Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 9, September, 2024
INTRODUCTION
The Child Welfare Licensing Act, (Ark. Code Ann. §
9-28-401 et. seq.),
is the legal authority under which the Child Welfare Agency Review Board
establishes minimum licensing standards for child welfare agencies, as defined
under the statute.
Child Welfare Agency Review Board
The Child Welfare Agency Review Board (the board) shall
promulgate and publish rules setting minimum standards governing the granting,
revocation, refusal, conversion, and suspension of licenses for a child welfare
agency and the operation of a child welfare agency.
The board may consult with such other agencies, organizations,
or individuals as it deems proper.
The board shall take any action necessary to prohibit any
person, partnership, group, corporation, organization, or association not
licensed or exempted from licensure pursuant to this regulation from
advertising, placing, planning for, or assisting in the placement of any
unrelated minor for purposes of adoption or for care in a foster home. The
prohibition against advertising shall not apply to persons who are seeking to
add to their own family by adoption.
The board may amend the rules promulgated pursuant to this
section, from time to time, in accordance with the rule promulgation procedures
in the Arkansas Administrative Procedure Act, §
25-15-201 et
seq.
The board shall promulgate rules that:
1. Promote the health, safety, and welfare of
children in the care of a child welfare agency;
2. Promote safe and healthy physical
facilities;
3. Ensure adequate
supervision of the children by capable, qualified, and healthy
individuals;
4. Ensure appropriate
educational programs and activities for children in the care of a child welfare
agency;
5. Ensure adequate and
healthy food service;
6. Include
procedures for the receipt, recordation, and disposition of complaints
regarding allegations of violations of this subchapter, of the rules
promulgated under the Child Welfare Agency Licensing Act, or of child
maltreatment laws;
7. Include
procedures for the assessment of child and family needs and for the delivery of
services designed to enable each child to grow and develop in a permanent
family setting;
8. Ensure that
criminal record checks and central registry checks are completed on owners,
operators, employees, volunteers, foster parents, adoptive parents, and other
persons in the homes as set forth in this subchapter;
9. Require the compilation of reports and
making those reports available to the division when the board determines it is
necessary for compliance determination or data compilation;
10. Ensure that a child placement agency:
a. Treats clients seeking or receiving
services in a professional manner, as defined by rules promulgated pursuant to
this act; and
b. Provides clients
seeking or receiving services from a child placement agency that provides
adoption services with the phone number and address of the Child Welfare Agency
Licensing Unit of the Department of Human Services where complaints can be
lodged.
11. Require that
all child placement agencies that provide adoption services fully apprise in
writing all clients involved in the process of adopting a child of the agency's
adoption program or services, including all possible costs associated with the
adoption program, and
12. Establish
rules governing retention of licensing records maintained by the division.
A licensed child placement agency may adopt and apply internal
operating procedures that meet or exceed the minimum standards required by the
board.
The Arkansas Administrative Procedure Act, Ark. Code Ann.
§
25-15-201 et
seq., shall apply to all proceedings brought to the board under this
subchapter, except that the following provisions shall control during adverse
action hearings to the extent that they conflict with the Arkansas
Administrative Procedure Act:
1. All
parties to an adverse action shall be entitled to engage in and use formal
discovery as provided for in Rules 26, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, and 36 of
the Arkansas Rules of Civil Procedure including:
a. Requests for admission;
b. Request for production of documents and
things;
c. Written interrogatories;
and
d. Oral and written
depositions.
2. All
evidentiary rulings in an adverse action hearing shall be governed by the
Arkansas Rules of Evidence, with respect to the following types of evidence:
a. The requirements of personal knowledge of
a witness as required by Rule 602;
b. The admissibility of character evidence as
set forth by Rules 608 and 609;
c.
The admissibility of character evidence as set forth by Rules 701- 703; and
d. The admissibility of hearsay
evidence as set forth by Rules 801-806.
Child Placement Agencies Requiring
Licensure
Any person, organization, corporation, partnership, voluntary
association, or other entity that places, plans for, or assists in the
placement of any unrelated minor for care in a foster home, adoptive home, or
residential facility, or a child victim of human trafficking in a home or any
type of shelter or facility, that is not otherwise exempt by Child Welfare
Agency Licensing Act, requires a license.
The Child Welfare Agency Review Board (board) shall take any
action necessary to prohibit any person, partnership, group, corporation,
organization, or association not licensed or exempted from licensure from
advertising, placing, planning for, or assisting in the placement of any
unrelated minor for the purposes of adoption or for care in a foster home. The
prohibition against advertising shall not apply to persons who are seeking to
add to their own family by adoption.
The board may impose a civil penalty upon any person,
partnership, group, corporation, organization, or association not licensed or
exempt from licensure as a child welfare agency in the State of Arkansas that
advertises, places, plans for, or assists in the placement of any unrelated
minor for purposes of adoption or for care in a foster home. The prohibition
against advertising does not apply to persons who are seeking to add to their
own family by adoption.
Placement Types of Licenses
Foster Care
A child placement agency that places, plans for, or assists in
the placement of an unrelated minor or a child victim of human trafficking in a
home or in a private residence of one (1) or more family members for care and
supervision on a twenty-four-hour basis.
Therapeutic Foster Care
A child placement agency that places, plans for, or assists in
the placement of an unrelated minor in a therapeutic foster home. Therapeutic
foster care is intensive therapeutic care for children that is provided in
specially trained family homes and supported by licensed mental health
professionals (as recognized by Arkansas Medicaid). A therapeutic foster care
program is a family-based services delivery approach providing individualized
treatment for children, youth, and their families. Treatment is delivered
through an integrated set of services with key interventions and supports
provided by therapeutic foster parents who are trained, supervised, and
supported by qualified program staff.
Therapeutic foster care services shall be provided in a
separately identified program of a larger agency or be provided by an
independent agency.
Therapeutic Foster Care - Sexual Rehabilitative
Program
A treatment program that offers a specific and specialized
therapeutic program for children with sexually maladaptive behaviors. A
licensed sexual rehabilitative program may be in a residential childcare
facility, a therapeutic foster care home, or a psychiatric residential
treatment facility.
Adoption
A child placement agency that places, plans for, or assists in
the placement of an unrelated minor in a household of one (1) or more persons
who are approved to accept a child for adoption.
Placement Residential
A child placement agency that places, plans for, or assists in
the placement of an unrelated minor into a residential childcare facility or a
child victim of human trafficking in any type of shelter or facility. The
agency may be licensed for any or all types of licenses, depending on the types
of services it provides.
License Status
The board shall issue all licenses to child placement agencies
upon majority vote of members present during each properly-called board meeting
at which a quorum is present. The board shall have the power to deny an
application to operate a child welfare agency or to revoke or suspend a
previously issued license to operate a child welfare agency. The board may also
issue letters of reprimand or caution to a child welfare agency. Any revocation
of a license, suspension of a license, or denial of application for a license
shall be effective when made.
Provisional
Issued to a newly licensed agency for a one-year period, to
give the agency time to demonstrate substantial compliance with minimum
licensing standards. At the discretion of the board, a provisional license may
be issued up to an additional year.
Probationary
Issued to an agency that has not maintained compliance with
minimum licensing standards, but the board believes that compliance can be
restored and subsequently maintained. This license may be issued for up to one
(1) year, at the discretion of the board.
Regular
Issued either to a previously licensed agency that continues to
meet all minimum licensing standards, standards or issued to an agency that
meets all essential standards and has a favorable compliance history, (which
that predicts full compliance with all standards within a reasonable time). A
regular license shall remain open and effective until closed at the request of
the agency or board action.
Suspended
Board action taken when an agency has failed to maintain
compliance with minimum licensing standards, but the violations do not warrant
revocation. A license may not be suspended for longer than one (1) year at a
time. The board may issue a probationary or regular license when compliance is
restored.
Closed
Action taken when the agency requests that the license be
closed.
Termination
The board shall terminate the license of a licensee that has
not been in operation for a consecutive twelve-month period.
Revoked
Board action taken when an agency has failed to maintain
compliance with minimum licensing standards. The agency may not apply for a new
license for at least one (1) year from the date of revocation.
Status Change
After a board action, an amended license shall be issued any
time there is a change in the agency's program that affects the license type,
status, capacity, ages of children served, name change or an address
change.
A license to operate a child placement agency shall apply only
to the address and location stated on the application and license issued, and
it shall be transferable from one holder of the license to another or from one
place to another.
Whenever ownership of a controlling interest in the operation
of a child placement agency is sold, the following procedures shall be
followed:
1. The seller shall notify
the division of the sale at least thirty (30) days prior to the completed
sale;
2. The seller shall remain
responsible for the operation of the agency until such time as the agency is
closed or a license is issued to the buyer;
3. The seller shall remain liable for all
penalties assessed against the agency that are imposed for violations or
deficiencies occurring before the transfer of a license to the buyer;
4. The buyer shall be subject to any
corrective action notices to which the seller was subject; and
5. The provisions of subsection (a) of this
section, including those provisions regarding obtaining licenses or permits
from the Office of Long-Term Care of the Division of Medical Services of the
Department of Human Services and regarding obtaining any permits from the
Health Services Permit Agency or the Health Services Permit Commission, shall
apply in their entirety to the new owner of the child welfare agency.
The child placement agency shall inform current and potential
clients if their license has been suspended, revoked, or if they have
voluntarily surrendered their license.
How To Apply The Standards
Section 100 of the Minimum Licensing Standards for
Child Welfare Agencies applies to all agencies. Subsequent
sections apply to specific types of child placement agencies. Agencies shall
meet the license requirements for each license type held.
Special Consideration
The board may approve an agency's request for special
consideration to allow a licensee to deviate from the letter of a rule if the
licensee has demonstrated that the deviation is in the best interest of the
children and does not pose a risk to persons served by the licensee.
If the board grants a request for special consideration, the
child welfare agency's practice as described in the request shall be the
compliance terms under which the child welfare agency will be held responsible
and violations of those terms shall constitute a rule violation.
The board has authorized the managers and supervisors of the
Licensing Unit to make temporary rulings regarding special consideration
requests when the best interests of a child requires an immediate decision,
subject to final approval at the next regularly scheduled meeting of the
board.
Alternative Compliance
The board may grant an agency's request for alternative
compliance upon a finding that the agency does not meet the letter of a rule
promulgated under the Child Welfare Agency Licensing Act, but that the agency
meets or exceeds the intent of that rule through alternative means.
If the board grants a request for alternative compliance, the
agency's practice as described in the request for alternative compliance shall
be the compliance terms under which the agency will be held responsible and
violations of those terms shall constitute a rule violation.
The board has authorized the managers and supervisors of the
Licensing Unit to make temporary rulings regarding Alternative Compliance
requests when the best interests of a child requires an immediate decision,
subject to final approval at the next regularly scheduled meeting of the
board.
Alternative Compliance requests granted in the areas listed
below shall be time limited and shall not exceed two (2) years in length. These
alternative compliances shall be monitored on an ongoing basis for compliance
and shall be reviewed by the board every two (2) years.
3. Sleeping arrangements; and
100
GENERAL REQUIREMENTS
The standards in Section 100 apply to all
agencies unless otherwise indicated.
101
Applications & Licensing
Procedure1. The owner or board shall
prepare and furnish an application packet for a license that contains the
following:
a. A completed application
form;
b. A letter from the agency's
board or owner (as applicable) authorizing a person to sign the
application;
c. A copy of the
Articles of Incorporation, bylaws, and current board roster, if applicable,
including names, addresses, and contact information of officers. Out of state
agencies shall have legal authorization from the Arkansas Secretary of State to
do business in Arkansas;
d. A
personnel list with verifications of qualifications and experience;
e. Substantiation of the agency's financial
soundness. This shall include without limitation: a budget showing sufficient
resources to operate for a period of six (6) months, either with resources on
hand or with projected revenue from verifiable sources. Verifiable letters of
financial support and monthly bank account statements may be included to
project income;
f. Proof of general
and professional liability insurance (does not apply to state
agencies);
g. A written description
of the agency's program of care, including intake policies, types of services
offered, and a written plan for providing health care services to children in
care; and
h. Any additional
information requested by the Licensing Specialist to verify compliance with
these standards and to make a recommendation regarding the granting of a
license.
2. Once a
completed application packet has been received, the division shall complete a
licensing study and recommendation within ninety (90) days. If a recommendation
is not made within ninety (90) days, the applicant may appear before the board
to request a license.
3. Any child
placement agency licensed in Arkansas shall provide the following information
to the Licensing Unit prior to opening a branch office:
a. The address, telephone numbers (if
available), and office hours for the branch office;
b. The name(s), qualifications, and contact
information of the person(s) responsible for the day-to-day operation of the
branch office and the child-placement activities at the branch; and
c. The name and contact information of the
person responsible for providing services in case of emergencies or
child-placement crises.
102
Organization &
Administration
1. The child placement
agency shall obtain a license before placing or planning for the placement of
children in a foster home, adoptive home, or residential facility.
2. The purpose and mission of the agency,
including treatment philosophy, services provided, and characteristics of
children it is designed to serve, shall be stated in writing.
3. The following policies of the agency shall
be current and available to all employees of the agency and the Licensing
Specialist:
a. Personnel policies;
b. Volunteer policy;
c. Student intern policy;
d. Admission policy;
e. Intake policy;
f. Behavior Management policy: Corporal
punishment is prohibited for all placement licenses. See Arkansas code §
9-28-405(d)
(1) e;
g. Crisis Management policy;
h. Child Maltreatment/Mandated Reporter
policy; according to Arkansas law, including, procedures to ensure that
alleged, suspected, or witnessed incidents of maltreatment are reported to the
Child Maltreatment Hotline, and documented as required by these or other
applicable rules or laws;
i. Child
Exploitation policy;
j. Visitation
policy;
k. Public Safety policy
(sexual rehabilitative programs only);
l. Target Population and Admission,
Exclusion, and Discharge Criteria policy (sexual rehabilitative programs only);
and
m. Emergency, Respite Care, and
Disruption policy (placement agencies only).
4. The agency shall be legally authorized to
conduct business in Arkansas by state law and local ordinance.
5. The agency shall meet all federal, state,
and local laws and ordinances that apply to child welfare agencies and to the
proper care of children in such facilities.
6. The agency shall provide copies of all
programmatic licenses, certifications, and accreditations it holds.
7. The owner or Board of Directors, or both,
shall be responsible for operating the facility and shall have final
responsibility to ensure that the facility meets licensing requirements. Names
and addresses of board members shall be provided to the Licensing Specialist
annually.
8. The agency shall
maintain a current organizational chart showing the administrative structure of
the organization.
9. The agency
shall notify the Licensing Unit within five (5) days of any change of
Administrator, Social Service Director, or Clinical Director.
10. The agency shall establish and follow
written policies and procedures that meet or exceed the
Minimum Licensing Standards for Child Welfare
Agencies.
11.
All agencies applying for an Arkansas license shall provide proof that they are
licensed in good standing in their home state, if applicable, and are in good
standing in all other states where they are licensed. If an agency is being
disciplined or sanctioned in another jurisdiction, the board shall be
notified.
12. All agencies licensed
in Arkansas after January 18, 2002, shall have an office in Arkansas.
