HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES |
H.B. NO. |
2365 |
TWENTY-NINTH LEGISLATURE, 2018 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
RELATING TO CHILD CARE.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION
1. Access to safe, affordable, and
nurturing child care is a critical need for Hawaii's children and working
parents. The purpose of this Act is to
amend provisions of chapter 346, Hawaii Revised Statutes, to: (1) improve the
safety of children in Hawaii's regulated and legally exempt child care settings
by requiring criminal history checks of adult relatives who provide care for a
child whose family receives a child care subsidy from the department of human
services; (2) clarify that the department of
human services may take both administrative and judicial action to enforce
child care licensing provisions of chapter 346, Hawaii Revised Statutes, and
increase penalties by making them apply on a daily basis; (3) explain when
investigation information will be released to the public; and (4) clarify that when the child care licensing program
receives a report of death or injury of a child in a child care setting, the
program will share information it receives with, and cooperate with, child
welfare services and law enforcement.
SECTION
2. Section 346-152.5, Hawaii Revised
Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
"(a) [To be eligible] In order to
provide child care for a child whose family receives a child care subsidy from
the department, persons exempt pursuant to section 346-152 shall be required to
agree to:
(1) A
criminal history record check, a sex offender registry check, a child abuse
record check, and an adult abuse perpetrator check in the same manner as a
prospective applicant or licensed provider in accordance with section 346-154;
[provided that the criminal history record check shall be limited to a
criminal history record check conducted through files maintained by the Hawaii
criminal justice data center for the following relatives of the child who
requires care: grandparents, great-grandparents, aunts, uncles, and siblings
aged eighteen or older living in a separate residence;]
(2) Completion
of a pre-service or orientation training and ongoing training in health and
safety topics;
(3) Any
monitoring inspection visits by the department or its designee to determine
compliance with minimum health and safety standards at the location where child
care is being provided for a child whose family receives a child care subsidy
from the department, including investigations by the department when the
department has received a report of health and safety concerns."
SECTION
3. Section 346-153, Hawaii Revised
Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§346-153 Records of deficiencies and complaints;
release to public. (a) For every child care facility, the department
shall maintain records for the current and previous two years of: results of
its inspections; notifications to providers of deficiencies; corrective action
taken; complaints of violations of rules adopted under this part; results of
its investigations; resolution of complaints; and suspensions, revocations,
reinstatements, restorations, and reissuances of licenses, temporary permits,
and registrations issued under this part.
(b)
Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the records described in
this section shall be available for inspection in the manner set forth in
chapter 92F and may be posted by the department on a public website; provided
that with respect to records of family child care homes and group child care
homes, sensitive personal information, including home addresses, or information
provided to the department with the understanding that it would not be publicly
divulged shall be deleted or obliterated prior to making the records available
to the public. Nothing in this section shall authorize the department to
release to the public the names of or any other identifying information
on complainants. Nothing in this
section shall prohibit the department's child care licensing program from sharing
information and cooperating with the department's child protective services and
law enforcement on investigations.
(c)
The department may withhold information [on a] about an
investigation of a complaint [for which an investigation is being conducted]
of a violation for not more than ten working days [following the date
of filing of the complaint;] from the date the investigation report is
completed; provided that if an investigation relates to an alleged criminal
offense, no information shall be released until the criminal
investigation has been completed and the director has determined that no legal
proceeding will be jeopardized by its release."
SECTION
4. Section 346-156, Hawaii Revised
Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§346-156 Penalty[.]; remedies. (a)
Any person, entity, agency, or organization violating any
provision of this [chapter] part or any rule made pursuant
thereto shall be [fined as follows:
(1) Up] subject to penalties including a
fine of up to $1,000 for [the first] each day of violation; [and
(2) Up] provided that the fine may be up
to $3,000 for [the second violation and each succeeding violation.] each
day for a violation of section 346-161 or 346-171.
(b) The department may enforce this part in
either administrative or judicial proceedings or both."
SECTION
5. Statutory material to be repealed is
bracketed and stricken. New statutory
material is underscored.
SECTION
6. This Act shall take effect upon its
approval.
INTRODUCED BY: |
_____________________________ |
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BY REQUEST |
Report Title:
Improve Safety of Children in Care; Criminal History Checks; Records of Deficiencies and Complaints; Role and Response to Reports of Death or Injury in a Child Care Setting; Release of Information for Purposes of Investigation; Penalties, Administrative and judicial action
Description:
Requires criminal history checks of adult relatives who provide care for a child whose family receives a child care subsidy from the Department of Human Services, clarifies that the Department of Human Services may take both administrative and judicial action to enforce child care licensing provisions of chapter 346, Hawaii Revised Statutes, clarifies the role and response of the child care licensing program when it receives a report of death or injury of a child in a child care setting, and addresses the release of information pending an investigation.
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.