund;
   51         specifying requirements for the reports; amending s.
   52         1002.95, F.S.; requiring the administrator of the
   53         Teacher Education and Compensation Helps Scholarship
   54         Program, subject to an appropriation, to establish and
   55         administer the Center for Early Childhood Professional
   56         Recognition for a specified purpose; amending ss.
   57         39.202, 125.0109, 166.0445, 212.08, 402.302, 402.305,
   58         402.309, 402.310, 402.3115, 402.312, 402.315, 402.318,
   59         402.319, 409.988, 411.203, 1002.55, 1002.82, 1002.83,
   60         1002.84, 1002.88, 1002.895, 1002.92, 1002.93, and
   61         1002.945, F.S.; conforming provisions to changes made
   62         by the act; providing an effective date.
   63          
   64  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
   65  
   66         Section 1. Subsection (3) of section 402.306, Florida
   67  Statutes, is amended to read:
   68         402.306 Designation of licensing agency; dissemination by
   69  the department and local licensing agency of information on
   70  child care.—
   71         (3) The department and local licensing agencies, or the
   72  designees thereof, shall be responsible for coordination and
   73  dissemination of information on child care to the community and
   74  shall make available through electronic means all licensing
   75  standards and procedures, health and safety standards for school
   76  readiness providers, monitoring and inspection reports, and the
   77  names and addresses of licensed child care facilities, school
   78  readiness program providers, and, where applicable pursuant to
   79  s. 402.313, licensed or registered family child day care homes.
   80  This information shall also include the number of deaths,
   81  serious injuries, and instances of substantiated child abuse
   82  that have occurred in child care settings, including those which
   83  are exempt pursuant to s. 402.316(1) or (2), each year; research
   84  and best practices in child development; and resources regarding
   85  social-emotional development, parent and family engagement,
   86  healthy eating, and physical activity.
   87         Section 2. Section 402.313, Florida Statutes, is amended to
   88  read:
   89         402.313 Family child day care homes.—
   90         (1) Family child day care homes shall be licensed under
   91  this act if they are presently being licensed under an existing
   92  county licensing ordinance or if the board of county
   93  commissioners passes a resolution that family child day care
   94  homes be licensed.
   95         (a) If not subject to license, family child day care homes
   96  shall register annually with the department, providing the
   97  following information:
   98         1. The name and address of the home.
   99         2. The name of the operator.
  100         3. The number of children served.
  101         4. Proof of a written plan to provide at least one other
  102  competent adult to be available to substitute for the operator
  103  in an emergency. This plan shall include the name, address, and
  104  telephone number of the designated substitute.
  105         5. Proof of screening and background checks.
  106         6. Proof of successful completion of the 30-hour training
  107  course, as evidenced by passage of a competency examination,
  108  which shall include:
  109         a. State and local rules and regulations that govern child
  110  care.
  111         b. Health, safety, and nutrition.
  112         c. Identifying and reporting child abuse and neglect.
  113         d. Child development, including typical and atypical
  114  language development; and cognitive, motor, social, and self
  115  help skills development.
  116         e. Observation of developmental behaviors, including using
  117  a checklist or other similar observation tools and techniques to
  118  determine a child’s developmental level.
  119         f. Specialized areas, including early literacy and language
  120  development of children from birth to 5 years of age, as
  121  determined by the department, for owner-operators of family
  122  child day care homes.
  123         7. Proof that immunization records are kept current.
  124         8. Proof of completion of the required continuing education
  125  units or clock hours.
  126         (b) A family child day care home may volunteer to be
  127  licensed under this act.
  128         (c) The department may provide technical assistance to
  129  counties and family child day care home providers to enable
  130  counties and family child day care providers to achieve
  131  compliance with family child day care homes standards.
  132         (2) This information shall be included in a directory to be
  133  published annually by the department to inform the public of
  134  available child care facilities.
  135         (3) Child care personnel in family child day care homes
  136  shall be subject to the applicable screening provisions
  137  contained in ss. 402.305(2) and 402.3055. For purposes of
  138  screening in family child day care homes, the term includes any
  139  member over the age of 12 years of a family child day care home
  140  operator’s family, or persons over the age of 12 years residing
  141  with the operator in the family child day care home. Members of
  142  the operator’s family, or persons residing with the operator,
  143  who are between the ages of 12 years and 18 years shall not be
  144  required to be fingerprinted, but shall be screened for
  145  delinquency records.
  146         (4) Operators of family child day care homes must
  147  successfully complete an approved 30-clock-hour introductory
  148  course in child care, as evidenced by passage of a competency
  149  examination, before caring for children.
  150         (5) In order to further develop their child care skills
  151  and, if appropriate, their administrative skills, operators of
  152  family child day care homes shall be required to complete an
  153  additional 1 continuing education unit of approved training or
  154  10 clock hours of equivalent training, as determined by the
  155  department, annually.
  156         (6) Operators of family child day care homes shall be
  157  required to complete 0.5 continuing education unit of approved
  158  training in early literacy and language development of children
  159  from birth to 5 years of age one time. The year that this
  160  training is completed, it shall fulfill the 0.5 continuing
  161  education unit or 5 clock hours of the annual training required
  162  in subsection (5).
  163         (7) Operators of family child day care homes shall be
  164  required annually to complete a health and safety home
  165  inspection self-evaluation checklist developed by the department
  166  in conjunction with the statewide resource and referral program.
  167  The completed checklist shall be signed by the operator of the
  168  family child day care home and provided to parents as
  169  certification that basic health and safety standards are being
  170  met.
  171         (8) Family child day care home operators may avail
  172  themselves of supportive services offered by the department.
  173         (9) The department shall prepare a brochure on family child
  174  day care for distribution by the department and by local
  175  licensing agencies, if appropriate, to family child day care
  176  homes for distribution to parents utilizing such child care, and
  177  to all interested persons, including physicians and other health
  178  professionals; mental health professionals; school teachers or
  179  other school personnel; social workers or other professional
  180  child care, foster care, residential, or institutional workers;
  181  and law enforcement officers. The brochure shall, at a minimum,
  182  contain the following information:
  183         (a) A brief description of the requirements for family
  184  child day care registration, training, and fingerprinting and
  185  screening.
  186         (b) A listing of those counties that require licensure of
  187  family child day care homes. Such counties shall provide an
  188  addendum to the brochure that provides a brief description of
  189  the licensure requirements or may provide a brochure in lieu of
  190  the one described in this subsection, provided it contains all
  191  the required information on licensure and the required
  192  information in the subsequent paragraphs.
  193         (c) A statement indicating that information about the
  194  family child day care home’s compliance with applicable state or
  195  local requirements can be obtained by telephoning the department
  196  office or the office of the local licensing agency, if
  197  appropriate, at a telephone number or numbers which shall be
  198  affixed to the brochure.
  199         (d) The statewide toll-free telephone number of the central
  200  abuse hotline, together with a notice that reports of suspected
  201  and actual child physical abuse, sexual abuse, and neglect are
  202  received and referred for investigation by the hotline.
  203         (e) Any other information relating to competent child care
  204  that the department or local licensing agency, if preparing a
  205  separate brochure, deems would be helpful to parents and other
  206  caretakers in their selection of a family child day care home.