13. All agencies licensed in Arkansas shall
maintain all required files for licensing review as needed. They may choose to:
a. Maintain these files in their office in
Arkansas; or
b. Arrange to provide
the required files to the licensing staff.
14. All agencies licensed in Arkansas shall
have a qualified person on call to supervise emergency services.
15. If electronic records are kept, these
records shall be made available to the Licensing Specialist for purposes of
monitoring and investigation.
16.
Any disciplinary action taken against the agency by another jurisdiction shall
be reported to the Licensing Unit.
17. The Child Welfare Agency Review Board
shall terminate the license of a licensee that has not been in operation for a
consecutive twelve-month period. The agency shall not permit, aid, or abet an
unlicensed person to perform activities requiring a license.
18. The agency shall not misrepresent the
type or status of education, training, expertise, licensure, or professional
affiliations.
103
Central Registry & Criminal Record Checks
1. The agency shall conduct background
checks, as required by the Child Welfare Agency Licensing Act (§
9-28-409), using forms approved by the Licensing Unit. Background checks conducted by or
for other licensing authorities (for example, Office of Long-Term Care,
Division of Developmental Disabilities Services, et.al) do not meet the
requirement of this standard.
2.
The following persons in a child placement agency shall be checked with the
Child Maltreatment Central Registry in their state of residence, if available,
and any state of residence in which the person has lived for the past five (5)
years and in the person's state of employment, if different, for reports of
child maltreatment:
a. Employees, having
direct and unsupervised contact with children;
b. Volunteers, mentors, sponsors, and student
interns having direct and unsupervised contact with children;
c. Foster parents and each member of the
household fourteen (14) years of age and older, excluding children in foster
care. These checks shall be made prior to approval and shall be repeated every
two (2) years thereafter;
d.
Adoptive parents, and each member of the household fourteen (14) years of age
and older, residing in Arkansas, excluding children in foster care. Adoptive
parents and each member of the household fourteen (14) years of age and older,
excluding children residing in out-of-state foster care, shall provide Child
Maltreatment Central Registry Checks from their state of residence, if
available. These checks shall be made prior to approval and shall be repeated
every two (2) years until the adoption decree has been issued;
e. Owners having direct and unsupervised
contact with children; or
f.
Members of the agency's board of directors having direct and unsupervised
contact with children.
3.
Persons required to have the Child Maltreatment Central Registry Check shall
repeat the check every two (2) years.
4. Any person found to have a record of child
maltreatment shall be reviewed by the owner or administrator of the agency, in
consultation with the board or its designee, to determine corrective action.
Corrective action may include without limitation, counseling, training,
probationary employment, non-selection for employment, or
termination.
5. The following
persons in a child placement agency shall be checked with the Identification
Bureau of the Arkansas State Police for convictions of offenses listed in
Arkansas Code Annotated §
9-28-409:
a. Employees, having direct and unsupervised
contact with children;
b.
Volunteers, mentors, sponsors, and student interns having direct and
unsupervised contact with children;
c. Foster parents, and each member of the
household eighteen (18) years of age and older, excluding children in foster
care. The foster parents shall certify in writing annually whether or not
household members fourteen (14) through seventeen (17) years of age have
criminal records;
d. Adoptive
parents and each member of the household eighteen (18) years of age and older
residing in Arkansas. Adoptive parents and each member of the household
eighteen (18) years of age and older residing out of state shall provide State
Police Criminal Record Checks from their state of residence, if available. The
out of state adoptive families do not need to do an Arkansas State Police Check
if they have never resided in Arkansas;
e. Owners having direct and unsupervised
contact with children; and
f.
Members of the agency's board of directors having direct and unsupervised
contact with children. Individuals required to submit to a criminal background
check with the Identification Bureau of the Arkansas State Police shall also
complete a background check with the Federal Bureau of Investigations.
1. Federal Bureau of Investigations criminal
background checks shall not be required if:
i.
the adoption is an international adoption where the criminal background checks
have been performed by the Unites States Citizenship and Immigration Services,
or
ii. The adoptive parents and
each member of the household age eighteen and one-half (181/2) have
continuously resided in another state for at least five (5) years before the
adoption; and the state -of-residence criminal check is available
6. A child in
the custody of the Department of Human Services shall not be placed in an
approved home of any foster parent or adoptive parent unless all household
members eighteen and one half (18 1/2) years of age and older, excluding
children in foster care, have had a fingerprint-based criminal background check
performed by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The check shall be
initiated within thirty (30) days of the household member's eighteenth
birthday.
7. All persons required
to be checked with the Department of Arkansas State Police under this
subsection shall repeat the check at a minimum of every five (5) years, except
that adoptive parents who reside in Arkansas shall repeat the check every year
pending court issuance of a final decree of adoption, at which point repeat
checks will no longer be required.
8. A child in the custody of the Department
of Human Services shall not be placed in an approved home of any foster parent
or adoptive parent unless all household members eighteen and one half (18 1/2)
years and of age and older (excluding children in foster care) have been
checked with the Identification Bureau of the Department of Arkansas State
Police at a minimum of every two (2) years. The check shall be initiated within
thirty (30) days of the household member's eighteenth birthday.
9. Child Maltreatment Central Registry Checks
and Arkansas State Police or Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Criminal
Record Checks shall be initiated within ten (10) days of employment.
10. The agency shall maintain on file
evidence that background checks have been initiated as required and results of
the completed checks.
11. The
agency shall provide a copy of the Federal Bureau of Investigation Criminal
Record Check form and the Arkansas State Police Criminal Record Check form to
the Licensing Office upon initiation.
No person guilty of an excluded criminal offense pursuant to
A.C.A. §
9-28-409
shall be permitted to have direct and unsupervised contact with children,
except as provided in the statute. The child placement agency shall immediately
notify the Licensing Unit when an individual is found to have a record of an
excluded criminal offense.
104
General Personnel
Requirements
All personnel employed on or after April 12,
1999, shall meet the following requirements:
1. The agency shall have an administrator who
shall be responsible for the general management of the agency, possessing at
least one of the following qualifications:
a.
A doctorate degree;
b. A master's
degree in a human services field (child development, psychology, sociology,
social work, guidance and counseling, divinity, education), administration,
business, or a related field; or
c.
A bachelor's degree in a human services field, administration, business, or a
related field, and at least two (2) years of work experience in a human
services agency.
2. The
agency shall have a Social Services Director who shall supervise child
placement activities and casework services by the agency, possessing at least
one (1) of the following qualifications (Therapeutic foster care see section
320.2 and Sexual Rehabilitative Program see 422.2):
a. A master's degree or higher in a human
services field (child development, psychology, sociology, social work,
counseling and guidance, divinity, or education);
b. A bachelor's degree in a human services
field and two (2) years of work experience in a child welfare agency; or
c. Anyone permitted to supervise
child placement or casework services shall meet the qualifications for Social
Services Director.
3.
Each agency shall have a caseworker who is responsible for doing assessments,
case planning, and casework services, possessing at least one (1) of the
following (Therapeutic foster care see section 320.3 and Sexual Rehabilitative
Program see 422.3):
a. A bachelor's degree in
a human services field; or
b. A
bachelor's degree and two (2) years' work experience in a human services
field.
4. If casework
services are contracted, the agency shall maintain all required personnel
information on the contracted caseworkers.
105
Qualifications &
Training1. The Administrator, Social
Services Director, and each caseworker of a child welfare agency shall have
twenty-four (24) hours of job-related continuing education each year.
2. Owners, operators, employees, foster
parents, or volunteers in a child welfare agency are responsible for ensuring
the proper care, treatment, safety, and supervision of the children they
supervise.
3. Owners, operators,
employees, foster parents, or volunteers in a child welfare agency shall not
engage in behavior that could be viewed as sexual, dangerous, exploitative, or
physically harmful to children.
4.
Documentation verifying annual training shall be dated indicating the number of
hours, the name of the source, and topic or title.
5. The agency shall maintain a personnel file
for each employee that shall include:
a. A
resume or application;
b. Date of
hire;
c. Verifications of
qualifications;
d. Documentation of
required annual training;
e.
Criminal Record Check and Child Maltreatment Central Registry Check information
as required by law;
f.
Documentation that applicable employees are informed that they are mandated
reporters of suspected child maltreatment, according to A.C.A §
12-18-402, and
are provided the information needed to make a report;
g. A functional job description;
and
h. At least three (3) positive
personal references from non-relatives.
106
Volunteers & Student
Interns1. The agency shall create a
policy clearly defining the qualifications, duties, and supervision of
volunteers and student interns.
2.
Volunteers and student interns will be supervised by an appropriate and
designated staff person.
3. A
volunteer or student intern who works unsupervised and substitutes as staff
shall meet the qualifications required for a paid employee in that position.
107
Exploitation of
Children1. The agency shall not
require a child to acknowledge dependency, destitution, or neglect or to make
public statements about their background.
2. The agency shall not use, or allow to be
used, any reports, pictures, or any other information from which a child can be
identified, except under the following conditions:
a. The child and the parent or guardian sign
a consent form that describes the purposes for which the identification is
being made;
b. The signed consent
shall say in which publication or broadcast the identification will appear; and
c. The parent or guardian and
child shall be informed that the consent may be withdrawn.
3. All information regarding children and
their families shall be kept strictly confidential and may only be released
with the consent of a parent or guardian, except to authorized persons or
agencies.
4. The agency shall
document that the foster parents have been made aware of the need to protect
the confidentiality of foster children in the use of social media.
108
Ethical
Standards1. The board sets forth this
section as a Code of Ethics/Standards for Practice for all child welfare
agencies within the State of Arkansas. Violations of the following shall be
grounds for disciplinary action:
a.
Confidentiality: In providing services, a child welfare agency shall safeguard
information given by clients. A child welfare agency shall obtain the client's
informed written consent before releasing confidential information, except when
consent to disclose is permitted by law or required by judicial order. If the
client is a minor, then the written consent shall be made with the minor and
their legal representative or guardian;
b. Responsibility: A child placement agency
shall provide a clear, written description of what the client may expect in the
way of services, reports, risks, fees, billing, estimated schedules, and
grievance procedures;
c.
Misrepresentation: A child welfare agency shall not misrepresent its program
services or experience; and
d.
Client Relationships: Relationships with clients shall not be exploited by the
child welfare agency staff for personal gain.
109
Conduct
1. Unprofessional conduct in the practice of
child welfare activities includes without limitation:
a. Permitting, aiding, or abetting an
unlicensed person in performing activities that require a professional
license;
b. Misrepresenting type or
status of education, training, expertise, licensure, or professional
affiliations;
c. Failing to
maintain confidentiality, except as otherwise required or permitted by law, of
all information that has been received from a client in confidence during the
course of services;
d. Violating
the ethical standards adopted by the board;
e. Failing to report to the Licensing Unit
any disciplinary action taken against the child welfare agency by another
jurisdiction, or the surrender of a license or loss of authorization to
practice child welfare activities in another jurisdiction;
f. Failing to comply with any stipulation or
agreement with the board involving probation or a settlement of any
disciplinary matters; and
g.
Engaging in behavior that could be viewed as sexual, dangerous, exploitative,
or physically harmful to children.
110
Inspections, Investigations &
Corrective Action1. The Licensing
Specialist shall conduct inspections to ensure continued compliance with
licensing standards.
2. The
Licensing Specialist shall investigate complaints of alleged violation of
licensing standards against all placement agencies and may participate in
investigations of alleged child maltreatment.
3. The agency shall cooperate with the
Licensing Unit in conducting inspections and investigations and shall provide
information required to verify compliance with rules.
4. Inspections and investigations may be
scheduled or unscheduled, at the discretion of the Licensing Specialist, and
may be conducted outside regular working hours.
5. The frequency of inspections are at the
discretion of the Licensing Unit and may be based on the agency's compliance
history.
6. At the discretion of
the Licensing Unit, a multi-disciplinary team may be asked to advise the
Licensing Specialist during initial approval or during inspections. This team
may include a professional in the appropriate field.
7. Upon finding any violations of licensing
standards, the Licensing Specialist shall issue to the agency a corrective
action notice that shall state:
a. A factual
description of the conditions that constitute a violation of the
standard;
b. The specific law or
standard violated; and
c. A
reasonable time frame within which the violation shall be corrected.
8. The agency shall provide a
written corrective action plan, when requested to do so, by the Licensing
Specialist in a corrective action notice.
9. Any owner, operator, employee, foster
parent, or volunteer in a child welfare agency shall immediately notify the
Child Abuse Hotline if they have reasonable cause to suspect that a child has:
a. Been subjected to child
maltreatment;
b. Died as a result
of child maltreatment; or
c. If
they observe a child being subjected to conditions or circumstances that would
reasonably result in child maltreatment.
10. If a complaint of child maltreatment is
filed against any owner, operator, employee, foster parent, volunteer, or other
person in a child welfare agency, the agency administration shall evaluate the
risk to children and determine the suitability of the person(s) to supervise,
be left alone with children, have disciplinary control over children, or remain
in the child placement agency until the allegations are determined to be true
or unsubstantiated. Any interim corrective action measures shall be approved by
the Licensing Unit.
11. The agency
shall maintain a log or file of all calls to the child abuse hotline.
12. The agency shall notify the Licensing
Unit by the next business day when a report of child maltreatment is accepted
by the child abuse hotline against the owner, operator, employee, foster
parent, volunteer, child, or other person in a child welfare agency.
13. The agency and all staff shall cooperate
fully with investigators during a child maltreatment investigation.
14. The agency shall take steps to prevent
harm or retaliation against the child while an allegation of child maltreatment
is being investigated.
15. Any
person with a true finding of child maltreatment shall have a review by the
owner or administrator of the agency, in consultation with the Child Welfare
Agency Review Board or its designee, to determine corrective action. Corrective
action may include without limitation, counseling, training, probationary
employment, non-selection for employment, or termination.
16. Any employee who has been sanctioned by
any licensing or certifying entity for any reason pertaining to child safety
shall be reviewed by the owner or administrator of the agency, in consultation
with the Child Welfare Agency Review Board or its designee, to determine
corrective action. Corrective action may include without limitation,
counseling, training, probationary employment, non-selection for employment, or
termination.
17. The agency shall
notify the Licensing Unit by the next business day of serious injuries
requiring emergency medical treatment, agency vehicle accidents, arrests,
elopements, suicide attempts, or deaths, and maintain documentation of the
incident and notification.
18. The
agency shall maintain reports on all incidences that cause injury, property
damage, or disruption to routine operation or services.
200
CHILD PLACEMENT AGENCIES: FOSTER CARE
In addition to all standards in Section 100, the
following standards shall be met:
201
Admission
1. Each agency shall establish written
criteria for admitting, as well as excluding, children.
2. The agency shall not admit any child for
whom the agency cannot provide adequate care.
3. Each child shall have a medical
examination within one (1) year before admission, or an appointment scheduled
within one (1) week after admission.
4. Each child shall have proof of current
immunizations, or a letter of exemption, in accordance with the Arkansas
Department of Health, or an appointment scheduled within one (1) week after
admission.
5. The agency shall
obtain written authority from the parent(s), guardian(s), or court before
placement, or within seventy-two (72) hours if it is an emergency
placement.
6. The agency shall
obtain written authority for medical care for the child from the parent(s),
guardian(s), or court at the time of placement, or within seventy-two (72)
hours in an emergency placement.