  207         (10) On an annual basis, the department shall evaluate the
  208  registration and licensure system for family child day care
  209  homes. Such evaluation shall, at a minimum, address the
  210  following:
  211         (a) The number of family child day care homes registered
  212  and licensed and the dates of such registration and licensure.
  213         (b) The number of children being served in both registered
  214  and licensed family child day care homes and any available slots
  215  in such homes.
  216         (c) The number of complaints received concerning family
  217  child day care, the nature of the complaints, and the resolution
  218  of such complaints.
  219         (d) The training activities utilized by child care
  220  personnel in family child day care homes for meeting the state
  221  or local training requirements.
  222  
  223  The evaluation shall be utilized by the department in any
  224  administrative modifications or adjustments to be made in the
  225  registration of family child day care homes or in any
  226  legislative requests for modifications to the system of
  227  registration or to other requirements for family child day care
  228  homes.
  229         (11) In order to inform the public of the state requirement
  230  for registration of family child day care homes as well as the
  231  other requirements for such homes to legally operate in the
  232  state, the department shall institute a media campaign to
  233  accomplish this end. Such a campaign shall include, at a
  234  minimum, flyers, newspaper advertisements, radio advertisements,
  235  and television advertisements.
  236         (12) Notwithstanding any other state or local law or
  237  ordinance, any family child day care home licensed pursuant to
  238  this chapter or pursuant to a county ordinance shall be charged
  239  the utility rates accorded to a residential home. A licensed
  240  family child day care home may not be charged commercial utility
  241  rates.
  242         (13) The department shall, by rule, establish minimum
  243  standards for family child day care homes that are required to
  244  be licensed by county licensing ordinance or county licensing
  245  resolution or that voluntarily choose to be licensed. The
  246  standards should include requirements for staffing, training,
  247  maintenance of immunization records, minimum health and safety
  248  standards, reduced standards for the regulation of child care
  249  during evening hours by municipalities and counties, and
  250  enforcement of standards.
  251         (14)During the months of August and September of each
  252  year, each family day care home shall provide parents of
  253  children enrolled in the home detailed information regarding the
  254  causes, symptoms, and transmission of the influenza virus in an
  255  effort to educate those parents regarding the importance of
  256  immunizing their children against influenza as recommended by
  257  the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices of the Centers
  258  for Disease Control and Prevention.
  259         (15)During the months of April and September of each year,
  260  at a minimum, each family day care home shall provide parents of
  261  children attending the family day care home information
  262  regarding the potential for a distracted adult to fail to drop
  263  off a child at the family day care home and instead leave the
  264  child in the adult’s vehicle upon arrival at the adult’s
  265  destination. The family day care home shall also give parents
  266  information about resources with suggestions to avoid this
  267  occurrence. The department shall develop a flyer or brochure
  268  with this information that shall be posted to the department’s
  269  website, which family day care homes may choose to reproduce and
  270  provide to parents to satisfy the requirements of this
  271  subsection.
  272         Section 3. Subsections (9) and (10) of section 402.3131,
  273  Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
  274         402.3131 Large family child care homes.—
  275         (9)During the months of August and September of each year,
  276  each large family child care home shall provide parents of
  277  children enrolled in the home detailed information regarding the
  278  causes, symptoms, and transmission of the influenza virus in an
  279  effort to educate those parents regarding the importance of
  280  immunizing their children against influenza as recommended by
  281  the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices of the Centers
  282  for Disease Control and Prevention.
  283         (10)During the months of April and September of each year,
  284  at a minimum, each large family child care home shall provide
  285  parents of children attending the large family child care home
  286  information regarding the potential for a distracted adult to
  287  fail to drop off a child at the large family child care home and
  288  instead leave the child in the adult’s vehicle upon arrival at
  289  the adult’s destination. The large family child care home shall
  290  also give parents information about resources with suggestions
  291  to avoid this occurrence. The department shall develop a flyer
  292  or brochure with this information that shall be posted to the
  293  department’s website, which large family child care homes may
  294  choose to reproduce and provide to parents to satisfy the
  295  requirements of this subsection.
  296         Section 4. Section 402.316, Florida Statutes, is amended to
  297  read:
  298         402.316 Exemptions.—
  299         (1) The provisions of ss. 402.301-402.319, except for the
  300  requirements regarding screening of child care personnel
  301  pursuant to ss. 402.305 and 402.3055, do not apply to a child
  302  care facility which is an integral part of church or parochial
  303  schools, or a child care facility that solely provides child
  304  care to eligible children as defined in s. 402.261(1)(c),
  305  conducting regularly scheduled classes, courses of study, or
  306  educational programs accredited by, or by a member of, an
  307  organization that which publishes and requires compliance with
  308  its standards for health, safety, and sanitation. However, Such
  309  facilities must shall meet minimum requirements of the
  310  applicable local governing body as to health, sanitation, and
  311  safety and shall meet the screening requirements pursuant to ss.
  312  402.305 and 402.3055. Failure by a facility to comply with such
  313  screening requirements pursuant to ss. 402.305 and 402.3055
  314  shall result in the loss of the facility’s exemption from
  315  licensure.
  316         (2)The provisions of ss. 402.301-402.319, except for the
  317  requirements regarding screening of child care personnel
  318  pursuant to ss. 402.305 and 402.3055, do not apply to a child
  319  care facility that solely provides child care to eligible
  320  children as defined in s. 402.261(1)(c). Such facilities must
  321  meet minimum requirements of the applicable local governing body
  322  as to health, sanitation, and safety. Failure by a facility to
  323  comply with screening requirements pursuant to ss. 402.305 and
  324  402.3055 shall result in the loss of the facility’s exemption
  325  from licensure.
  326         (3)(2) The provisions of ss. 402.301-402.319 do not apply
  327  to a child care facility or family child day care home if the
  328  child care facility or family child day care home has a
  329  certificate issued by the United States Department of Defense or
  330  by the United States Coast Guard to provide child care and has
  331  completed background screening by the United States Department
  332  of Defense pursuant to 34 U.S.C. s. 20351 and 32 C.F.R. part 86
  333  and received a favorable suitability and fitness determination.
  334  If the child care facility or family child day care home elects
  335  to serve children ineligible for care under the United States
  336  Department of Defense Instruction 6060.02, the child care
  337  facility or family child day care home must be licensed under
  338  this chapter.
  339         (4)(3) Any child care facility covered by the exemption
  340  under subsection (1) or subsection (2) which desires to be
  341  licensed may submit an application to the department or local
  342  licensing agency pursuant to s. 402.308(4).
  343         (5)(4) The department and the local licensing agency
  344  pursuant to s. 402.308(4) shall adopt rules to administer and
  345  implement this section, including, but not limited to, any
  346  assessments of previous licensure history.
  347         (6)A child care facility exempt under subsection (1) or
  348  subsection (2) must include, at a minimum, the following
  349  statement on its website, in its promotional materials, and on
  350  its facility-created documents and forms provided to families
  351  served by the child care facility:(Child care facility name)
  352  is a child care facility operating under an exemption pursuant
  353  to the laws of the State of Florida and is not subject to
  354  licensure or regulation by the Department of Children and
  355  Families.
  356         Section 5. Section 627.70161, Florida Statutes, is amended
  357  to read:
  358         627.70161 Family child day care and large family child care
  359  insurance.—
  360         (1) PURPOSE AND INTENT.—The Legislature recognizes that
  361  family child day care and large family child care homes fulfill
  362  a vital role in providing child care in Florida. It is the
  363  intent of the Legislature that residential property insurance
  364  coverage should not be canceled, denied, or nonrenewed solely on
  365  the basis of the child family day care services at the
  366  residence. The Legislature also recognizes that the potential
  367  liability of residential property insurers is substantially
  368  increased by the rendition of child care services on the
  369  premises. The Legislature therefore finds that there is a public
  370  need to specify that contractual liabilities that arise in
  371  connection with the operation of the family child day care home
  372  or the large family child care home are excluded from
  373  residential property insurance policies unless they are
  374  specifically included in such coverage.
  375         (2) DEFINITIONS.—As used in this section, the term:
  376         (a) “Child care” means the care, protection, and
  377  supervision of a child, for a period of less than 24 hours a day
  378  on a regular basis, which supplements parental care, enrichment,
  379  and health supervision for the child, in accordance with his or
  380  her individual needs, and for which a payment, fee, or grant is
  381  made for care.
  382         (b) “Family child day care home” means an occupied
  383  residence in which child care is regularly provided for children
  384  from at least two unrelated families and which receives a
  385  payment, fee, or grant for any of the children receiving care,
  386  whether or not operated for a profit.
  387         (c)“Large family child care home” means an occupied
  388  residence in which child care is regularly provided for children
  389  from at least two unrelated families; which receives a payment,
  390  fee, or grant for any of the children receiving care, whether or
  391  not operated for profit; and which has at least two full-time
  392  child care personnel on the premises during the hours of
  393  operation. One of the two full-time child care personnel must be
  394  the owner or occupant of the residence. A large family child
  395  care home must first have operated as a licensed family child
  396  care home for at least 2 years, with an operator who has held a
  397  child development associate credential or its equivalent for at
  398  least 1 year, before seeking licensure as a large family child
  399  care home. Household children under 13 years of age, when on the
  400  premises of the large family child care home or on a field trip
  401  with children enrolled in child care, must be included in the
  402  overall capacity of the licensed home. A large family child care
  403  home may provide care for one of the following groups of
  404  children, which must include household children under 13 years
  405  of age:
  406         1.A maximum of 8 children from birth to 24 months of age.
  407         2.A maximum of 12 children, with no more than 4 children
  408  under 24 months of age.
  409         (3) FAMILY CHILD DAY CARE AND LARGE FAMILY CHILD CARE
  410  HOMES; COVERAGE.—A residential property insurance policy may
  411  shall not provide coverage for liability for claims arising out
  412  of, or in connection with, the operation of a family child day
  413  care home or a large family child care home, and the insurer
  414  shall be under no obligation to defend against lawsuits covering
  415  such claims, unless:
  416         (a) Specifically covered in a policy; or
  417         (b) Covered by a rider or endorsement for business coverage
  418  attached to a policy.
  419         (4) DENIAL, CANCELLATION, REFUSAL TO RENEW PROHIBITED.—An
  420  insurer may not deny, cancel, or refuse to renew a policy for
  421  residential property insurance solely on the basis that the
  422  policyholder or applicant operates a family child day care home
  423  or a large family child care home. In addition to other lawful
  424  reasons for refusing to insure, an insurer may deny, cancel, or
  425  refuse to renew a policy of a family child day care home or
  426  large family child care home provider if one or more of the
  427  following conditions occur:
  428         (a) The policyholder or applicant provides care for more
  429  children than authorized for family day care homes by s.
  430  402.302;
  431         (b) The policyholder or applicant fails to maintain a
  432  separate commercial liability policy or an endorsement providing
  433  liability coverage for the family child day care home or large
  434  family child care home operations;
  435         (c) The policyholder or applicant fails to comply with the
  436  applicable family day care home licensure and registration
  437  requirements specified in chapter 402 s. 402.313; or
  438         (d) Discovery of willful or grossly negligent acts or
  439  omissions or any violations of state laws or regulations
  440  establishing safety standards for family child day care homes or
  441  large family child care homes by the named insured or his or her
  442  representative which materially increase any of the risks
  443  insured.
  444         Section 6. Section 1001.24, Florida Statutes, is amended to
  445  read:
  446         1001.24 Direct-support organization; use of property; board
  447  of directors; audit.—
  448         (1) DEFINITIONS.—For the purposes of this section, the
  449  term:
  450         (a) “Department of Education direct-support organization”
  451  means an organization:
  452         1. That is a corporation not for profit that is
  453  incorporated under the provisions of chapter 617 and approved by
  454  the Department of State.
  455         2. That is organized and operated exclusively to receive,
  456  hold, invest, and administer property and to make expenditures
  457  to or for the benefit of early learning programs for children
  458  from birth to 5 years of age and public prekindergarten through
  459  12th grade education in this state.
  460         3. That the State Board of Education, after review, has
  461  certified to be operating in a manner consistent with the goals
  462  and best interest of the Department of Education.
  463         (b) “Personal services” includes full-time or part-time
  464  personnel, as well as payroll processing.
  465         (2) USE OF PROPERTY.—The State Board of Education:
  466         (a) May permit the use of property, facilities, and
  467  personal services of the department by the direct-support
  468  organization, subject to the provisions of this section.
  469         (b) Shall prescribe by rule conditions with which the
  470  direct-support organization must comply in order to use
  471  property, facilities, or personal services of the department.
  472  Such rules shall provide for budget and audit review and for
  473  oversight by the department.
  474         (c) Shall not permit the use of property, facilities, or
  475  personal services of the direct-support organization if such
  476  organization does not provide equal employment opportunities to
  477  all persons, regardless of race, color, national origin, gender,
  478  age, or religion.
  479         (3) BOARD OF DIRECTORS.—The board of directors of the
  480  department direct-support organization shall be appointed by the
  481  commissioner and shall include representation from business,
  482  industry, and other components of Florida’s economy.
  483         (4) ANNUAL AUDIT.—Each direct-support organization shall
  484  provide for an annual financial audit in accordance with s.
  485  215.981. The identity of donors who desire to remain anonymous
  486  shall be protected, and that anonymity shall be maintained in
  487  the auditor’s report. All records of the organization other than
  488  the auditor’s report, management letter, and any supplemental
  489  data requested by the Auditor General and the Office of Program
  490  Policy Analysis and Government Accountability shall be
  491  confidential and exempt from the provisions of s. 119.07(1).
  492         Section 7. Section 1002.821, Florida Statutes, is created
  493  to read:
  494         1002.821Florida Child Care Fund.—The Florida Child Care
  495  Fund is established to support early learning and child care
  496  needs of Florida families.
  497         (1)A Department of Education direct-support organization
  498  established pursuant to s. 1001.24 shall administer the fund.
  499         (2)(a)Any bequests, gifts, grants, and donations made to
  500  the fund as may be solicited for such purpose from public or
  501  private sources shall be deposited into the Early Learning Fund.
  502         (b)Any legislative appropriation from the Child Care and
  503  Development Block Grant Trust Fund which may be provided to the
  504  Florida Child Care Fund shall be deposited into the Early
  505  Learning Fund and shall be used to fund children from the
  506  waiting list under subparagraph (3)(a)1.
  507         (c)Any funds received from state sources and interest
  508  earnings shall be accounted for separately.