7.
The agency shall comply with the Interstate Compact on the Placement of
Children when placing or admitting children from outside Arkansas.
8. A dependent juvenile of a parent who is in
the custody of the Division of Child and Family Services (DCFS) shall be
subject to all rules regarding space, ratio, health, and safety.
202
Intake &
Assessment1. Intake information shall
be completed on each child in care within ten (10) working days after
admission.
2. The intake
information shall include:
a. Demographic
information on the child and parent(s), including name, address, birth date,
gender, race, and religious preference;
b. A factual description of the circumstances
requiring placement;
c. A brief
social history of the family;
d.
The child's current legal status or custody;
e. Any history of previous placements outside
the family, if applicable; and
f.
An assessment of services needed to ensure the health and welfare of the child,
including medical history and psychological history.
3. The agency shall obtain copies of legal
documents within thirty (30) days of admission or shall document their attempts
to obtain the documents. The legal documents shall include without limitation,
birth certificates, social security cards, and court orders.
4. A plan of safe care shall be developed for
all children with physical limitations, medical conditions, or behaviors that
are indicative of harm to self or others; to include without limitation: arson,
physical aggression, sexual aggression, suicidal behaviors, or other
selfharming tendencies. This plan shall identify the behavior or problem and
shall specify the safeguards that are to be implemented. A copy of the plan
shall be provided to the direct caregiver(s), as well as a copy placed in the
child's record.
203
Case Planning1. A case plan
shall be developed for each child placed into a foster home by a child
placement agency. The plan shall address the child's needs as identified in the
intake information.
2. When a
placement agency places a child with another placement agency, the receiving
agency shall develop a case plan for each child received for care.
3. The case plan shall be developed within
thirty (30) days after placement.
4. The child's case plan shall contain, at
the minimum:
a. Specific needs of the
child;
b. Plan for meeting the
child's needs;
c. Special treatment
issues (for example, psychotropic medications, sexual misconduct, and
neurological disorders) with a statement of how the special needs shall be
met;
d. A plan to ensure that the
child's educational needs are met according to applicable state law;
e. Visitation plan, if applicable;
and
f. Date of next review of the
case plan.
5. If
independence is a goal, the case plan shall include training in independent
living skills.
6. Foster parents
shall be included in case planning for each child.
7. A copy of the case plan shall be made
available to the parent(s), guardian(s), court, or other agencies involved in
the delivery of case plan services, if applicable.
8. The child placement agency shall review
the case plan at least semi-annually and shall be updated to reflect the
child's progress.
204
Children's Records1. The agency
shall keep a confidential case record for each child that includes the
following:
a. Demographic
information;
b. Plan of safe care,
if applicable;
c. A complete
intake;
d. Consents, including
consent for medical care, and authority to place the child;
e. Interstate Compact information, if
applicable;
f. Case plans and case
plan reviews;
g. Copies of legal
documents (for example, birth certificate, social security card, or court
orders) or documentation of their attempts to obtain the documents;
h. Physical exams and immunization records,
or documentation of their attempts to obtain the documents;
i. Psychological reports, if
applicable;
j. Educational reports,
if applicable;
k. Disciplinary and
incident reports, if applicable;
l.
Records of visitation and family contacts, if applicable;
m. Documentation of casework services and
child contact; and
n. Discharge
statement.
2. Records for
each child shall be kept for five (5) years from the date of discharge, unless
otherwise specified by Arkansas law.
205
Behavior Management
1. The agency shall have a written discipline
policy that is consistently followed.
2. Discipline shall be directed toward
teaching the child acceptable behavior and self-control.
3. Discipline shall be appropriate to the
child's age, development, and history (including trauma history).
4. The following actions are prohibited:
a. Denial of meals, sleep, shelter, essential
clothing, or case plan activities;
b. Denial of parental visits or regular phone
and mail contact with family. Non-disciplinary case planning issues are
accepted;
c. Lewd or obscene
language;
d. Derogatory comments
about the child, the child's family, race, or gender;
e. Restriction to a room for more than a
short period of time without periodic observation;
f. Restriction to a dark room or
area;
g. Locked
isolation;
h. Physical injury or
threat of bodily harm;
i.
Humiliating or degrading action;
j.
Extremely strenuous work or exercise;
k. Mechanical or chemical restraints; nor
l. Corporal punishment.
5. Physical restraint shall be
initiated only by a trained person; only to prevent injury to the child, other
people, or property; and shall not be initiated solely as a form of
discipline.
6. A child shall not be
allowed to administer discipline, except teen parents may discipline their own
children under the supervision and guidance of the foster parent.
7. Searches of a child or a child's personal
property shall be for reasons limited to safety and security of children and
their foster family, or in cases of suspected theft.
8. Any searches requiring removal of clothing
shall be done in privacy.
206
Foster Parent Qualifications
1. In a two-parent home, both are joint
applicants, each sign the application, and participate in the approval
process.
2. Foster parents are at
least twenty-one (21) years of age.
3. The stability of the foster family is
evaluated and determined to be appropriate.
4. Foster parents are physically, mentally,
and emotionally capable of caring for children.
5. The foster family shall provide
documentation of sufficient financial resources to meet their needs.
6. All family members under eighteen (18)
years of age in the household shall have proof of current health immunizations
or an exemption in accordance with the Arkansas Department of Health.
7. When routine childcare is needed, foster
children shall attend licensed childcare or have an agency-approved caregiver.
207
Content of the
Home Study1. The agency shall complete
a home study for each foster home.
2. The agency shall conduct at least one (1)
scheduled in-home interview for each household member to observe family
functioning and assess the family's capacity to meet the needs of children in
foster care.
3. The agency shall
interview every age-appropriate member of the household.
4. The home study shall include the following
information:
a. Motivation: the individual's
motivation for becoming a foster parent;
b. Household Composition: the full legal
names, birth dates, relationships to one another, and a brief physical
description of everyone residing in the home
c. Housing: Address, location, and type of
structure, as well as the upkeep and housekeeping standards, sleeping
arrangements, length of time at residence, and future residence plans of the
facility's occupants;
d. Safety
Hazards: an assessment of the safety of the home and grounds, including water
hazards, swimming pools, hot tubs, dangerous pets, and other hazardous items
and areas;
e. Income and Expenses:
employment history for the last six (6) years (duration, salary, duties, title,
degree of job security, and hours), other sources of income, monthly living
expenses, outstanding debts, and insurance;
f. Health: current health of each family
member, including prior illnesses or medical problems; disabilities; clinics or
doctors utilized and frequency of use; counseling (dates and purposes); and
hospitalization for alcohol abuse, drug abuse, or mental illness;
g. Education: parents' educational
attainment, future educational plans, and parenting classes attended;
h. Childcare Arrangements or Plans: current
arrangement or proposed arrangement as it relates to their working hours and
income;
i. Child Rearing Practices:
purpose of behavior management; behavior guidance practices; how they show
affection; and how they handle stress, allowance, chores, and
homework;
j. Daily
Schedule;
k. Social History:
highlights and verification regarding action of marriages, divorces, children,
relationships support system, future plans, any individual not living in the
home, and any significant personal, developmental, personality or legal
problems;
l. Family Activities:
religious interests, social organizations, activities with children, and family
roles;
m. Impressions, Conclusions
and Recommendations: evaluate the family's situation and ability to provide for
a child based on the information obtained during the home study; and
n. Approval: if the agency approves the
foster parent(s), the agency shall recommend in the home study the number, age,
gender, and other characteristics of children for whom the home is approved to
provide care.
5. The
Placement agency may require further documentation or evaluation to determine
the suitability of the home.
208
Physical Requirements of the
Home1. The foster home shall be
accessible to community resources needed by foster children.
2. The foster home shall be clean and free of
hazards.
3. The foster home shall
have a continuous supply of sanitary drinking water. If the source is not a
municipal water system, the water shall be tested and approved annually by the
Arkansas Department of Health. The approval shall be kept in the foster home
case record.
4. The foster home
shall have at least one (1) flush toilet, one (1) sink with running water, and
one (1) bathtub or shower with hot and cold running water.
5. There shall be an operational smoke
detector in each bedroom.
6. There
shall be an operational smoke detector on each level of occupancy of the foster
home.
7. There shall be an
operational chemical fire extinguisher, readily accessible, near the cooking
area of the home.
8. The foster
parents shall practice and document emergency evacuation drills with each new
child entering the home and repeat at least quarterly thereafter.
9. All heating units with hot external areas
shall be screened or otherwise shielded.
10. The home shall have at least one (1)
exterior door that exits directly to the outside, or the home shall have an
alternate fire escape route.
11.
The home shall have an operational telephone that is accessible for children.
Working cell phones kept on the premises are acceptable.
12. Each child shall have adequate space for
storing clothing and personal belongings.
13. All household pets shall have proof of
current rabies vaccinations, as required by Arkansas law.
14. All firearms shall be maintained in a
secure, locked location or be secured by a trigger lock.
15. All ammunition shall be secured and
locked separately from firearms, unless they are stored in a safe (for example,
a handgun safe or a long gun safe).
16. The foster home record shall contain an
agency-approved safety plan for any noted hazards. The safety plan shall be
signed by all caregivers in the foster home and an agency
representative.
17. A current floor
plan of the home with room dimensions for all rooms used for sleeping shall be
in the foster home record.
18.
Manufactured homes, used as foster homes, shall have an agency-approved plan
for tornado safety. The safety plan shall be signed by all caregivers in the
foster home and an agency representative.
19. The foster home shall be a house, mobile
home, housing unit, or apartment occupied by an individual or family.
20. The foster home, grounds, and all
structures on the property shall be maintained in a clean, safe, and sanitary
condition and be in a reasonable state of repair within community
standards.
21. The foster home
interior and exterior must be free from dangerous objects, dangerous
conditions, and hazardous materials.
22. All poisonous materials, cleaning
supplies, other hazardous materials, and alcoholic beverages shall be stored in
an area not readily accessible to children, as appropriate for the age and
development of each child.
23. The
foster home shall have proper trash and recycling disposal.
24. The foster home shall be free of rodent
and insect infestation.
25. The
foster home shall be equipped with a functional kitchen that includes a sink
with hot and cold running water, a refrigerator, a stove, and an
oven.
26. The foster home shall
have adequate lighting and ventilation.
27. The foster home shall have a heating,
ventilating, and air conditioning source, maintained in safe operating
condition, that keeps the temperature a minimum of sixty-five degrees (65°)
and a maximum of eighty-five degrees (85°).
28. The foster home shall be free of obvious
fire hazards such as defective heating equipment or improperly stored flammable
materials.
29. There shall be a
carbon monoxide detector on each level of occupancy of the foster home and near
all sleeping areas.
30. The foster
home shall have a safe operating water heater that has a recommended
temperature at or below one-hundred and twenty degrees (120°), as tested at
the plumbing fixture nearest the water heater.
31. The foster home shall maintain adequate
first aid supplies for emergencies.
32. Foster parents shall maintain a list of
emergency telephone numbers, including poison control, and shall post it in a
prominent place.
33. Foster parents
shall not permit a child to enter a pool area unless accompanied by an
adult.
34. The foster home record
shall contain a water safety plan for supervision of children during water
activities. The plan shall be signed by all caregivers in the foster home and
an agency representative.
35.
Swimming pools shall be enclosed or shall have an approved manual or power
operated child safety cover that meets the standards of the American Society
for Testing and Materials adopted by the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
Please note that solar pool covers and winter pool covers are not safety
covers. The American Safety for Testing and Materials (ASTM) (1996) requires
that a pool cover be able to hold a minimum of 485 pounds per five (5) square
feet in order to qualify as a safety cover.
36. In ground pools without an approved child
safety cover shall be protected by an enclosure (wall, fence, or barrier) that
surrounds the pool area.
37. Unless
local code provides otherwise an enclosure shall meet the following;
a. Entirely enclose the pool area;
b. Be at least 4 feet high;
c. Swimming pools must have their methods of
access through the barrier equipped with a safety device, such as a bolt
lock.
38. The wall of a
house or other building shall not be used in lieu of barrier to the pool with
the exception of a solid wall that does not contain any doors. When a wall is
used as a barrier the remaining three sides shall be protected by an enclosure
(wall, fence, or barrier) that surrounds the pool area or have an approved
child safety cover. The enclosure shall meet the following:
a. Entirely encloses the pool area;
b. Be at least 4 feet high;
c. Swimming pools must have their methods of
access through the barrier equipped with a safety device, such as a bolt
lock.
39. All above
ground pools shall have non-climbable exterior side walls with a minimum height
of 4 feet and have access ladders or steps that are removable and able to be
secured when the pool is not in use.
40. Swimming pools shall be equipped with a
life saving device such as a ring buoy.
41. All portable pools (inflatable and wading
pools) shall be fenced or emptied after every use.
42. Swimming pools that cannot be emptied
after each use shall have a working pump and filtering system.
43. Hot tubs and spas shall have locking
safety covers that are locked when not in use.
209
Sleeping Arrangements
1. Each household occupant shall have a
bedroom that provides privacy.
2.
Each bedroom shall have at least fifty (50) square feet of floor space per
occupant.
3. Each bedroom used for
foster children shall have a window to the outside that can serve as an
emergency escape.
4. Bars, grilles,
grates, or other items that block access to the window are permitted only if
they can be removed from the inside without the use of a key, tool, or force
greater than that required for normal operation of the window. In this event,
each such bedroom shall have a working smoke detector.
5. No more than four (4) children shall share
a bedroom.
6. Each foster child
shall be provided a safe bedroom (appropriate for the child's age and needs)
that includes a bed with a mattress, sheets, a pillow, a pillowcase, and
adequate cover, all in good condition, and similar to those provided to other
household members. Children of the opposite sex shall not share the same
bedroom if either child is four (4) years of age or older, except for a teen
parent in foster care with her child.
7. No children shall share a bed if either
child is four (4) years of age or older.
8. No child under six (6) years of age shall
occupy a top bunk.
9. Foster
children, except infants under two (2) years of age, shall not share a sleeping
room with adults; this age would increase through four (4) years of age for a
grandparent to the child or a teen parent in foster care with her
child.
10. All cribs used for
children shall have current certification of compliance with Consumer Product
Safety Guidelines (CPSC) standards.
11. Children twelve (12) months of age and
below shall be placed flat on their backs to sleep, in accordance with American
Academy of Pediatrics guidelines, to lessen the risk of suffocation and Sudden
Infant Death Syndrome (If a child rolls over on their own, the facility is not
required to reposition the child.) If there is a medical reason a child cannot
sleep on their back, a signed statement from the child's physician shall be in
the file stating the reason, the sleep position indicated, and the time frame
required.
12. Bedding shall be
changed at least weekly, or more often if needed.
13. Foster parents shall not co-sleep or bed
share with a foster child of any age, including infants.
210
Approval of Foster Homes
1. A foster home shall be approved by only
one (1) agency.
2. At least three
(3) positive personal references shall be obtained on the foster family,
including at least one (1) from a relative and one (1) from a
non-relative.
3. Each member of the
foster family shall have a physical exam within twelve (12) months before the
initial approval.
4. Pre-service
training shall include the following topics:
a. Legal rights;
b. Roles, responsibilities, and expectations
of foster parents;
c. Agency
structure, purpose, policies, and services;
d. Laws and regulations, as related to foster
homes or foster children;
e. The
impact of childhood trauma;
f.