  509         (3)Funds shall be used for the following purposes:
  510         (a)To provide care for children from birth until the child
  511  is eligible to enroll in kindergarten in accordance with:
  512         1.An allocation methodology to fund the waiting list of
  513  early learning coalitions; or
  514         2.The intentions of a donor.
  515         (b)The early learning coalition shall fund school
  516  readiness program providers and providers selected by the
  517  donor’s recipient at the reimbursement rate calculated pursuant
  518  to s. 1002.84(17). If the provider selected by the donor’s
  519  recipient is not a school readiness program provider, the
  520  department shall adopt a contract for use by an early learning
  521  coalition with the provider to provide such funds.
  522         (c)Any family served under subparagraph (a)1. shall have
  523  an early learning coalition apply a parent copayment based on
  524  family income pursuant to s. 1002.84(9) or s. 1002.935(2)(b).
  525         (4)Beginning January 1, 2027, and each January 1
  526  thereafter, the Division of Early Learning shall prepare, and
  527  the department shall publish on its website, a report that
  528  summarizes the performance of the Florida Child Care Fund and
  529  the fund’s fundraising activities for the previous fiscal year,
  530  and identifies the child care needs supported by the fund
  531  principal or earnings and those supported by private sources,
  532  bequests, gifts, grants, and donations. The report must also
  533  include:
  534         (a)Outcome data, including the number of children served
  535  and any child outcomes, by each early learning coalition.
  536         (b)The amount of funds spent on administrative expenses
  537  and fundraising and the amount of funds raised from private
  538  sources.
  539         Section 8. Present subsection (2) of section 1002.95,
  540  Florida Statutes, is redesignated as subsection (3), and a new
  541  subsection (2) is added to that section, to read:
  542         1002.95 Teacher Education and Compensation Helps (TEACH)
  543  Scholarship Program.—
  544         (2) Subject to an appropriation, the TEACH Scholarship
  545  Program administrator shall also establish and administer the
  546  Center for Early Childhood Professional Recognition to ensure
  547  alignment of training statewide, including, but not limited to,
  548  a system of training approval, a system of trainer approval, and
  549  implementation of competency-based assessments aligned to the
  550  early learning professional development standards and career
  551  pathways under s. 1002.995.
  552         Section 9. Paragraph (a) of subsection (2) of section
  553  39.202, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  554         39.202 Confidentiality of reports and records in cases of
  555  child abuse or neglect; exception.—
  556         (2) Except as provided in subsection (4), access to such
  557  records, excluding the name of, or other identifying information
  558  with respect to, the reporter which may only be released as
  559  provided in subsection (5), may only be granted to the following
  560  persons, officials, and agencies:
  561         (a) Employees, authorized agents, or contract providers of
  562  the department, the Department of Health, the Agency for Persons
  563  with Disabilities, the Agency for Health Care Administration,
  564  the Department of Education, or county agencies responsible for
  565  carrying out:
  566         1. Child or adult protective investigations;
  567         2. Ongoing child or adult protective services;
  568         3. Early intervention and prevention services;
  569         4. Healthy Start services;
  570         5. Licensure or approval of adoptive homes, foster homes,
  571  child care facilities, facilities licensed under chapters 393
  572  and 394, family child day care homes, providers who receive
  573  school readiness funding under part VI of chapter 1002, or other
  574  homes used to provide for the care and welfare of children;
  575         6. Employment screening for caregivers in residential group
  576  homes and facilities licensed under chapters 393, 394, and 409;
  577  or
  578         7. Services for victims of domestic violence when provided
  579  by certified domestic violence centers working at the
  580  department’s request as case consultants or with shared clients.
  581  
  582  Also, employees or agents of the Department of Juvenile Justice
  583  responsible for the provision of services to children, pursuant
  584  to chapters 984 and 985.
  585         Section 10. Section 125.0109, Florida Statutes, is amended
  586  to read:
  587         125.0109 Family child day care homes; local zoning
  588  regulation.—The operation of a residence as a family child day
  589  care home, as defined by law, registered or licensed with the
  590  Department of Children and Families shall constitute a valid
  591  residential use for purposes of any local zoning regulations,
  592  and no such regulation shall require the owner or operator of
  593  such family child day care home to obtain any special exemption
  594  or use permit or waiver, or to pay any special fee in excess of
  595  $50, to operate in an area zoned for residential use.
  596         Section 11. Section 166.0445, Florida Statutes, is amended
  597  to read:
  598         166.0445 Family child day care homes; local zoning
  599  regulation.—The operation of a residence as a family child day
  600  care home, as defined by law, registered or licensed with the
  601  Department of Children and Families shall constitute a valid
  602  residential use for purposes of any local zoning regulations,
  603  and no such regulation shall require the owner or operator of
  604  such family child day care home to obtain any special exemption
  605  or use permit or waiver, or to pay any special fee in excess of
  606  $50, to operate in an area zoned for residential use.
  607         Section 12. Paragraph (j) of subsection (7) of section
  608  212.08, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  609         212.08 Sales, rental, use, consumption, distribution, and
  610  storage tax; specified exemptions.—The sale at retail, the
  611  rental, the use, the consumption, the distribution, and the
  612  storage to be used or consumed in this state of the following
  613  are hereby specifically exempt from the tax imposed by this
  614  chapter.
  615         (7) MISCELLANEOUS EXEMPTIONS.—Exemptions provided to any
  616  entity by this chapter do not inure to any transaction that is
  617  otherwise taxable under this chapter when payment is made by a
  618  representative or employee of the entity by any means,
  619  including, but not limited to, cash, check, or credit card, even
  620  when that representative or employee is subsequently reimbursed
  621  by the entity. In addition, exemptions provided to any entity by
  622  this subsection do not inure to any transaction that is
  623  otherwise taxable under this chapter unless the entity has
  624  obtained a sales tax exemption certificate from the department
  625  or the entity obtains or provides other documentation as
  626  required by the department. Eligible purchases or leases made
  627  with such a certificate must be in strict compliance with this
  628  subsection and departmental rules, and any person who makes an
  629  exempt purchase with a certificate that is not in strict
  630  compliance with this subsection and the rules is liable for and
  631  shall pay the tax. The department may adopt rules to administer
  632  this subsection.
  633         (j) Household fuels.—Also exempt from payment of the tax
  634  imposed by this chapter are sales of utilities to residential
  635  households or owners of residential models in this state by
  636  utility companies who pay the gross receipts tax imposed under
  637  s. 203.01, and sales of fuel to residential households or owners
  638  of residential models, including oil, kerosene, liquefied
  639  petroleum gas, coal, wood, and other fuel products used in the
  640  household or residential model for the purposes of heating,
  641  cooking, lighting, and refrigeration, regardless of whether such
  642  sales of utilities and fuels are separately metered and billed
  643  direct to the residents or are metered and billed to the
  644  landlord. If any part of the utility or fuel is used for a
  645  nonexempt purpose, the entire sale is taxable. The landlord
  646  shall provide a separate meter for nonexempt utility or fuel
  647  consumption. For the purposes of this paragraph, licensed family
  648  child day care homes shall also be exempt.