Managing child behaviors;
g.
Medication administration; and
h.
The importance of maintaining meaningful connections between the child and
parents, including regular visitation.
i. Foster parent(s) shall have a current
certificate of completion of First Aid and CPR before a child is placed in the
home. The training shall require hands on, skill-based instruction, as well as
practical testing. Training and certification that is provided solely online
will not be accepted.
5.
Foster parents shall provide documentation that they carry homeowner's or
renter's insurance and general liability insurance.
6. Foster homes shall not also operate as
child-care family homes.
7. Foster
homes shall not provide compensated care for any non-related adults in the
foster home, unless providing transitional care for a person placed in care
prior to eighteen (18) years of age.
8. There shall be an annual approval letter
from the approving agency in the foster home record.
9. A provisional foster home means a foster
home opened for no more than six (6) months by the Division of Children and
Family Services of the Department of Human Services, and operated by a relative
or fictive kin of a child in the custody of the division after the division
does the following:
a. Conducts a health and
safety check, including a central registry check and a criminal background
check or check with local law enforcement on the relative's or fictive kin's
home; and
b. Performs a visual
inspection of the home of the relative or fictive kin to verify that the
relative or fictive kin and the home will meet the standards for opening a
regular foster home.
10.
If a foster home moves from one (1) placement agency to another, all
requirements for opening a new foster home shall be met.
11. Foster parents must be able to
communicate with the foster child, the placement agency, health care providers,
and other service providers.
12. At
least one (1) foster parent in the home must have functional literacy, such as
having the ability to read medication labels.
211
Selection of Foster Home
1. The agency shall select the home that is
in the best interest of the child, is the least restrictive possible, and is
matched to the child's physical and emotional needs. The placement decision
shall be based on an individual assessment of the child's needs.
2. No children shall be placed in a foster
home unless there is an approval letter in the record from the approving
agency.
3. The agency shall place
children only in approved foster homes.
4. When a placement agency places a child
with another placement agency, the receiving agency shall maintain a record for
and provide casework services to the children placed into their foster
homes.
5. Foster homes shall not
have more than six (6) foster children in care. A foster home shall not have
more than eight (8) children in their home, including their own children. This
includes placement or respite care.
6. Foster homes shall not have more than two
(2) children under two (2) years of age, including the foster parent's own
children.
7. No new placements of
children shall occur with foster parents who have not satisfied the annual
training requirements. Administrative-level staff designated by the agency
director may grant an exemption to this restriction for up to sixty (60) days.
The administrator shall review the quality of care provided by the foster
parents and the reasons for failing to complete the training on time in
deciding whether to grant an exception.
212
Continued Training of Foster
Parents1. Each foster parent shall
obtain at least fifteen (15) hours of training each year after the first year.
This does not apply to foster parents for infants who are in short-term foster
care awaiting adoptive placement. Such foster parents shall obtain ten (10)
hours of training for the primary caregiver and five (5) hours of training for
the secondary caregiver each year.
2. Documentation verifying annual training
shall indicate the date, the number of hours, the name of the source, the
topic, and the title.
3. Each
foster parent shall maintain a current certificate of successful completion of
hands-on, skill-based CPR and First Aid. Training and certification that is
provided solely online will not be accepted.
4. Foster parents shall participate in
ongoing training to receive instruction that supports their parental roles and
ensures the foster parent is up to date with agency and licensing requirements.
NOTE: Annual training may include without
limitation, child-specific training or issues relevant to the general
population of children in foster care.
213
Foster Parents
Responsibilities1. Foster parents
shall be responsible for providing the level of supervision, care, and
treatment necessary to ensure the safety and well-being of each child placed
into their home, considering the child's age, individual differences,
abilities, surrounding circumstances, hazards, and risks.
2. Foster parents shall provide each child
with adequate and nutritious food.
3. Foster parents shall provide regular
activities to promote the physical, social, intellectual, spiritual, and
emotional development of the children in their care.
4. Foster parents shall provide each child
their own clothing that is clean, well-fitted, seasonal, appropriate to age and
gender, and comparable to community standards.
5. Foster parents shall allow foster children
to acquire and keep personal belongings.
6. Foster parents shall fully cooperate with
the child placement agency's case plan for each foster child, including
visitation.
7. Foster parents shall
provide routine transportation for each child.
8. Foster parents shall participate in case
planning and case plan reviews.
9.
Foster parents shall attend school conferences concerning a foster child and
shall notify the child placement agency of any situations that may affect the
case plan or require agency involvement.
10. Foster parents shall notify the child
placement agency promptly of serious illness, injury, or unusual circumstances
affecting the health, safety, or welfare of the foster child.
11. Foster parents shall cooperate with the
child placement agency and the Licensing Unit in conducting inspections and
investigations and shall provide information required to verify compliance with
rules.
12. Foster parents shall
maintain absolute confidentiality of private information about each foster
child and the birth family.
13.
Foster parents shall give advance notice to the agency of any major changes
that affect the life and circumstances of the foster family, including a change
of residence, when possible.
14.
Foster parents shall keep periodic photographs, a record of the child's
memberships, activities, and participation in extracurricular school or church
activities, trophies, awards, ribbons, etc. for each foster child. These items
shall be provided to the child upon change in placement.
15. Foster parents shall ensure that each
child has sufficient sleep for their age and physical condition.
16. Foster parents shall instruct each child
in good grooming and personal hygiene habits.
17. Foster parents shall provide each child
with opportunities for regular recreational activities and exercise.
18. Foster parents shall ensure each child
shall be provided with age-appropriate activities and equipment.
19. Foster parents shall monitor and time
limit the use of television, videos, computer games, and other screen time
activities.
20. Foster parents
shall comply with the rules and responsibilities of the Placement Agreement
developed by the Placement Agency.
21. Foster parents shall not engage in the
use of illegal substances, abuse alcohol by consuming excessive amounts, or
abuse legal prescription drugs or non-prescription drugs by consuming them in
excess amounts or using them contrary to as prescribed or indicated.
22. Foster parents shall adhere to the
placement agency's reasonable and prudent standard.
214
Medications
1. Foster parents shall administer
medications only in accordance with directions on the label.
a. All over-the-counter medications shall be
stored in an area not readily accessible to children, according to the age and
development of each child in the home.
b. All prescription medications excluding
Epi-pens, inhalers, and Glucagon kits shall be locked. An age appropriate and
developmentally capable child may be provided or have access to non-narcotic
prescriptions with an approved safety plan. Examples include without
limitation, birth control, acne creams, and topical creams.
2. Medication shall be stored in
accordance with pharmaceutical recommendations.
3. Foster parents shall be aware of possible
side effects of all medications administered to foster children.
4. All medications shall be logged by the
foster parent at the time the medication is administered.
5. The medication logs shall include:
a. Child's name;
b. Time and date;
c. Medication and dosage; and
d. Initials of the person administering the
medication.
6. All
currently prescribed medication shall be provided at placement.
215
Transportation1. Foster families
shall have their own transportation available.
2. Any vehicle used to transport foster
children shall be maintained in compliance with motor vehicle laws and be
insured.
3. Children shall be
transported only by foster parents or persons approved by the foster parents
who possess a valid driver's license.
4. Children shall be transported according to
Arkansas law, including without limitation, use of safety belts, child safety
seats, and smoking restrictions.
216
Visitation
The standards in 216 do not apply to children in
short-term foster care awaiting adoptive placement.
1. The agency that has legal responsibility
for the child shall develop a visitation plan that specifies when and how
visits will occur between the child and the parents.
2. The child placement agency shall carry out
the visitation plan to meet the terms of the plan.
3. Foster parents shall allow foster children
and their families to communicate according to the child's case plan.
217
Child
Placement Agency Responsibilities1.
The child placement agency (agency) shall provide the foster parents with the
information necessary to provide adequate care to each foster child.
2. The agency shall provide foster parents
with instructions for contacting agency personnel at any time.
3. The agency shall assign a caseworker to
each child who is responsible for doing assessments, case planning, and
casework services.
4. An agency
caseworker shall not have more than twenty-five (25) children's cases at a
time.
5. An agency caseworker shall
visit the child in person at least monthly while the child is in foster
care.
6. The agency shall ensure
that each child in foster care has a medical exam at least annually. Medical
exams need not be repeated during the year if a child moves from one facility
or agency to another (provided the results of the exam are available to the
receiving facility or agency).
7.
The agency shall remain legally responsible for the supervision and
decision-making regarding foster children. Foster parents have daily
responsibility for the care of the children.
8. The agency shall have a written plan that
provides foster parents with timely reimbursements for costs of care and fees
for services.
9. The agency shall
develop respite care and babysitting policies.
10. Respite care shall occur in an
agency-approved foster home and shall not exceed fourteen (14) consecutive
days.
11. If the agency receives a
report of non-compliance with licensing standards, the agency shall investigate
the report of non-compliance. A report of findings and any corrective action
shall be maintained in the foster home record. The investigation shall be
completed within sixty (60) days of receiving the report of non-compliance,
unless good cause is documented.
12. The agency shall maintain a record for
each foster family that contains all information and documentation required by
licensing standards. This record shall include:
a. Complete and signed application;
b. Approval letter;
c. Home Study;
d. Minimum age verification;
e. Three (3) positive references;
f. Initial physical exam;
g. Pre-service training
verification;
h. Initial and
current criminal background, Child Maltreatment Central Registry, and Federal
Bureau of Investigation (FBI) checks, as required;
i. Initial and current CPR and First Aid
certification;
j. Current health
immunizations of children or exemption;
k. Current auto insurance;
l. Current homeowner's or renter's insurance
and general liability insurance;
m.
Current rabies vaccinations for household pets, as required by law;
n. Documentation of annual
training;
o. Safety
plans;
p. Social media
confidentiality documentation;
q.
Surveillance documentation, if applicable;
r. Floor plan;
s. Annual water test results, if
applicable;
t. Approved alternative
fire escape route, if applicable;
u. Documentation of quarterly monitoring
visits, including unannounced visits;
v. Documentation of annual
re-evaluations;
w. Reports of
non-compliance with licensing standards, including findings and any corrective
actions; and
x. Closing
summary.
13. If the home
closes, the agency shall prepare a closing summary, including reasons for
closure.
14. The agency shall
promptly notify Arkansas' Office of the Interstate Compact on the Placement of
Children (ICPC) upon discharging a child from outside Arkansas.
15. The agency shall approve and document the
use of all surveillance devices used in the home.
218
Monitoring &
Re-evaluation1. The agency shall
monitor the foster home at least quarterly for continued compliance with
licensing standards for foster homes. This does not apply to foster homes for
infants in shortterm foster care awaiting adoptive placement. Before a child
can be placed in such a foster home, a monitoring visit shall be done within
the three (3) months prior to placement
2. At least one (1) unannounced quarterly
visit shall be conducted annually and shall be documented as unannounced in the
foster home record.
3. The child
placement agency shall conduct an annual re-evaluation of the foster family
home. Any foster home that does not substantially comply with the standards for
approval shall not be approved for placement until compliance is
achieved.
4. The agency shall keep
documentation of quarterly monitoring visits and annual reevaluations in the
foster home record, signed and dated by the person conducting the visit and the
foster parent.
5. If the foster
family experiences any major life changes (for example, marriage, divorce,
separation, health problems, death, change of residence, or change of household
composition), the child placement agency shall re-evaluate the home at that
time.
6. If a home is inactive or
closed for one (1) year or more and desires to reopen, the agency shall:
a. Conduct a re-evaluation to ensure that
licensing requirements are met;
b.
Ensure that new background checks are conducted;
c. Ensure that CPR and First Aid training is
current; and
d. Evaluate any major
changes, that being, (218.5).
219
Discharge
1. The discharge of any child shall be
planned by agency staff.
2. The
agency may discharge a child on an emergency basis if failure to do so could
result in harm to the child or other persons or significant property
damage.
3. A agency shall discharge
the child to the custody of their parent, their guardian, a person with
authorization from their parent or guardian, or a person authorized by court
order to assume custody of the child.
4. The agency shall complete a discharge
statement on each child (including the date of and reason for discharge) and
provide a copy of it to the child's custodian..
5. Documentation of the discharge shall be
maintained in the child's record.
300
CHILD PLACEMENT AGENCIES:
THERAPEUTIC FOSTER CARE
In addition to all standards in Section 100, the
following standards shall be met in order to be licensed as a Therapeutic
Foster Care Agency:
301
Admission
1. Each agency shall
establish written criteria for admitting as well as excluding
children.
2. The agency shall not
admit any child for whom the agency cannot provide adequate care.
3. Each child shall have a medical exam
within one (1) year before admission, or an appointment scheduled within one
(1) week after admission.
4. Each
child shall have proof of current immunizations, a letter of exemption in
accordance with the Arkansas Department of Health, or an appointment scheduled
within one (1) week after admission.
5. The agency shall obtain written authority
from the parent(s), guardian(s), or court before placement, or within
seventy-two (72) hours in an emergency placement.
6. The agency shall obtain written authority
for medical care for the child from the parent(s), guardian(s), court at the
time of placement, or within seventy-two (72) hours in an emergency
placement.
7. The agency shall
comply with the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children when placing or
admitting children from outside Arkansas.
8. A dependent juvenile of a parent who is in
the custody of the Division of Child and Family Services (DCFS) shall be
subject to all rules regarding space, ratio, health, and safety.
302
Intake &
Assessment1. Intake information shall
be completed on each child in care within ten (10) working days after
admission.
2. The intake
information shall include:
a. Demographic
information on the child and parent(s), including name, address, birth date,
gender, race, and religious preference;
b. A factual description of the circumstances
requiring placement;
c. A brief
social history of the family;
d.
The child's current legal status or custody;
e. Any history of previous placements outside
the family, if applicable; and
f.
An assessment of services needed to ensure the health and welfare of the child,
including medical history and psychological history.
3. The agency shall obtain copies of legal
documents within thirty (30) days of admission or shall document their attempts
to obtain the documents. The legal documents shall include without limitation,
birth certificates, social security cards, and court orders.
4. A plan of safe care shall be developed for
all children with physical limitations, medical conditions, or behaviors that
are indicative of harm to self or others; to include without limitation: arson,
physical aggression, sexual aggression, suicidal behaviors, or other
selfharming tendencies. This plan shall identify the behavior or problem and
specify the safeguards that are to be implemented. A copy of the plan shall be
provided to the direct caregiver(s), as well as a copy placed in the child's
case file.
303
Treatment Planning1. A treatment
plan shall be developed for each child placed into a foster home by a child
placement agency. The plan shall address the child's needs as identified in the
intake information.
2. When a
placement agency places a child with another placement agency the receiving
agency shall develop a treatment plan for each child received for
care.
3. The treatment plan shall
be developed within thirty (30) days after placement.
4. The treatment plan shall be developed
after a staffing. If applicable, the parents, foster parents, facility staff,
caseworker, social worker or probation officer, and the child shall be invited
to the staffing.
5. The child's
treatment plan shall contain, at the minimum:
a. Specific needs of the child;
b. Plan for meeting child's needs;
c. Special treatment issues (for example,
psychotropic medications, sexual misconduct, and neurological disorders) shall
be identified, with a statement of how the special needs shall be
met;
d. A plan to ensure that the
child's educational needs are met according to applicable state law;
e. Visitation plan, if applicable;
and
f. Date of next review of the
treatment plan.