  649         Section 13. Subsections (3), (8), (9), and (11) of section
  650  402.302, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
  651         402.302 Definitions.—As used in this chapter, the term:
  652         (3) “Child care personnel” means all owners, operators,
  653  employees, and volunteers working in a child care facility. The
  654  term does not include persons who work in a child care facility
  655  after hours when children are not present or parents of children
  656  in a child care facility. For purposes of screening, the term
  657  includes any member, over the age of 12 years, of a child care
  658  facility operator’s family, or person, over the age of 12 years,
  659  residing with a child care facility operator if the child care
  660  facility is located in or adjacent to the home of the operator
  661  or if the family member of, or person residing with, the child
  662  care facility operator has any direct contact with the children
  663  in the facility during its hours of operation. Members of the
  664  operator’s family or persons residing with the operator who are
  665  between the ages of 12 years and 18 years are not required to be
  666  fingerprinted but must be screened for delinquency records. For
  667  purposes of screening, the term also includes persons who work
  668  in child care programs that provide care for children 15 hours
  669  or more each week in public or nonpublic schools, family child
  670  day care homes, membership organizations under s. 402.301, or
  671  programs otherwise exempted under s. 402.316. The term does not
  672  include public or nonpublic school personnel who are providing
  673  care during regular school hours, or after hours for activities
  674  related to a school’s program for grades kindergarten through
  675  12. A volunteer who assists on an intermittent basis for less
  676  than 10 hours per month is not included in the term “personnel”
  677  for the purposes of screening and training if a person who meets
  678  the screening requirement of s. 402.305(2) is always present and
  679  has the volunteer in his or her line of sight. Students who
  680  observe and participate in a child care facility as a part of
  681  their required coursework are not considered child care
  682  personnel, provided such observation and participation are on an
  683  intermittent basis and a person who meets the screening
  684  requirement of s. 402.305(2) is always present and has the
  685  student in his or her line of sight.
  686         (8) “Family child day care home” means an occupied
  687  residence in which child care is regularly provided for children
  688  from at least two unrelated families and which receives a
  689  payment, fee, or grant for any of the children receiving care,
  690  whether or not operated for profit. Household children under 13
  691  years of age, when on the premises of the family child day care
  692  home or on a field trip with children enrolled in child care,
  693  shall be included in the overall capacity of the licensed home.
  694  A family child day care home shall be allowed to provide care
  695  for one of the following groups of children, which shall include
  696  household children under 13 years of age:
  697         (a) A maximum of four children from birth to 12 months of
  698  age.
  699         (b) A maximum of three children from birth to 12 months of
  700  age, and other children, for a maximum total of six children.
  701         (c) A maximum of six preschool children if all are older
  702  than 12 months of age.
  703         (d) A maximum of 10 children if no more than 5 are
  704  preschool age and, of those 5, no more than 2 are under 12
  705  months of age.
  706         (9) “Household children” means children who are related by
  707  blood, marriage, or legal adoption to, or who are the legal
  708  wards of, the family child day care home operator, the large
  709  family child care home operator, or an adult household member
  710  who permanently or temporarily resides in the home. Supervision
  711  of the operator’s household children shall be left to the
  712  discretion of the operator unless those children receive
  713  subsidized child care through the school readiness program
  714  pursuant to s. 1002.92 to be in the home.
  715         (11) “Large family child care home” means an occupied
  716  residence in which child care is regularly provided for children
  717  from at least two unrelated families, which receives a payment,
  718  fee, or grant for any of the children receiving care, whether or
  719  not operated for profit, and which has at least two full-time
  720  child care personnel on the premises during the hours of
  721  operation. One of the two full-time child care personnel must be
  722  the owner or occupant of the residence. A large family child
  723  care home must first have operated as a licensed family child
  724  day care home for 2 years, with an operator who has had a child
  725  development associate credential or its equivalent for 1 year,
  726  before seeking licensure as a large family child care home.
  727  Household children under 13 years of age, when on the premises
  728  of the large family child care home or on a field trip with
  729  children enrolled in child care, shall be included in the
  730  overall capacity of the licensed home. A large family child care
  731  home shall be allowed to provide care for one of the following
  732  groups of children, which shall include household children under
  733  13 years of age:
  734         (a) A maximum of 8 children from birth to 24 months of age.
  735         (b) A maximum of 12 children, with no more than 4 children
  736  under 24 months of age.
  737         Section 14. Paragraph (a) of subsection (17) of section
  738  402.305, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  739         402.305 Licensing standards; child care facilities.—
  740         (17) TRANSFER OF OWNERSHIP.—
  741         (a) One week prior to the transfer of ownership of a child
  742  care facility or family child day care home, the transferor
  743  shall notify the parent or caretaker of each child of the
  744  impending transfer.
  745         Section 15. Subsections (1), (2), and (3) of section
  746  402.309, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
  747         402.309 Provisional license or registration.—
  748         (1) The local licensing agency or the department, whichever
  749  is authorized to license child care facilities in a county, may
  750  issue a provisional license for child care facilities, family
  751  child day care homes, or large family child care homes, or a
  752  provisional registration for family child day care homes to
  753  applicants for an initial license or registration or to
  754  licensees or registrants seeking a renewal who are unable to
  755  meet all the standards provided for in ss. 402.301-402.319.
  756         (2) A provisional license or registration may not be issued
  757  unless the operator or owner makes adequate provisions for the
  758  health and safety of the child. A provisional license may be
  759  issued for a child care facility if all of the screening
  760  materials have been timely submitted. A provisional license or
  761  registration may not be issued unless the child care facility,
  762  family child day care home, or large family child care home is
  763  in compliance with the requirements for screening of child care
  764  personnel in ss. 402.305, 402.3055, 402.313, and 402.3131,
  765  respectively.
  766         (3) Notwithstanding subsection (2), a local licensing
  767  agency or the department, whichever is authorized to license
  768  child care facilities in a county, must issue a provisional
  769  license or registration if the operator or owner:
  770         (a) Is applying for an initial license or registration for
  771  a child care facility, a family child day care home, or a large
  772  family child care home;
  773         (b) Has made adequate provisions for the health and safety
  774  of the child; and
  775         (c) Provides evidence that he or she has completed, within
  776  the previous 6 months, training pursuant to United States
  777  Department of Defense Instruction 6060.02 and background
  778  screening by the United States Department of Defense pursuant to
  779  34 U.S.C. s. 20351 and 32 C.F.R. part 86 and received a
  780  favorable suitability and fitness determination.
  781         Section 16. Paragraph (d) of subsection (1) and subsection
  782  (4) of section 402.310, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
  783         402.310 Disciplinary actions; hearings upon denial,
  784  suspension, or revocation of license or registration;
  785  administrative fines.—
  786         (1)
  787         (d) The disciplinary sanctions set forth in this section
  788  apply to licensed child care facilities, licensed large family
  789  child care homes, and licensed or registered family child day
  790  care homes.
  791         (4) An applicant, registrant, or licensee shall have the
  792  right to appeal a decision of the local licensing agency to a
  793  representative of the department. Any required hearing shall be
  794  held in the county in which the child care facility, family
  795  child day care home, or large family child care home is being
  796  operated or is to be established. The hearing shall be conducted
  797  in accordance with the provisions of chapter 120.
  798         Section 17. Subsection (1) and paragraph (a) of subsection
  799  (2) of section 402.3115, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
  800         402.3115 Elimination of duplicative and unnecessary
  801  inspections; abbreviated inspections.—
  802         (1) The Department of Children and Families and local
  803  governmental agencies that license child care facilities shall
  804  develop and implement a plan to eliminate duplicative and
  805  unnecessary inspections of child care facilities, family child
  806  day care homes, and large family child care homes.
  807         (2)(a) The department and the local governmental agencies
  808  shall develop and implement an abbreviated inspection plan for
  809  child care facilities, family child day care homes, and large
  810  family child care homes that meet all of the following
  811  conditions:
  812         1. Have been licensed for at least 2 consecutive years.
  813         2. Have not had a Class 1 deficiency, as defined by rule,
  814  for at least 2 consecutive years.
  815         3. Have not had more than three of the same Class 2
  816  deficiencies, as defined by rule, for at least 2 consecutive
  817  years.
  818         4. Have received at least two full onsite renewal
  819  inspections in the most recent 2 years.
  820         5. Do not have any current uncorrected violations.
  821         6. Do not have any open regulatory complaints or active
  822  child protective services investigations.
  823         Section 18. Section 402.312, Florida Statutes, is amended
  824  to read:
  825         402.312 License required; injunctive relief.—
  826         (1) The operation of a child care facility without a
  827  license, a family child day care home without a license or
  828  registration, or a large family child care home without a
  829  license is prohibited. If the department or the local licensing
  830  agency discovers that a child care facility is being operated
  831  without a license, a family child day care home is being
  832  operated without a license or registration, or a large family
  833  child care home is being operated without a license, the
  834  department or local licensing agency is authorized to seek an
  835  injunction in the circuit court where the facility is located to
  836  enjoin continued operation of such facility, family child day
  837  care home, or large family child care home. When the court is
  838  closed for the transaction of judicial business, the department
  839  or local licensing agency is authorized to seek an emergency
  840  injunction to enjoin continued operation of such unlicensed
  841  facility, unregistered or unlicensed family child day care home,
  842  or unlicensed large family child care home, which injunction
  843  shall be continued, modified, or revoked on the next day of
  844  judicial business.
  845         (2) Other grounds for seeking an injunction to close a
  846  child care facility, family child day care home, or a large
  847  family child care home are that:
  848         (a) There is any violation of the standards applied under
  849  ss. 402.301-402.319 which threatens harm to any child in the
  850  child care facility, a family child day care home, or large
  851  family child care home.
  852         (b) A licensee or registrant has repeatedly violated the
  853  standards provided for under ss. 402.301-402.319.
  854         (c) A child care facility, family child day care home, or
  855  large family child care home continues to have children in
  856  attendance after the closing date established by the department
  857  or the local licensing agency.
  858         (3) The department or local licensing agency may impose an
  859  administrative fine on any child care facility, family child day
  860  care home, or large family child care home operating without a
  861  license or registration, consistent with the provisions of s.
  862  402.310.
  863         Section 19. Subsection (3) of section 402.315, Florida
  864  Statutes, is amended to read:
  865         402.315 Funding; license fees.—
  866         (3) The department shall collect a fee for any license it
  867  issues for a child care facility, family child day care home, or
  868  large family child care home pursuant to ss. 402.305, 402.313,
  869  and 402.3131.
  870         (a) For a child care facility licensed pursuant to s.
  871  402.305, such fee shall be $1 per child, based on the licensed
  872  capacity of the facility, except that the minimum fee shall be
  873  $25 per facility and the maximum fee shall be $100 per facility.
  874         (b) For a family child day care home registered pursuant to
  875  s. 402.313, such fee shall be $25.
  876         (c) For a family child day care home licensed pursuant to
  877  s. 402.313, such fee shall be $50.
  878         (d) For a large family child care home licensed pursuant to
  879  s. 402.3131, such fee shall be $60.
  880         Section 20. Section 402.318, Florida Statutes, is amended
  881  to read:
  882         402.318 Advertisement.—A person, as defined in s. 1.01(3),
  883  may not advertise a child care facility, family child day care
  884  home, or large family child care home without including within
  885  such advertisement the state or local agency license number or
  886  registration number of such facility or home. Violation of this
  887  section is a misdemeanor of the first degree, punishable as
  888  provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083.
  889         Section 21. Section 402.319, Florida Statutes, is amended
  890  to read:
  891         402.319 Penalties.—
  892         (1) It is a misdemeanor of the first degree, punishable as
  893  provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083, for any person knowingly
  894  to:
  895         (a) Fail, by false statement, misrepresentation,
  896  impersonation, or other fraudulent means, to disclose in any
  897  application for voluntary or paid employment or licensure
  898  regulated under ss. 402.301-402.318 all information required
  899  under those sections or a material fact used in making a
  900  determination as to such person’s qualifications to be child
  901  care personnel, as defined in s. 402.302, in a child care
  902  facility, family child day care home, or other child care
  903  program.
  904         (b) Operate or attempt to operate a child care facility
  905  without having procured a license as required by this act.
  906         (c) Operate or attempt to operate a family child day care
  907  home without a license or without registering with the
  908  department, whichever is applicable.
  909         (d) Operate or attempt to operate a child care facility or
  910  family child day care home under a license that is suspended,
  911  revoked, or terminated.
  912         (e) Misrepresent, by act or omission, a child care facility
  913  or family child day care home to be duly licensed pursuant to
  914  this act without being so licensed.
  915         (f) Make any other misrepresentation, by act or omission,
  916  regarding the licensure or operation of a child care facility or
  917  family child day care home to a parent or guardian who has a
  918  child placed in the facility or is inquiring as to placing a
  919  child in the facility, or to a representative of the licensing
  920  authority, or to a representative of a law enforcement agency,
  921  including, but not limited to, any misrepresentation as to:
  922         1. The number of children at the child care facility or the
  923  family child day care home;
  924         2. The part of the child care facility or family child day
  925  care home designated for child care;
  926         3. The qualifications or credentials of child care
  927  personnel;
  928         4. Whether a family child day care home or child care
  929  facility complies with the screening requirements of s. 402.305;
  930  or
  931         5. Whether child care personnel have the training as
  932  required by s. 402.305.
  933         (2) If any child care personnel makes any misrepresentation
  934  in violation of this section to a parent or guardian who has
  935  placed a child in the child care facility or family child day
  936  care home, and the parent or guardian relied upon the
  937  misrepresentation, and the child suffers great bodily harm,
  938  permanent disfigurement, permanent disability, or death as a
  939  result of an intentional act or negligence by the child care
  940  personnel, then the child care personnel commits a felony of the
  941  second degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083,
  942  or s. 775.084.
  943         (3) Each child care facility, family child day care home,
  944  and large family child care home shall annually submit an
  945  affidavit of compliance with s. 39.201.
  946         Section 22. Paragraph (c) of subsection (2) of section
  947  409.988, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  948         409.988 Community-based care lead agency duties; general
  949  provisions.—
  950         (2) LICENSURE.—
  951         (c) Substitute care providers who are licensed under s.
  952  409.175 and who have contracted with a lead agency are also
  953  authorized to provide registered or licensed family child day
  954  care under s. 402.313 if such care is consistent with federal
  955  law and if the home has met the requirements of s. 402.313.
  956         Section 23. Paragraph (b) of subsection (8) of section
  957  411.203, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  958         411.203 Continuum of comprehensive services.—The Department
  959  of Education and the Department of Health shall utilize the
  960  continuum of prevention and early assistance services for high
  961  risk pregnant women and for high-risk and handicapped children
  962  and their families, as outlined in this section, as a basis for
  963  the intraagency and interagency program coordination,
  964  monitoring, and analysis required in this chapter. The continuum
  965  shall be the guide for the comprehensive statewide approach for
  966  services for high-risk pregnant women and for high-risk and
  967  handicapped children and their families, and may be expanded or
  968  reduced as necessary for the enhancement of those services.