6. If
independence is a goal, the treatment plan shall include training in
independent living skills.
7.
Foster parents shall be included in treatment planning for each
child.
8. Foster parents shall be
provided a copy of the child's current treatmentplan.
9. A copy of the treatment plan shall be made
available to the parent(s), guardian(s), court, or other agencies involved in
the delivery of case plan services, if applicable.
10. The treatment plan shall be reviewed at
least semi-annually and shall be updated to reflect the child's
progress.
11. If treatment services
are contracted, there shall be evidence of participation by the contracted
therapist in treatment planning reviews and individualized program
implementation.
304
Children's Records1. The agency
shall keep a confidential case record for each child that includes the
following;
a. Demographic
information;
b. Plan of safe care,
if applicable;
c. A complete
intake;
d. Consents, including
consent for medical care, and authority to place the child;
e. Interstate Compact information, if
applicable;
f. Treatment plans and
treatment plan reviews;
g. Copies
of legal documents (for example, birth certificates, social security cards, or
court orders) or documentation of their attempts to obtain the
documents;
h. Physical exams and
immunization records, or documentation of their attempts to obtain the
documents;
i. Psychological
reports, if applicable;
j.
Educational reports, if applicable;
k. Disciplinary and incident reports, if
applicable;
l. Records of
visitation and family contacts, if applicable;
m. Documentation of casework services and
child contact, current to within one (1) month of occurrence; and
n. Discharge statement.
2. Records for each child shall be kept for
five (5) years from the date of discharge, unless otherwise specified by
Arkansas law.
305
Behavior Management
1. The
agency shall have a written discipline policy that is consistently
followed.
2. Discipline shall be
directed toward teaching the child acceptable behavior and
self-control.
3. Discipline shall
be appropriate to the child's age, development, and history (including trauma
history).
4. The following
disciplinary actions shall not be used:
a.
Denial of meals, sleep, shelter, essential clothing, or case plan
activities;
b. Denial of parental
visits or regular phone and mail contact with family. Non-disciplinary case
planning issues are accepted;
c.
Lewd or obscene language;
d.
Derogatory comments about the child, the child's family, race, or
gender;
e. Restriction to a room
for more than a short period of time without periodic observation;
f. Restriction to a dark room or
area;
g. Locked
isolation;
h. Physical injury or
threat of bodily harm;
i.
Humiliating or degrading action;
j.
Extremely strenuous work or exercise;
k. Mechanical or chemical restraints;
nor
l. Corporal
punishment.
5. Physical
restraint shall be initiated only by a trained person; only to prevent injury
to the child, other people, or property; and shall not be initiated solely as a
form of discipline.
6. A child
shall not be allowed to administer discipline, except teen parents may
discipline their own children under the supervision and guidance of the foster
parent.
7. Searches of a child or a
child's personal property shall be for reasons limited to safety and security
of children and foster family, or in cases of suspected theft.
8. Any searches requiring removal of clothing
shall be done in privacy.
306
Foster Parent Qualifications
1. In a two-parent home, both shall be joint
applicants, each sign the application, and participate in the approval
process.
2. Foster parents shall be
at least twenty-one (21) years of age.
3. The stability of the foster family shall
be evaluated and determined to be appropriate.
4. Foster parents shall be physically,
mentally, and emotionally capable of caring for children.
5. The physical health of the foster parents
shall be equal to the stress inherent in the care of special needs children, as
evidenced by the physician's statement.
6. The foster family shall provide
documentation of sufficient financial resources to meet their needs.
7. All family members under eighteen (18)
years of age in the household shall have proof of current health immunizations,
or an exemption in accordance with the Arkansas Department of Health.
8. When routine childcare is needed, foster
children shall attend licensed childcare or have an agency-approved caregiver.
307
Content of the
Home Study1. The agency shall complete
a home study for each foster home.
2. The agency shall conduct at least one (1)
scheduled in-home interview for each household member to observe family
functioning and assess the family's capacity to meet the needs of children in
foster care.
3. The agency shall
interview every age-appropriate member of the household.
4. The home study shall include the following
information:
a. Motivation: the individual's
motivation for becoming foster parents;
b. Household Composition: the full legal
names, birth dates, relationships to one another, and a brief physical
description of everyone residing in the home;
c. Housing: Address, location, and type of
structure, as well as the upkeep and housekeeping standards, sleeping
arrangements, length of time at residence, and future residence plans of the
facility's occupants;
d. Safety
Hazards: an assessment of the safety of the home and grounds including water
hazards, swimming pools, hot tubs, dangerous pets, and other hazardous items
and areas;
e. Income and Expenses:
employment history for the last six (6) years (duration, salary, duties, title,
degree of job security, and hours), other sources of income, monthly living
expenses, outstanding debts, and insurance;
f. Health: current health of each family
member, including prior illnesses or medical problems; disabilities; clinic or
doctor utilized and frequency of use; counseling (dates and purposes); and
hospitalization for alcohol abuse, drug abuse, or mental illness;
g. Education: parents' educational
attainment, future educational plans, and parenting classes attended;
h. Childcare Arrangements or Plans: current
arrangement or proposed arrangement as it relates to their working hours and
income;
i. Child Rearing Practices:
purpose of behavior management; behavior guidance practices; how they show
affection; and how they handle stress, allowance, chores, and
homework;
j. Daily
Schedule;
k. Social History:
highlights and verification regarding action of marriages and divorces,
children, relationships' support system, future plans, any significant extended
family members not living in the home, and any significant personal,
developmental, personality, or legal problems;
l. Family Activities: religious interests,
social organizations, activities with children, and family roles;
m. Impressions, Conclusions, and
Recommendations: evaluate the family's situation and ability to provide for a
child based on the information obtained during the home study; and
n. Approval: if the agency approves the
foster parent(s), the agency shall recommend in the home study the number, age,
gender, and other characteristics of children for whom the home is approved to
provide care.
5. The
placement agency may require further documentation or evaluation to determine
the suitability of the home.
308
Physical Requirements of the
Home1. The foster home shall have
access to community resources needed by foster children.
2. The foster home shall be clean and free of
hazards.
3. The foster home shall
have a continuous supply of sanitary drinking water. If the source is not a
municipal water system, the water shall be tested and approved annually by the
Arkansas Department of Health. This approval will be added to the foster home
case record.
4. The foster home
shall have at least one (1) flushing toilet, one (1) sink with running water,
and one (1) bathtub or shower with hot and cold running water.
5. An operational smoke detector is required
for each bedroom.
6. An operational
chemical fire extinguisher must be readily accessible near the cooking area of
the home.
7. The foster parents
shall practice and document emergency evacuation drills with each new child
entering the home and repeat at least quarterly thereafter.
8. All heating units with hot external areas
shall be screened or otherwise shielded.
9. The home shall have at least one (1)
exterior door that exits directly to the outside, or an alternate fire escape
route.
10. The home shall have an
operational telephone that is accessible to children. Working cell phones kept
on the premises are acceptable.
11.
Each child shall have adequate space for storing clothing and personal
belongings.
12. All household pets
shall have proof of current rabies vaccinations as required by Arkansas
law.
13. All firearms shall be
maintained in a secure, locked location or be secured by a trigger
lock.
14. All ammunition shall be
secured and locked separately from firearms unless they are stored in a safe
(for example, a handgun safe or a long gun safe).
15. The foster home record shall contain an
agency-approved safety plan for any noted hazards. The safety plan shall be
signed by all caregivers in the foster home and an agency
representative.
16. A current floor
plan of the home with room dimensions for all rooms used for sleeping shall be
in the foster home record.
17.
Manufactured homes, used as foster homes, shall have an agency-approved plan
for tornado safety. The safety plan shall be signed by all caregivers in the
foster home and an agency representative.
18. The foster home shall be a house, a
mobile home, housing unit, or apartment occupied by an individual or a
family.
19. The foster home,
grounds, and all structures on the property shall be maintained in a clean,
safe, and sanitary condition and be in a reasonable state of repair within
community standards
20. The foster
home interior and exterior must be free from dangerous objects, dangerous
conditions, and hazardous materials.
21. All poisonous materials, cleaning
supplies, other hazardous materials, and alcoholic beverages, shall be stored
in an area not readily accessible to children, as appropriate for the age and
development of each child.
22. The
foster home shall have proper trash and recycling disposal.
23. The foster home shall be free of rodent
and insect infestation.
24. The
foster home shall be equipped with a functional kitchen that includes a sink
with hot and cold running water, a refrigerator, a stove, and an
oven.
25. The foster home shall
have adequate lighting and ventilation.
26. The foster home shall have a heating,
ventilating, and air conditioning source, maintained in safe operating
condition, that keeps the temperature a minimum of sixty-five degrees (65°)
and a maximum of eighty-five degrees (85°).
27. The foster home shall be free of obvious
fire hazards such as defective heating equipment or improperly stored flammable
materials.
28. There shall be an
operational smoke detector on each level of occupancy of the foster
home.
29. There shall be a carbon
monoxide detector on each level of occupancy of the foster home and near all
sleeping areas.
30. The foster home
shall have a safe operating water heater that has a recommended temperature at
or below one-hundred and twenty degrees (120°) as tested at the plumbing
fixture nearest the water heater.
31. The foster home shall maintain adequate
first aid supplies for emergencies.
32. Foster parents shall maintain a list of
emergency telephone numbers, including poison control, and shall post it in a
prominent place.
33. Foster parents
shall not permit a child to enter a pool area unless accompanied by an
adult.
34. The foster home record
shall contain a water safety plan for supervision of children during water
activities. The plan shall be signed by all caregivers in the foster home and
an emergency representative.
35.
Swimming pools shall be enclosed or shall have an approved manual or power
operated child safety cover that meets the standards of the American Society
for Testing and Materials adopted by the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
Please note that solar pool covers and winter pool covers are not safety
covers. The American Safety for Testing and Materials (ASTM) (1996) requires
that a pool cover be able to hold a minimum of 485 pounds per five (5) square
feet in order to qualify as a safety cover.
36. In ground pools without an approved child
safety cover shall be protected by an enclosure (wall, fence, or barrier) that
surrounds the pool area.
37. Unless
local code provides otherwise an enclosure shall meet the following;
a. Entirely enclose the pool area;
b. Be at least 4 feet high
c. Swimming pools must have their methods of
access through the barrier equipped with a safety device, such as a bolt
lock.
38. The wall of a
house or other building shall not be used in lieu of barrier to the pool with
the exception of a solid wall that does not contain any doors. When a wall is
used as a barrier the remaining three sides shall be protected by an enclosure
(wall, fence, or barrier) that surrounds the pool area or have an approved
child safety cover. The enclosure shall meet the following:
a. Entirely encloses the pool area;
b. Be at least 4 feet high;
c. Swimming pools must have their methods of
access through the barrier equipped with a safety device, such as a bolt
lock.
39. All above
ground pools shall have non-climbable exterior side walls with a minimum height
of 4 feet and have access ladders or steps that are removable and able to be
secured when the pool is not in use.
40. Swimming pools shall be equipped with a
life saving device such as a ring buoy.
41. All portable pools (inflatable and wading
pools) shall be fenced or emptied after every use.
42. Swimming pools that cannot be emptied
after each use shall have a working pump and filtering system.
43. Hot tubs and spas shall have locking
safety covers that are locked when not in use.
309
Sleeping Arrangements
1. Each household occupant shall have a
bedroom that provides privacy
2.
Each bedroom shall have at least fifty (50) square feet of floor space per
occupant.
3. Each bedroom used for
foster children shall have a window to the outside that can serve as an
emergency escape.
4. Bars, grills,
grates, or other items that block access to the window are permitted only if
they can be removed from the inside without the use of a key, tool, or force
greater than that required for normal operation of the window. In this event,
each such bedroom shall have a working smoke detector.
5. No more than four (4) children shall share
a bedroom.
6. Each foster child
shall be provided a safe bedroom (appropriate for the child's age and needs)
that includes a bed with a mattress, sheets, a pillow, a pillowcase, and
adequate cover, all in good condition, and similar to those provided to other
household members.
7. Children of
the opposite sex shall not share the same bedroom if either child is four (4)
years of age or older, except for a teen parent in foster care with her
child.
8. No children shall share a
bed if either child is four (4) years of age or older.
9. Children under six (6) years of age cannot
occupy a top bunk.
10. Foster
children, except infants under two (2) years of age, shall not share a sleeping
room with adults; this age would increase through four (4) years of age for a
grandparent to the child or a teen parent in foster care with her
child.
11. All cribs used for
children shall have current certification of compliance with Consumer Product
Safety Commission (CPSC) standards.
12. Children twelve (12) months of age and
below shall be placed flat on their backs to sleep, in accordance with American
Academy of Pediatrics guidelines, to lessen the risk of suffocation and Sudden
Infant Death Syndrome. (If a child rolls over on their own, the facility is not
required to reposition the child.) If there is a medical reason a child cannot
sleep on their back, a signed statement from the child's physician shall be in
the file stating the reason, the sleep position indicated, and the time frame
required.
13. Bedding shall be
changed at least weekly, or more often if needed.
14. Foster parents shall not co-sleep or
share a bed with a foster child of any age, including infants.
310
Approval of
Foster Homes1. A foster home can be
approved only by one (1) agency.
2.
At least three (3) positive personal references shall be obtained on the foster
family including at least one (1) from a relative and one (1) from a
non-relative.
3. Each member of the
foster family shall have a physical exam within twelve (12) months before the
initial approval.
4. Foster parents
shall be trained in crisis prevention and intervention before a child is placed
in the home.
5. Pre-service
training shall include the following topics:
a. Legal rights;
b. Roles, responsibilities, and expectations
of foster parents;
c. Agency
structure, purpose, policies, and services;
d. Laws and regulations as related to foster
homes or foster children;
e. The
impact of childhood trauma;
f.
Managing child behaviors;
g.
Medication administration; and
h.
The importance of maintaining meaningful connections between the child and
parents; including regular visitation.
6. Prior to the placement of children in
their home, foster parents shall complete at least thirty (30) hours of
skill-based pre-service training (excluding CPR and First Aid) consistent with
the agency's treatment methodology and the needs of the population
served.
7. Foster parent(s) shall
have a current certificate of completion of First Aid and CPR before a child is
placed in the home. The training shall require hands-on, skill-based
instruction, as well as practical testing. Training and certification that is
provided solely online will not be accepted.
8. Foster parents shall provide documentation
that they carry homeowner's or renter's insurance and general liability
insurance.
9. Foster homes shall
not also operate as child-care family homes.
10. Foster homes shall not provide
compensated care for any non-related adults in the foster home, unless
providing transitional care for a person placed in care prior to eighteen (18)
years of age.
11. There shall be an
annual approval letter from the approving agency in the foster home
record.
12. If a foster home moves
from one (1) placement agency to another all requirements for opening a new
foster home shall be met.
13.
Foster parents must be able to communicate with the foster child, the placement
agency, health care providers, and other service providers.
14. At least one (1) foster parent in the
home must have functional literacy, such as having the ability to read
medication labels.