  969  Expansion or reduction of the continuum shall be determined by
  970  intraagency or interagency findings and agreement, whichever is
  971  applicable. Implementation of the continuum shall be based upon
  972  applicable eligibility criteria, availability of resources, and
  973  interagency prioritization when programs impact both agencies,
  974  or upon single agency prioritization when programs impact only
  975  one agency. The continuum shall include, but not be limited to:
  976         (8) SUPPORT SERVICES FOR ALL EXPECTANT PARENTS AND PARENTS
  977  OF HIGH-RISK CHILDREN.—
  978         (b) Child care and early childhood programs, including, but
  979  not limited to, licensed child care facilities, family child day
  980  care homes, therapeutic child care, Head Start, and preschool
  981  programs in public and private schools.
  982         Section 24. Paragraph (a) of subsection (3) of section
  983  1002.55, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  984         1002.55 School-year prekindergarten program delivered by
  985  private prekindergarten providers.—
  986         (3) To be eligible to deliver the prekindergarten program,
  987  a private prekindergarten provider must meet each of the
  988  following requirements:
  989         (a) The private prekindergarten provider must be a child
  990  care facility licensed under s. 402.305, family child day care
  991  home licensed under s. 402.313, large family child care home
  992  licensed under s. 402.3131, nonpublic school exempt from
  993  licensure under s. 402.3025(2), faith-based child care provider
  994  exempt from licensure under s. 402.316, child development
  995  program that is accredited by a national accrediting body and
  996  operates on a military installation that is certified by the
  997  United States Department of Defense, or private prekindergarten
  998  provider that has been issued a provisional license under s.
  999  402.309. A private prekindergarten provider may not deliver the
 1000  program while holding a probation-status license under s.
 1001  402.310.
 1002         Section 25. Paragraph (u) of subsection (2) of section
 1003  1002.82, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1004         1002.82 Department of Education; powers and duties.—
 1005         (2) The department shall:
 1006         (u) Administer a statewide toll-free Warm-Line to provide
 1007  assistance and consultation to child care facilities and family
 1008  child day care homes regarding health, developmental,
 1009  disability, and special needs issues of the children they are
 1010  serving, particularly children with disabilities and other
 1011  special needs. The department shall:
 1012         1. Annually inform child care facilities and family child
 1013  day care homes of the availability of this service through the
 1014  child care resource and referral network under s. 1002.92.
 1015         2. Expand or contract for the expansion of the Warm-Line to
 1016  maintain at least one Warm-Line in each early learning coalition
 1017  service area.
 1018         Section 26. Paragraph (j) of subsection (4) of section
 1019  1002.83, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1020         1002.83 Early learning coalitions.—
 1021         (4) Each early learning coalition must include the
 1022  following member positions; however, in a multicounty coalition,
 1023  each ex officio member position may be filled by multiple
 1024  nonvoting members but no more than one voting member shall be
 1025  seated per member position. If an early learning coalition has
 1026  more than one member representing the same entity, only one of
 1027  such members may serve as a voting member:
 1028         (j) A representative of private for-profit child care
 1029  providers, including private for-profit family child day care
 1030  homes.
 1031         Section 27. Subsection (4) of section 1002.84, Florida
 1032  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1033         1002.84 Early learning coalitions; school readiness powers
 1034  and duties.—Each early learning coalition shall:
 1035         (4) Establish a regional Warm-Line as directed by the
 1036  department pursuant to s. 1002.82(2)(u). Regional Warm-Line
 1037  staff shall provide onsite technical assistance, when requested,
 1038  to assist child care facilities and family child day care homes
 1039  with inquiries relating to the strategies, curriculum, and
 1040  environmental adaptations the child care facilities and family
 1041  child day care homes may need as they serve children with
 1042  disabilities and other special needs.
 1043         Section 28. Paragraphs (a) and (c) of subsection (1) of
 1044  section 1002.88, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 1045         1002.88 School readiness program provider standards;
 1046  eligibility to deliver the school readiness program.—
 1047         (1) To be eligible to deliver the school readiness program,
 1048  a school readiness program provider must:
 1049         (a) Be a child care facility licensed under s. 402.305, a
 1050  family child day care home licensed or registered under s.
 1051  402.313, a large family child care home licensed under s.
 1052  402.3131, a public school or nonpublic school exempt from
 1053  licensure under s. 402.3025, a faith-based child care provider
 1054  exempt from licensure under s. 402.316, a before-school or
 1055  after-school program described in s. 402.305(1)(c), a child
 1056  development program that is accredited by a national accrediting
 1057  body and operates on a military installation that is certified
 1058  by the United States Department of Defense, an informal child
 1059  care provider to the extent authorized in the state’s Child Care
 1060  and Development Fund Plan as approved by the United States
 1061  Department of Health and Human Services pursuant to 45 C.F.R. s.
 1062  98.18, or a provider who has been issued a provisional license
 1063  pursuant to s. 402.309. A provider may not deliver the program
 1064  while holding a probation-status license under s. 402.310.
 1065         (c) Provide basic health and safety of its premises and
 1066  facilities and compliance with requirements for age-appropriate
 1067  immunizations of children enrolled in the school readiness
 1068  program.
 1069         1. For a provider that is licensed, compliance with s.
 1070  402.305, s. 402.3131, or s. 402.313 and this subsection, as
 1071  verified pursuant to s. 402.311, satisfies this requirement.
 1072         2. For a provider that is a registered family child day
 1073  care home or is not subject to licensure or registration by the
 1074  Department of Children and Families, compliance with this
 1075  subsection, as verified pursuant to s. 402.311, satisfies this
 1076  requirement. Upon verification pursuant to s. 402.311, the
 1077  provider shall annually post the health and safety checklist
 1078  adopted by the department prominently on its premises in plain
 1079  sight for visitors and parents and shall annually submit the
 1080  checklist to its local early learning coalition.
 1081         3. For a child development program that is accredited by a
 1082  national accrediting body and operates on a military
 1083  installation that is certified by the United States Department
 1084  of Defense, the submission and verification of annual
 1085  inspections pursuant to United States Department of Defense
 1086  Instructions 6060.2 and 1402.05 satisfies this requirement.
 1087         Section 29. Paragraph (c) of subsection (2) of section
 1088  1002.895, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1089         1002.895 Market rate schedule.—The school readiness program
 1090  market rate schedule shall be implemented as follows:
 1091         (2) The market rate schedule must differentiate rates by
 1092  provider type, including, but not limited to:
 1093         (c) Family child day care homes licensed or registered
 1094  under s. 402.313.
 1095         Section 30. Paragraph (a) of subsection (3) and subsection
 1096  (4) of section 1002.92, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 1097         1002.92 Child care and early childhood resource and
 1098  referral.—
 1099         (3) Child care resource and referral agencies shall provide
 1100  the following services:
 1101         (a) Identification of existing public and private child
 1102  care and early childhood education services, including child
 1103  care services by public and private employers, and the
 1104  development of an early learning provider performance profile of
 1105  those services through the single statewide information system
 1106  developed by the department under s. 1002.82(2)(q). These
 1107  services may include family child day care, public and private
 1108  child care programs, the Voluntary Prekindergarten Education
 1109  Program, Head Start, the school readiness program, special
 1110  education programs for prekindergarten children with
 1111  disabilities, services for children with developmental
 1112  disabilities, full-time and part-time programs, before-school
 1113  and after-school programs, and vacation care programs. The early
 1114  learning provider performance profile shall include, but not be
 1115  limited to:
 1116         1. Type of program.
 1117         2. Hours of service.
 1118         3. Ages of children served.
 1119         4. Number of children served.
 1120         5. Program information.
 1121         6. Fees and eligibility for services.
 1122         7. Availability of transportation.
 1123         8. Participation in the Child Care Food Program, if
 1124  applicable.
 1125         9. A link to licensing inspection reports, if applicable.
 1126         10. The components of the Voluntary Prekindergarten
 1127  Education Program performance metric calculated under s. 1002.68
 1128  which must consist of the program assessment composite score,
 1129  learning gains score, achievement score, and its designations,
 1130  if applicable.
 1131         11. The school readiness program assessment composite score
 1132  and program assessment care level composite score results
 1133  delineated by infant classrooms, toddler classrooms, and
 1134  preschool classrooms results under s. 1002.82, if applicable.
 1135         12. Gold Seal Quality Care designation under s. 1002.945,
 1136  if applicable.
 1137         13. Indication of whether the provider implements a
 1138  curriculum approved by the department and the name of the
 1139  curriculum, if applicable.
 1140         14. Participation in school readiness child assessment
 1141  under s. 1002.82.
 1142         (4) A child care facility licensed under s. 402.305 and
 1143  licensed and registered family child day care homes must provide
 1144  the statewide child care and resource and referral network with
 1145  the following information annually:
 1146         (a) Type of program.
 1147         (b) Hours of service.
 1148         (c) Ages of children served.
 1149         (d) Fees and eligibility for services.
 1150         Section 31. Subsection (2) of section 1002.93, Florida
 1151  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1152         1002.93 School readiness program transportation services.—
 1153         (2) The transportation servicers may only provide
 1154  transportation to each child participating in the school
 1155  readiness program to the extent that such transportation is
 1156  necessary to provide child care opportunities that otherwise
 1157  would not be available to a child whose home is more than a
 1158  reasonable walking distance from the nearest child care facility
 1159  or family child day care home.
 1160         Section 32. Paragraph (b) of subsection (1), paragraphs (a)
 1161  and (c) of subsection (3), and subsection (4) of section
 1162  1002.945, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 1163         1002.945 Gold Seal Quality Care Program.—
 1164         (1)
 1165         (b) A child care facility, large family child care home, or
 1166  family child day care home that is accredited by an accrediting
 1167  association approved by the Department of Education under
 1168  subsection (3) and meets all other requirements shall, upon
 1169  application to the department, receive a separate “Gold Seal
 1170  Quality Care” designation.
 1171         (3)(a) In order to be approved by the Department of
 1172  Education for participation in the Gold Seal Quality Care
 1173  Program, an accrediting association must apply to the department
 1174  and demonstrate that it:
 1175         1. Is a recognized accrediting association.
 1176         2. Has accrediting standards that substantially meet or
 1177  exceed the Gold Seal Quality Care standards adopted by the state
 1178  board under subsection (2).
 1179         3. Is a registered corporation with the Department of
 1180  State.
 1181         4. Can provide evidence that the process for accreditation
 1182  has, at a minimum, all of the following components:
 1183         a. Clearly defined prerequisites that a child care provider
 1184  must meet before beginning the accreditation process. However,
 1185  accreditation may not be granted to a child care facility, large
 1186  family child care home, or family child day care home before the
 1187  site is operational and is attended by children.
 1188         b. Procedures for completion of a self-study and
 1189  comprehensive onsite verification process for each classroom
 1190  that documents compliance with accrediting standards.
 1191         c. A training process for accreditation verifiers to ensure
 1192  inter-rater reliability.
 1193         d. Ongoing compliance procedures that include requiring
 1194  each accredited child care facility, large family child care
 1195  home, and family child day care home to file an annual report
 1196  with the accrediting association and risk-based, onsite auditing
 1197  protocols for accredited child care facilities, large family
 1198  child care homes, and family child day care homes.
 1199         e. Procedures for the revocation of accreditation due to
 1200  failure to maintain accrediting standards as evidenced by sub
 1201  subparagraph d. or any other relevant information received by
 1202  the accrediting association.
 1203         f. Accreditation renewal procedures that include an onsite
 1204  verification occurring at least every 5 years.
 1205         g. A process for verifying continued accreditation
 1206  compliance in the event of a transfer of ownership of
 1207  facilities.
 1208         h. A process to communicate issues that arise during the
 1209  accreditation period with governmental entities that have a
 1210  vested interest in the Gold Seal Quality Care Program, including
 1211  the Department of Education, the Department of Children and
 1212  Families, the Department of Health, local licensing entities if
 1213  applicable, and the early learning coalition.
 1214         (c) If an accrediting association has granted accreditation
 1215  to a child care facility, large family child care home, or
 1216  family child day care under fraudulent terms or failed to
 1217  conduct onsite verifications, the accrediting association shall
 1218  be liable for the repayment of any rate differentials paid under
 1219  subsection (6).
 1220         (4) In order to obtain and maintain a designation as a Gold
 1221  Seal Quality Care provider, a child care facility, large family
 1222  child care home, or family child day care home must meet the
 1223  following additional criteria:
 1224         (a) The child care provider must not have had any class I
 1225  violations, as defined by rule of the Department of Children and
 1226  Families, within the 2 years preceding its application for
 1227  designation as a Gold Seal Quality Care provider. Commission of
 1228  a class I violation shall be grounds for termination of the
 1229  designation as a Gold Seal Quality Care provider until the
 1230  provider has no class I violations for a period of 2 years.
 1231         (b) The child care provider must not have had three or more
 1232  of the same class II violations, as defined by rule of the
 1233  Department of Children and Families, within the 2 years
 1234  preceding its application for designation as a Gold Seal Quality
 1235  Care provider. Commission of three or more of the same class II
 1236  violations within a 2-year period shall be grounds for
 1237  termination of the designation as a Gold Seal Quality Care
 1238  provider until the provider has no class II violations that are
 1239  the same for a period of 1 year.
 1240         (c) The child care provider must not have been cited for
 1241  the same class III violation, as defined by rule of the
 1242  Department of Children and Families, three or more times and
 1243  failed to correct the violation within 1 year after the date of
 1244  each citation, within the 2 years preceding its application for
 1245  designation as a Gold Seal Quality Care provider. Commission of
 1246  the same class III violation three or more times and failure to
 1247  correct within the required time during a 2-year period may be
 1248  grounds for termination of the designation as a Gold Seal
 1249  Quality Care provider until the provider has no class III
 1250  violations for a period of 1 year.
 1251         (d) Notwithstanding paragraph (a), if the Department of
 1252  Education determines through a formal process that a provider
 1253  has been in business for at least 5 years and has no other class
 1254  I violations recorded, the department may recommend to the state
 1255  board that the provider maintain its Gold Seal Quality Care
 1256  status. The state board’s determination regarding such
 1257  provider’s status is final.
 1258         Section 33. This act shall take effect July 1, 2026.