311
Selection of Foster Home1. The
agency shall select the home that is in the best interest of the child, is the
least restrictive possible, and is matched to the child's physical and
emotional needs. The placement decision shall be based on an individual
assessment of the child's needs.
2.
No children shall be placed in a foster home unless there is an approval letter
in the record from the approving agency.
3. The agency shall place children only in
approved foster homes.
4. When a
placement agency places a child with another placement agency, the receiving
agency shall maintain a record for and provide casework services to the
children placed into their foster homes.
5. Foster homes shall not have more than two
(2) children under two (2) years of age, including the foster parent's own
children.
6. The number of children
placed into one (1) therapeutic foster home shall not exceed two (2), except to
keep a sibling group together In that case, up to a maximum of three (3)
children may be placed into the home. The sibling group shall be the only
children placed into the therapeutic foster home. There shall be no more than
five (5) total children in the home, including the foster parent's children.
This includes placement or respite care. In the case of an emergency respite
placement that would exceed capacity, the agency shall notify the Licensing
Unit the next business day.
7.
Before placing more than one (1) child (therapeutic or otherwise) in a home,
the agency shall consider extraordinary problems and needs of each child (for
example, violent behavior, sexual offenses, and seizure disorders).
Justification of the appropriateness of placing a child in a home with another
child shall be documented.
8.
Non-therapeutic foster children may be placed into therapeutic foster homes
under any of the following circumstances:
a.
The non-therapeutic foster child is a sibling of the therapeutic foster
child;
b. The non-therapeutic
foster child is the child of the therapeutic foster child;
c. The non-therapeutic foster child was
previously a therapeutic foster child placed in the foster home; or
d. The non-therapeutic foster child is placed
as an emergency placement for a maximum of twenty-one (21) days.
9. Before placing a
non-therapeutic foster child into a therapeutic foster home with a therapeutic
foster child, the agency shall consider the potential risk to the
non-therapeutic foster child. Justification of the appropriateness of placing a
non-therapeutic child in a home with another therapeutic foster child shall be
documented. The agency shall maintain Section 200 standards in reference to the
non-therapeutic foster child's record and the services the agency provides to
the child.
10. No new placements of
children shall occur with foster parents who have not satisfied the annual
training requirements. Administrative-level staff designated by the agency
Director may grant an exemption to this restriction for up to sixty (60) days.
The administrator shall review the quality of care provided by the foster
parents and the reasons for failing to complete the training on time in
deciding whether to grant an exception.
312
Continued Training of Foster
Parents1. Each therapeutic foster
parent shall complete at least twenty-four (24) hours of skill-based training
annually, excluding CPR and First Aid.
2. Documentation verifying annual training
shall indicate the date, number of hours, the name of the source, the topic,
and the title.
3. Each foster
parent shall maintain a current certificate of successful completion of
hands-on, skill-based CPR and First Aid. Training and certification that is
provided solely online will not be accepted.
4. Foster parents shall participate in
ongoing training to receive instruction that supports their parental roles and
ensures the foster parent is up to date with agency and licensing requirements.
NOTE: Annual training may include without limitation,
child-specific training or issues relevant to the general population of
children in foster care.
313
Therapeutic Foster Parent
Responsibilities
1. Foster parents
shall be responsible for providing the level of supervision, care, and
treatment necessary to ensure the safety and well-being of each child placed
into their home, considering the child's age, individual differences and
abilities, surrounding circumstances, hazards, and risks.
2. Foster parents shall provide each child
with adequate and nutritious food.
3. Foster parents shall provide regular
activities to promote the physical, social, intellectual, spiritual, and
emotional development of the children in their care.
4. Foster parents shall provide each child
with their own clothing that is clean, well-fitted, seasonal, appropriate to
age and gender, and comparable to community standards.
5. Foster parents shall allow foster children
to acquire and keep personal belongings.
6. Foster parents shall fully cooperate with
the child placement agency's case plan for each foster child, including
visitation.
7. Foster parents shall
provide routine transportation for each child.
8. Foster parents shall participate in case
planning and case plan reviews.
9.
Foster parents shall attend school conferences concerning a foster child and
notify the placing agency of any situations that may affect the case plan or
require agency involvement.
10.
Foster parents shall notify the child placement agency promptly of serious
illness, injury, or unusual circumstances affecting the health, safety, or
welfare of the foster child.
11.
Foster parents shall cooperate with the child placement agency and the
Licensing Unit in conducting inspections and investigations and shall provide
information required to verify compliance with rules.
12. Foster parents shall maintain absolute
confidentiality of private information about each foster child and the birth
family.
13. Foster parents shall
give advance notice to the agency of any major changes that affect the life and
circumstances of the foster family, including a change of residence, when
possible.
14. Foster parents shall
keep periodic photographs, a record of the child's memberships, activities, and
participation in extracurricular school or church activities, trophies, awards,
ribbons, etc. for each foster child. These items shall be provided to the child
upon change in placement.
15.
Foster parents shall be provided with a written list of duties clearly
detailing their responsibilities.
16. Foster parents shall be responsible for
implementing in-home treatment strategies specified in each child's treatment
plan.
17. Foster parents shall keep
an ongoing written record of each child's behavior and progress toward
treatment goals.
18. Foster parents
shall ensure that each child has sufficient sleep for their age and physical
condition.
19. Foster parents shall
instruct each child in good grooming and personal hygiene habits.
20. Foster parents shall ensure each child is
provided with opportunities for regular recreational activities and
exercise.
21. Foster parents shall
provide each child with age- appropriate activities and equipment.
22. Foster parents shall monitor and time
limit the use of television, videos, computer games, and other screen time
activities.
23. Foster parents
shall adhere to the placement agency's reasonable and prudent parent standard.
314
Medications1. The agency shall
have an intervention policy that is non-medical, unless a specific medical
condition is indicated.
2. When
psychotropic medications are prescribed by a physician, they shall be used in
concert with other interventions.
3. Foster parents shall administer
medications only in accordance with directions on the label.
a. All over-the-counter medications shall be
stored in an area not readily accessible to children, according to the age and
development of each child in the home.
b. All prescription medications excluding
Epi-pens, inhalers, and Glucagon kits shall be locked. An age appropriate and
developmentally capable child may be provided or have access to non-narcotic
prescriptions with an approved safety plan.
Examples include without limitation, birth control, acne
creams, and topical creams.
4. Medication shall be stored in accordance
with pharmaceutical recommendations.
5. Foster parents shall be aware of possible
side effects of all medications administered to foster children.
6. All medications shall be logged by the
foster parent at the time the medication is administered.
7. The medication logs shall include:
a. Child's name;
b. Time and date;
c. Medication and dosage; and initials of the
person administering the medication.
8. All currently prescribed medication shall
be provided at placement.
315
Transportation
1. Foster families shall have their own
transportation available.
2. Any
vehicles used to transport foster children shall be maintained in compliance
with motor vehicle laws and be insured.
3. Children shall be transported only by
foster parents or persons approved by the foster parents who possess a valid
driver's license.
4. Children shall
be transported according to Arkansas law, including without limitation, use of
safety belts, child safety seats, and smoking restrictions.
316
Visitation1. The agency that has
legal responsibility for the child shall develop a visitation plan that
specifies when and how visits will occur between the child and the
parents.
2. The child placement
agency shall carry out the visitation plan to meet the terms of the
plan.
3. Foster parents shall allow
foster children and their families to communicate according to the child's case
plan.
317
Staffing
Requirements, Staff Training & Support
1. Primary responsibilities of program staff
shall include treatment planning, leadership of the treatment team, case
management, clinical and administrative supervision, twenty-four-hour crisis
intervention, and discharge planning.
2. The therapeutic foster care agency shall
employ a Clinical Director who shall be clearly responsible for implementation
of treatment planning and service delivery. The Clinical Director shall have a
master's degree in a human service field, have two (2) years' experience in
placement or treatment, and shall be currently licensed in Arkansas as a mental
health professional (as recognized by Arkansas Medicaid).
3. The therapeutic foster care agency shall
employ at least one (1) caseworker who shall coordinate the implementation of
the treatment plan. The caseworker shall either have a bachelor's degree in a
human service field or be a mental health paraprofessional. The caseworker
shall be supervised by the Clinical Director.
4. The agency shall assign a caseworker to
each child to be responsible for doing assessments, treatment planning, and
casework services.
5. No caseworker
shall be responsible for managing more than twelve (12) children's
cases.
6. All casework staff shall
be trained in crisis prevention and intervention as well as CPR and First Aid
within the first sixty (60) days of employment.
7. All casework staff shall be provided with
eight (8) hours of orientation either prior to employment or within the first
week of employment, that shall provide an overview of the following areas:
a. The agency's policies and
procedures;
b. The client's rights,
including confidentiality;
c. How
to handle medical and non-medical emergencies;
d. The caseworker's clinical
limitations;
e. How to document
clinical information in the child and family records; and
f. General information regarding commonly
prescribed medications and their side effects.
8. The agency shall provide twenty-four-hour
on-call crisis intervention support to supplement the support provided by the
caseworker.
318
Child Placement Agency Responsibilities
1. The child placement agency (agency) shall
provide the foster parents with the information necessaryto provide adequate
care to each foster child.
2. The
agency shall provide foster parents with instructions for contacting agency
personnel any time.
3. The agency
shall ensure that casework staff visits with the child face-to- face, at least
once per week, during the first three (3) months after the child's placement
with the agency, and at least every other week thereafter.
4. The agency shall ensure that each child in
foster care has a medical exam at least annually. Medical exams need not be
repeated during the year if a child moves from one facility or agency to
another (provided the results of the exam are available to the receiving
facility or agency).
5. The agency
shall remain legally responsible for the supervision and decision making
regarding foster children. Foster parents have daily responsibility for the
care of the children.
6. The agency
shall have a written plan that provides foster parents with timely
reimbursements for costs of care and fees for services.
7. The agency shall develop respite care and
babysitting policies.
8. Respite
care shall occur in an agency-approved foster home and shall not exceed
fourteen (14) consecutive days.
9.
The agency shall have a written program description that is available to
residents, parents, and guardians. The following information shall be included:
a. Program philosophy and mission;
b. Services and treatment
modalities;
c. Treatment planning
procedures;
d. Behavior management
program and expectations of each child;
e. Admission, exclusion, and discharge
criteria; and
f. Aftercare
services.
10. The agency
shall keep documentation that includes:
a.
Prior treatment documents and intake information;
b. Assessments;
c. Master treatment plan;
d. Treatment plan review;
e. Ongoing observations;
f. Medication and physician's instructions,
if applicable; and
g. Progress
notes.
11. The agency
shall establish procedures for hearing children's grievances.
12. If the agency receives a report of
non-compliance with licensing standards, the agency shall investigate the
report of non-compliance. A report of findings and any corrective action shall
be maintained in the foster home record. The investigation shall be completed
within sixty (60) days of receiving the report of non-compliance, unless good
cause is documented.
13. The agency
shall maintain a record for each foster family that contains all information
and documentation required by licensing standards. This record shall include:
a. Complete and signed application;
b. Approval letter;
c. Home Study;
d. Minimum age verification;
e. Three (3) positive references;
f. Initial physical exam;
g. Pre-service training
verification;
h. Initial and
current criminal background, Child Maltreatment Central Registry, and Federal
Bureau of Investigation (FBI) checks, as required;
i. Initial and current CPR and First Aid
certification;
j. Current health
immunizations of children or exemption;
k. Current auto insurance;
l. Current homeowner's or renter's insurance
and general liability insurance;
m.
Current rabies vaccinations for household pets as required by law;
n. Documentation of annual
training;
o. Safety
plans;
p. Social media
confidentiality documentation;
q.
Surveillance documentation, if applicable;
r. Floor plan;
s. Approved annual water system test, if
applicable;
t. Approved alternative
fire escape route, if applicable;
u. Documentation of quarterly monitoring
visits, including unannounced visits;
v. Documentation of annual
re-evaluations;
w. Reports of
non-compliance with licensing standards including findings, and any corrective
actions; and
x. Closing
summary.
14. If the home
closes, the agency shall prepare a closing summary, including reasons for
closure.
15. The agency shall
promptly notify Arkansas' Office of the Interstate Compact on the Placement of
Children (ICPC) upon discharging a child from outside Arkansas.
16. The agency shall be aware of and approve
the use of all surveillance devices used in the home.
319
Monitoring &
Re-evaluation1. The agency shall
monitor the foster home at least quarterly for continued compliance with
licensing standards for foster homes.
2. At least one (1) unannounced quarterly
visit shall be conducted annually and shall be documented as unannounced in the
foster home record.
3. The agency
shall conduct an annual re-evaluation of the foster family home. Any foster
home that does not substantially comply with the standards for approval shall
not be approved for placement until compliance is achieved.
4. The agency shall keep documentation of
quarterly monitoring visits and annual reevaluations in the foster home record
signed and dated by the person conducting the visit and the foster
parent.
5. If the foster family
experiences any major life changes (for example, marriage, divorce, separation,
health problems, death, change of residence, or change of household
composition), the child placement agency shall re-evaluate the home at that
time.
6. If a home is inactive or
closed for one (1) year or more and desires to reopen, the agency shall:
a. Conduct a re-evaluation to ensure that
licensing requirements are met;
b.
Ensure that new background checks are conducted;
c. Ensure that CPR and First Aid training is
current; and
d. Evaluate any major
changes (See section 319.5).
320
Discharge
1. The discharge of any child shall be
planned by agency staff.
2. The
agency may discharge a child on an emergency basis if failure to do so could
result in harm to the child or other persons or significant property
damage.
3. The agency shall
discharge a child to the custody of the their parent, their guardian, a person
with authorization from their parent or guardian, or a person authorized by
court order to assume custody of the child.
4. The agency shall complete a discharge
statement on each child (including the date of and reason for discharge) and
provide a copy of it to the child's custodian.
5. Documentation of the discharge shall be
maintained in the child's record.
400
CHILD PLACEMENT AGENCIES:
THERAPEUTIC FOSTER CARE - SEXUAL REHABILITATIVE PROGRAMS
In addition to all standards in Section 100, the
following standards shall be met:
401
Licensing Approval &
Monitoring1. At the discretion of the
Licensing Unit, a multi-disciplinary team may be asked to assist the Licensing
Specialist in the initial study or during an investigation of a licensing
complaint. This team may include a licensed person with professional expertise
in the appropriate field.
2. At the
discretion of the Licensing Unit, a multi-disciplinary team may be asked to
assist the Licensing Specialist during inspections, for advisory purposes.
402 Admission
1. Each agency shall establish written
criteria for admitting as well as excluding children.
2. The agency shall not admit any child for
whom the agency cannot provide adequate care.
3. In order to be admitted to the program,
one of the following shall be met:
a. The
child has committed a sexual offense that has been found true or exempt by an
official investigation by the Department of Human Services or the Arkansas
State Police;
b. The child has
committed an offense involving the use of power, control, threat, coercion, or
intimidation;
c. The child has
committed an offense in which there was at least a three-year age difference
between the offender and the victim;
d. The child has a documented pattern of
deviant sexualized behavior, sexual misconduct, or sexually maladaptive
behaviors, as indicated by the psychosexual assessment.
4. Children admitted to the program shall
have the cognitive ability to benefit from the treatment program.
5. Each child shall have a medical exam
within one (1) year before admission, or an appointment scheduled within one
(1) week after admission.
6. Each
child shall have proof of current immunizations, a letter of exemption in
accordance with the Arkansas Department of Health, or an appointment scheduled
within one (1) week after admission.
7. The agency shall obtain written authority
from the parent(s), guardian(s), or court before placement, or within
seventy-two (72) hours if it is an emergency placement.
8. The agency shall obtain written authority
for medical care for the child from the placing agent at the time of
admission.
9. The agency shall
comply with the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children when placing or
admitting children from outside Arkansas.
10. The agency shall have written policies
regarding description of the target population, admission/exclusion criteria,
and discharge criteria.
11. The
agency shall have a written policy describing the risk levels it will accept in
children with sexually maladaptive behaviors who are being considered for
admission. The written policy shall also describe the therapeutic interventions
it will utilize for each risk level.
403
Intake & Assessment
1. Intake information shall be completed on
each child in care within ten (10) working days after admission.
2. The intake information shall include:
a. Demographic information on the child and
parent(s), including name, address, birth date, gender, race, and religious
preference;
b. A factual
description of the circumstances requiring placement;
c. A brief social history of the
family;
d. The child's current
legal status or custody;
e. Any
history of previous placements outside the family, if applicable;
f. An assessment of services needed to ensure
the health and welfare of the child, including medical history and
psychological history;
g. A
description of the offense or sexually maladaptive behavior, including police
reports and victim statements (if available);
h. A psychosexual assessment (if available);
and
i. A discharge summary from
previous rehabilitative-specific treatment (if applicable and
available).
3. The agency
shall obtain copies of legal documents within thirty (30) days of admission or
shall document their attempts to obtain the documents. The legal documents
shall include without limitation, birth certificates, social security cards,
and court orders.
4. A psychosexual
evaluation shall be conducted by a licensed mental health professional (as
recognized by Arkansas Medicaid) who is a member of the Association for the
Treatment of Sexual Abusers or has forty (40) hours of sexual rehabilitative
treatment training. The evaluation shall be completed within the past twelve
(12) months or within seven (7) days following the admission of the
child.
5. Each child shall have
been evaluated for intellectual ability, learning disabilities, and language
disorders within the past eighteen (18) months. If a child is admitted without
an evaluation, the evaluation shall be completed within thirty (30) days of
admission.
6. A plan of safe care
shall be developed for all children with physical limitations, medical
conditions, or behaviors that are indicative of harm to self or others; to
include without limitation: arson, physical aggression, sexual aggression,
suicidal behaviors, or other selfharming tendencies.
7. This plan shall identify the behavior or
problem and shall specify the safeguards that are to be implemented. A copy of
the plan shall be provided to the direct caregiver(s), as well as a copy placed
in the child's case file.
404
Treatment Planning
1. The agency shall develop a treatment plan
for each child that includes tasks appropriate to the needs of the child, as
identified in the intake information and psychosexual assessment.
2. The child's treatment plan shall include a
diagnosis related to their sexually maladaptive behavior.
3. When a placement agency places a child
with another placement agency the receiving agency shall develop a treatment
plan for each child received for care.
4. The treatment plan shall be developed
within thirty (30) days after placement.
5. The child's treatment plan shall contain,
at the minimum:
a. Specific needs of the
child;
b. Plan for meeting child's
needs;
c. Special treatment issues
(for example, psychotropic medications, sexual misconduct, and neurological
disorders) shall be identified, with a statement of how the special needs shall
be met;
d. A plan to ensure that
the child's educational needs are met according to applicable state
law;
e. Visitation plan, if
applicable; and
f. Date of next
review of the treatment plan.
6. If independence is a goal, the treatment
plan shall include training in independent living skills.
7. Foster parents shall be included in
treatment planning for each child
8. Foster parents shall be provided a copy of
the child's current treatment plan.
9. A copy of the treatment plan shall be made
available to the parent(s), guardian(s), court, or other agencies involved in
the delivery of case plan services, if applicable.
10. The child's treatment plan shall be
reviewed quarterly and shall be updated to reflect the child's
progress.
11. If treatment services
are contracted, there shall be evidence of participation by the contracted
therapist in treatment planning reviews and individualized program
implementation.
405
Children's Records Behavior Management
1. The agency shall keep a confidential case
record for each child that includes the following:
a. Demographic information;
b. Plan of safe care, if
applicable;
c. A complete
intake;
d. Consents, including
consent for medical care, and authority to place the child;
e. Interstate Compact information, if
applicable;
f. Treatment plans and
treatment plan reviews;
g. Copies
of legal documents (for example, birth certificates, social security cards, or
court orders) or documentation of their attempts to obtain the
documents;
h. Physical exams and
immunization records, or documentation of their attempts to obtain the
documents;
i. Psychological
reports, if applicable;
j.
Psychosexual evaluation;
k.
Educational reports, if applicable;
l. Disciplinary and incident reports, if
applicable;
m. Records of
visitation and family contacts, if applicable;
n. Documentation of casework services and
child contact, current to within one (1) month of occurrence; and
o. Discharge statement.
2. Records for each child shall be kept for
five (5) years from the date of discharge, unless otherwise specified by
Arkansas law.
3. The agency shall
have a written plan providing for appropriate supervision of children during
activities away from the foster home. A copy of the plan shall be provided to
the direct caregiver(s), and a copy shall be placed in the child's record.
406
Behavior
Management1. The agency shall have a
written discipline policy that is consistently followed.
2. Discipline shall be directed toward
teaching the child acceptable behavior and self control.
3. Discipline shall be appropriate to the
child's age, development, and history (including trauma history).
4. The following disciplinary actions shall
not be used:
a. Denial of meals, sleep,
shelter, essential clothing, or case plan activities;
b. Denial of parental visits or regular phone
and mail contact with family. Non-disciplinary case planning issues are
accepted;
c. Lewd or obscene
language;
d. Derogatory comments
about the child, the child's family, race, or gender;
e. Restriction to a room for more than a
short period of time without periodic observation;
f. Restriction to a dark room or
area;
g. Locked
isolation;
h. Physical injury or
threat of bodily harm;
i.
Humiliating or degrading action;
j.
Extremely strenuous work or exercise;
k. Mechanical or chemical restraints; nor
l. Corporal punishment.
5. Physical restraint shall be
initiated only by a trained person; only to prevent injury to the child, other
people, or property; and shall not be initiated solely as a form of
discipline.
6. A child shall not be
allowed to administer discipline, except teen parents may discipline their own
children.
7. Searches of a child or
a child's personal property shall be for reasons limited to safety and security
of children and foster family, or in cases of suspected theft.
8. Any searches requiring removal of clothing
shall be done in privacy.
407
Foster Parent Qualifications
1. In a two-parent home, both shall be joint
applicants, each sign the application, and participate in the approval
process.
2. Foster parents shall be
at least twenty-one (21) years of age.
3. The stability of the foster family shall
be evaluated and determined to be appropriate.
4. Foster parents shall be physically,
mentally, and emotionally capable of caring for children with sexual behavioral
problems or issues.
5. The physical
health of the foster parents shall be equal to the stress inherent in the care
of special needs children, as evidenced by the physician's statement.
6. The foster family shall provide
documentation of sufficient financial resources to meet their needs.
7. All family members under eighteen (18)
years of age in the household shall have proof of current health immunizations
or an exemption in accordance with the Arkansas Department of Health.
8. When routine child care is needed, foster
children shall attend licensed child care or have an agency-approved caregiver.
408
Content of the
Home Study1. The agency shall complete
a home study for each foster home.
2. The agency shall conduct at least one (1)
scheduled in-home interview for each household member to observe family
functioning and assess the family's capacity to meet the needs of children in
foster care.
3. The agency shall
interview every age-appropriate member of the household.
4. The home study shall include the following
information:
a. Motivation: the individual's
motivation for becoming foster parents;
b. Household Composition: the full legal
names, birth dates, relationships to one another, and a brief physical
description of everyone residing in the home;
c. Housing: Address, location, and type of
structure, as well as the upkeep and housekeeping standards, sleeping
arrangements, length of time at residence, and future residence plans of the
facility's occupants;
d. Safety
Hazards: an assessment of the safety of the home and grounds including water
hazards, swimming pools, hot tubs, dangerous pets, and other hazardous items
and areas;
e. Income and Expenses:
employment history for the last six (6) years (duration, salary, duties, title,
degree of job security, and hours), other sources of income, monthly living
expenses, outstanding debts, and insurance;
f. Health: current health of each family
member, including prior illnesses or medical problems; disabilities; clinic or
doctor utilized and frequency of use; counseling (dates and purposes); and
hospitalization for alcohol abuse, drug abuse, or mental illness;
g. Education: parents' educational
attainment, future educational plans, and parenting classes attended;
h. Childcare Arrangements or Plans: current
arrangement or proposed arrangement as it relates to their working hours and
income;
i. Child Rearing Practices:
purpose of behavior management; behavior guidance practices; how they show
affection; and how they handle stress, allowance, chores, and
homework;
j. Daily
Schedule;
k. Social History:
highlights and verification regarding action of marriages and divorces,
children, relationships' support system, future plans, any significant extended
family members not living in the home, and any significant personal,
developmental, personality or legal problems;
l. Family Activities: religious interests,
social organizations, activities with children, and family roles;
m. Impressions, Conclusions and
Recommendations: evaluate the family's situation and ability to provide for a
child based on the information obtained during the home study; and
n. Approval: if the agency approves the
foster parent(s), the agency shall recommend in the home study the number, age,
gender, and other characteristics of children for whom the home is approved to
provide care.
o. The placement
agency may require further documentation or evaluation to determine the
suitability of the home.
409
Physical Requirements of the
Home1. A sexual rehabilitative foster
home shall not be located within one thousand feet (1,000') of an elementary
school, child care center, or child care family home.
2. The foster home shall be accessible to
community resources needed by foster children.
3. The foster home shall be clean and free of
hazards.
4. The foster home shall
have a continuous supply of sanitary drinking water. If the source is not a
municipal water system, the water shall be tested and approved annually by the
Arkansas Department of Health. This approval shall be kept in the foster home
case record.
5. The foster home
shall have at least one (1) flushing toilet, one (1) sink with running water,
and one (1) bathtub or shower with hot and cold running water.
6. There shall be an operational smoke
detector in each bedroom.
7. There
shall be an operational chemical fire extinguisher, readily accessible, near
the cooking area of the home.
8.
The foster parents shall practice and document emergency evacuation drills with
each new child entering the home and repeat at least quarterly
thereafter.
9. All heating units
with hot external areas shall be screened or otherwise shielded.
10. The home shall have at least one (1)
exterior door that exits directly to the outside, or the home shall have an
alternate fire escape route.
11.
The home shall have an operational telephone that is accessible for children.
Working cell phones kept on the premises are acceptable.
12. Each child shall have adequate space for
storing clothing and personal belongings.
13. All household pets shall have proof of
current rabies vaccinations as required by Arkansas law.
14. All firearms shall be maintained in a
secure, locked location or be secured by a trigger lock.
15. All ammunition shall be secured and
locked separately from firearms unless they are stored in a safe (for example,
a hand gun safe or a long gun safe).
16. The foster home record shall contain an
agency-approved safety plan for any noted hazards. The safety plan shall be
signed by all caregivers in the foster home and an agency
representative.
17. A current floor
plan of the home with room dimensions for all rooms used for sleeping shall be
in the foster home record.
18.
Manufactured homes, used as foster homes, shall have an agency-approved plan
for tornado safety. The safety plan shall be signed by all caregivers in the
foster home and an agency representative.
19. The foster home shall be a house, mobile
home, housing unit, or apartment occupied by an individual or family.
20. The foster home, grounds, and all
structures on the property shall be maintained in a clean, safe, and sanitary
condition and be in a reasonable state of repair within community
standards.
21. The foster home
interior and exterior must be free from dangerous objects, dangerous
conditions, and hazardous materials.
22. All poisonous materials, cleaning
supplies, other hazardous materials, and alcoholic beverages, shall be stored
in an area not readily accessible to children, as appropriate for the age and
development of each child.
23. The
foster home shall have proper trash and recycling disposal.
24. The foster home shall be free of rodent
and insect infestation.
25. The
foster home shall be equipped with a functional kitchen that includes a sink
with hot and cold running water, a refrigerator, a stove, and an
oven.
26. The foster home shall
have adequate lighting and ventilation.
27. The foster home shall have a heating,
ventilating, and air conditioning source, maintained in safe operating
condition, that keeps the temperature a minimum of sixty-five degrees (65°)
and a maximum of eighty-five degrees (85°).
28. The foster home shall be free of obvious
fire hazards such as defective heating equipment or improperly stored flammable
materials.
29. There shall be an
operational smoke detector on each level of occupancy of the foster
home.
30. There shall be a carbon
monoxide detector on each level of occupancy of the foster home and near all
sleeping areas.
31. The foster home
shall have a safe operating water heater that has a recommended temperature at
or below one-hundred and twenty (120°) as tested at the plumbing fixture
nearest the water heater.
32. The
foster home shall maintain adequate first aid supplies for
emergencies.
33. Foster parents
shall not permit a child to enter a pool area unless accompanied by an
adult.
34. The foster home record
shall contain a water safety plan for supervision of children during water
activities. The plan shall be signed by all caregivers in the foster home and
an agency representative.
35.
Swimming pools shall be enclosed or shall have an approved manual or power
operated child safety cover that meets the standards of the American Society
for Testing and Materials adopted by the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
Please note that solar pool covers and winter pool covers are not safety
covers. The American Safety for Testing and Materials (ASTM) (1996) requires
that a pool cover be able to hold a minimum of 485 pounds per five (5) square
feet in order to qualify as a safety cover.
36. In ground pools without an approved child
safety cover shall be protected by an enclosure (wall, fence, or barrier) that
surrounds the pool area.
37. Unless
local code provides otherwise an enclosure shall meet the following;
a. Entirely enclose the pool area;
b. Be at least 4 feet high;
c. Swimming pools must have their methods of
access through the barrier equipped with a safety device, such as a bolt lock.
38. The wall of a house
or other building shall not be used in lieu of barrier to the pool with the
exception of a solid wall that does not contain any doors. When a wall is used
as a barrier the remaining three sides shall be protected by an enclosure
(wall, fence, or barrier) that surrounds the pool area or have an approved
child safety cover. The enclosure shall meet the following:
a. Entirely encloses the pool area;
b. Be at least 4 feet high;
c. Swimming pools must have their methods of
access through the barrier equipped with a safety device, such as a bolt
lock.
39. All above
ground pools shall have non-climbable exterior side walls with a minimum height
of 4 feet and have access ladders or steps that are removable and able to be
secured when the pool is not in use.
40. Swimming pools shall be equipped with a
life saving device such as a ring buoy.
41. All portable pools (inflatable and wading
pools) shall be fenced or emptied after every use.
42. Swimming pools that cannot be emptied
after each use shall have a working pump and filtering system.
43. Hot tubs and spas shall have locking
safety covers that are locked when not in use.
410
Sleeping Arrangements
1. Each household occupant shall have a
bedroom that provides privacy.
2.
Each bedroom shall have at least fifty (50) square feet of floor space per
occupant.
3. Each bedroom used for
foster children shall have a window to the outside that can serve as an
emergency escape.
4. Bars, grilles,
grates, or other items that block access to the window are permitted only if
they can be removed from the inside without the use of a key, tool, or force
greater than that required for normal operation of the window. In this event,
each such bedroom shall have a working smoke detector.
5. Children placed in the foster home shall
have individual bedrooms.
6. Each
foster child shall be provided a safe bedroom (appropriate for the child's age
and needs) that includes a bed with a mattress, sheets, a pillow, a pillowcase,
and adequate cover, all in good condition, and similar to those provided to
other household members.
7. No
child under six (6) years of age shall occupy a top bunk.
8. Bedding shall be changed at least weekly,
or more often if needed.
9. Foster
parents shall not co-sleep or bed share with a foster child of any age,
including infants.
411
Approval of Foster Homes1. A
foster home can be approved only by one (1) agency.
2. At least three (3) positive personal
references shall be obtained regarding the foster family (including at least
one (1) from a relative and one (1) from a non-relative).
3. Each member of the foster family shall
have a physical exam within twelve (12) months before the initial
approval.
4. Foster parents shall
be trained in crisis prevention and intervention before a child is placed in
the home. Prior to the placement of children in their home, foster parents
shall complete at least thirty (30) hours of skill-based pre-service training
(excluding CPR and First Aid) consistent with the agency's treatment
methodology and the needs of the population served. Pre-service training shall
include the following topics:
a. Legal
rights;
b. Roles, responsibilities,
and expectations of foster parents;
c. Agency structure, purpose, policies, and
services;
d. Laws and regulations
as related to foster homes or foster children;
e. The impact of childhood trauma;
f. Managing child behaviors;
g. Medication administration; and
h. The importance of maintaining meaningful
connections between the child and parents, including regular
visitation.
5. Foster
parents shall complete fifteen (15) hours of sexual rehabilitative training in
addition to their thirty (30) hours of pre-service training.
6. At least one (1) hour of training on the
program's safety plan shall be provided before placement of children into the
foster home.
7. Foster parent(s)
shall be currently certified in hands-on, skill-based CPR and First Aid before
a child is placed in the home. Training and certification that is provided
solely online will not be accepted.
8. Foster parents shall provide documentation
that they carry homeowner's or renter's insurance and general liability
insurance.
9. Foster homes shall
not also operate as child-care family homes.
10. Foster homes shall not provide
compensated care for any non-related adults in the foster home, unless
providing transitional care for a person placed in care prior to eighteen (18)
years of age.
11. There shall be an
annual approval letter from the approving agency in the foster home
record.
12. If a foster home moves
from one (1) placement agency to another all requirements for opening a new
foster home shall be met.
13.
Foster parents must be able to communicate with the foster child, the placement
agency, health care providers, and other service providers.
14. At least one (1) parent in the home must
have functional literacy, such as having the ability to read medication labels.
412
Selection of
Foster Home1. The agency shall select
the home that is in the best interest of the child, is the least restrictive
possible, and is matched to the child's physical and emotional needs. The
placement decision shall be based on an individual assessment of the child's
needs.
2. No children shall be
placed in a foster home unless there is an approval letter in the record from
the approving agency.
3. The agency
shall place children only in approved foster homes.
4. When a placement agency places a child
with another placement agency, the receiving agency shall maintain a record for
and provide casework services to the children placed into their foster
homes.
5. All children placed in
the foster home shall be admitted to the Therapeutic Sexual Rehabilitative
Program, except in the case of siblings.
6. Foster homes shall not have more than two
(2) children under two (2) years of age, including the foster parent's own
children.
7. The number of children
placed into one (1) therapeutic sexual rehabilitative foster home shall not
exceed two (2). There shall be no more than five (5) total children in the
home, including the foster parent's children. This includes placement or
respite care. In the case of an emergency respite placement that would exceed
capacity, the agency shall notify the Licensing Unit the next business
day.
8. Before placing more than
one (1) child in a home, the agency shall consider extraordinary problems and
needs of each child (for example, violent behavior, sexual offenses, and
seizure disorders). Justification of the appropriateness of placing a child in
a home with another child shall be documented.
9. No new placements of children shall occur
with foster parents who have not satisfied the annual training requirements.
Administrative-level staff designated by the agency director may grant an
exemption to this restriction for up to sixty (60) days. The administrator
shall review the quality of care provided by the foster parents and the reasons
for failing to complete the training on time in deciding whether to grant an
exception.
413
Continued Training of Foster Parents
1. Each foster parent shall complete at least
twenty-four (24) hours of skill-based training annually, excluding CPR and
First Aid.
2. Documentation
verifying annual training shall indicate the date, the number of hours, the
name of the source, the topic, and the title.
3. Each foster parent shall maintain a
current certificate of successful completion of hands-on, skill-based CPR and
First Aid. Training and certification that is provided solely online will not
be accepted.
4. All foster parents
shall receive at least ten (10) hours of sexual rehabilitative training
annually, which may be included in the required twenty-four (24) hours of
annual training.
5. Foster parents
shall comply with the roles and responsibilities of the placement agreement
developed by the placement agency
6. Foster parents shall not engage in the use
of illegal substances, in the abuse of alcohol by consuming excessive amounts,
or in the abuse of legal prescription drugs or nonprescription drugs by
consuming them in excessive amounts or using them contrary to as prescribed or
indicated.
7. Foster parents shall
adhere to the Placement Agency's reasonable and prudent parent standard.
414
Therapeutic
Foster Parent Responsibilities1.
Foster parents shall be responsible for providing the level of supervision,
care, and treatment necessary to ensure the safety and well-being of each child
placed into their home, taking into account the child's age, individual
differences and abilities, surrounding circumstances, hazards, and
risks.
2. Foster parents shall
provide each child with adequate and nutritious food.
3. Foster parents shall provide regular
activities to promote the physical, social, intellectual, spiritual, and
emotional development of the children in care.
4. Foster parents shall provide each child
their own clothing that is clean, well-fitted, seasonal, appropriate to age and
gender, and comparable to community standards.
5. Foster parents shall allow foster children
to acquire and keep personal belongings.
6. Foster parents shall fully cooperate with
the child placement agency's case plan for each foster child, including
visitation.
7. Foster parents shall
provide routine transportation for each child.
8. Foster parents shall participate in case
planning and case plan reviews.
9.
Foster parents shall attend school conferences concerning a foster child and
shall notify the placing agency of any situations that may affect the case plan
or require agency involvement.
10.
Foster parents shall notify the child placement agency promptly of serious
illness, injury, or unusual circumstances affecting the health, safety, or
welfare of the foster child.
11.
Foster parents shall cooperate with the child placement agency and the
Licensing Unit in conducting inspections and investigations and shall provide
information required to verify compliance with rules.
12. Foster parents shall maintain absolute
confidentiality of private information about each foster child and the birth
family.
13. Foster parents shall
give advance notice to the agency of any major changes that affect the life and
circumstances of the foster family, including a change of residence, whenever
possible.
14. Foster parents shall
keep the following items, including without limitation, periodic photographs, a
record of the child's memberships, activities, and participation in
extracurricular school or church activities, trophies, awards, and ribbons for
each foster child. These items shall be provided to the child upon change in
placement.
15. Foster parents shall
be provided with a written list of duties clearly detailing their
responsibilities.
16. Foster
parents shall be responsible for implementing in-home treatment strategies
specified in each child's treatment plan.
17. Foster parents shall keep an ongoing
written record of each child's behavior and progress toward treatment
goals.
18. Foster parents shall
ensure that each child has sufficient sleep for their age and physical
condition.
19. Foster parents shall
instruct each child in good grooming and personal hygiene habits.
20. Foster parents shall ensure each child is
provided with opportunities for regular recreational activities and
exercise.
21. Foster parents shall
ensure each child shall be provided with age appropriate activities and
equipment.
22. Foster parents shall
monitor and time limit the use of television, videos, computer games, and other
screen time activities.
415
Medications
1. The agency shall have an intervention
policy that is non-medical, unless a specific medical condition is
indicated.
2. When psychotropic
medications are prescribed by a physician they shall be used in concert with
other interventions.
3. Foster
parents shall administer medications only in accordance with directions on the
label.
4. All over-the-counter
medications shall be stored in an area not readily accessible to children,
according to the age and development of each child in the home.
5. All prescription medications excluding
Epi-pens, inhalers, and Glucagon kits shall be locked. An age appropriate and
developmentally capable child may be provided or have access to non-narcotic
prescriptions with an approved safety plan. Examples include without
limitation, birth control, acne creams, and topical creams.
6. Medication shall be stored in accordance
with pharmaceutical recommendations.
7. Foster parents shall be aware of possible
side effects of all medications administered to foster children.
8. All medication shall be logged by the
foster parent at the time the medication is administered.
9. The medication logs shall include:
a. Child's name;
b. Time and date;
c. Medication and dosage; and
d. Initials of the person administering the
medication.
10. All
currently prescribed medication shall be provided at placement.
416
Transportation
1. Foster
families shall have their own transportation available.
2. Any vehicles used to transport foster
children shall be maintained in compliance with motor vehicle laws and be
insured.
3. Children shall be
transported only by foster parents or persons approved by foster parents who
possess a valid driver's license.
4. Children shall be transported according to
Arkansas law, including without limitation, use of safety belts, child safety
seats, and smoking restrictions.
417
Visitation
1. The agency that has legal responsibility
for the child shall develop a visitation plan that specifies when and how
visits will occur between the child and the parents.
2. The child placement agency shall carry out
the visitation plan to meet the terms of the plan.
3. Foster parents shall allow foster children
and their families to communicate according to the child's treatment plan.
418
Staffing
Requirements, Staff Training & Support
1. Primary responsibilities of program staff
shall include treatment planning, leadership of the treatment team, case
management, clinical and administrative supervision, twenty-four-hour crisis
intervention, and discharge planning.
2. The agency shall have a Clinical Director
who shall be clearly responsible for implementation of treatment planning and
service delivery. The Clinical Director shall be qualified by a master's degree
in a human service field and shall have:
a.
Two (2) years of experience in placement or treatment;
b. No less than forty (40) hours of sexual
rehabilitative treatment training;
c. A minimum of two (2) years of sexual
rehabilitative treatment experience.
Certification as a sexual rehabilitative treatment trainer may
be substituted for the required experience; and
d. A current license in Arkansas as a mental
health professional (as recognized by Arkansas Medicaid).
3. The agency shall have a therapist who is a
licensed mental health professional (as recognized by Arkansas Medicaid) and
has at least one (1) of the following:
a. At
least two (2) years of experience in a sexual rehabilitative treatment program
and at least forty (40) hours of sexual rehabilitative treatment
training;
b. At least three (3)
years of experience in sexual rehabilitative specific treatment; or
c. Maintains current membership in, or is
actively working toward fulfilling the requirements for membership from, the
Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers.
4. The agency shall employ at least one (1)
caseworker who shall coordinate the implementation of the treatment plan. The
caseworker shall either have a bachelor's degree in a human service field or be
a mental healthparaprofessional. The caseworker shall be supervised by the
Clinical Director.
5. All casework
staff shall be trained in crisis prevention and intervention, CPR, and First
Aid within the first sixty (60) days of employment.
6. All casework staff shall be provided with
eight (8) hours of orientation either prior to employment or within the first
week of employment that shall provide an overview of the following areas:
a. The agency's policies and
procedures;
b. The client's rights,
including confidentiality;
c. How
to handle medical and non-medical emergencies;
d. The caseworker's clinical
limitations;
e. How to document
clinical information in the child and family records; and
f. General information regarding commonly
prescribed medications and their side effects.
7. The agency shall provide twenty-four-hour
on-call crisis intervention support to supplement the support provided by the
caseworker.
8. Therapy services
shall be provided by a licensed mental health professional (as recognized by
Arkansas Medicaid) who has at least one (1)of the following:
a. At least two (2) years of experience in a
sexual rehabilitative treatment program and at least forty (40) hours of sexual
rehabilitative treatment training;
b. At least three (3) years of experience in
sexual rehabilitative specific treatment; or
c. Maintains current membership in, or is
actively working toward, fulfilling the requirements for membership from the
Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers.
419
Child Placement Agency
Responsibilities1. The child placement
agency (agency) shall provide the foster parents with the information necessary
to provide adequate care to each foster child. The agency shall provide foster
parents with instructions for contacting agency personnel any time.
2. Each agency shall assign a caseworker to
each child who is responsible for doing assessments, case planning, and
casework services.
3. The agency
shall ensure that casework staff visit with the child face-to-face at least
once per week during the first three (3) months after the child's placement
with the agency, and at least every other week thereafter.
4. The agency shall ensure that each child in
foster care has a medical exam at least annually. Medical exams need not be
repeated during the year if a child moves from one facility or agency to
another (provided the results of the exam are available to the receiving
facility or agency).
5. The agency
shall remain legally responsible for the supervision and decision making
regarding foster children. Foster parents have daily responsibility for the
care of the children.
6. The agency
shall have a written plan that provides foster parents with timely
reimbursements for costs of care and fees for services.
7. The agency shall develop respite care and
babysitting policies.
8. Respite
care shall occur in an agency-approved foster home and shall not exceed
fourteen (14) consecutive days.
9.
Caseworkers shall be responsible for managing no more than twelve (12)
children's cases.
10. The agency
shall have a written program description that is available to residents,
parents, and guardians. The following information shall be included:
a. Program philosophy and mission;
b. Services and treatment
modalities;
c. Treatment planning
procedures;
d. Behavior management
program and expectations of each child;
e. Admission, exclusion, and discharge
criteria; and
f. Aftercare
services.
11. The agency
shall keep documentation that includes:
a.
Prior treatment documents and intake information;
b. Assessments;
c. Master treatment plan;
d. Treatment plan review;
e. Ongoing observations;
f. Medication and physician's instructions,
if applicable; and
g. Progress
notes.
12. The agency
shall establish procedures for hearing children's grievances.
13. The agency shall have written policies
governing the supervision and monitoring of children in the home, on the
grounds, and in the community.
14.
The agency shall have written policies to protect children in the program and
to ensure public safety.
15. If the
agency receives a report of non-compliance with licensing standards, the agency
shall investigate the report of non-compliance. A report of findings and any
corrective action shall be maintained in the foster home record. The
investigation shall be completed within sixty (60) days of receiving the report
of non-compliance, unless good cause is documented.
16. The agency shall maintain a record for
each foster family that contains all information and documentation required by
licensing standards. This record shall include:
a. Complete and signed application;
b. Approval letter;
c. Home Study;
d. Minimum age verification;
e. Three (3) positive references, from a
non-relative;
f. Initial physical
exam;
g. Pre-service training
verification;
h. Initial and
current criminal background, Child Maltreatment Central Registry, and Federal
Bureau of Investigation (FBI) checks, as required;
i. Initial and current CPR and First Aid
certification;
j. Current health
immunizations of children or exemption;
k. Current auto insurance;
l. Current homeowner's or renter's insurance
and general liability insurance;
m.
Current rabies vaccinations for household pets as required by law;
n. Documentation of annual
training;
o. Social media
confidentiality documentation;
p.
Surveillance documentation, if applicable;
q. Safety plans;
r. Floor plan;
s. Approved annual water system test, if
applicable;
t. Approved alternative
fire escape route, if applicable;
u. Documentation of quarterly monitoring
visits, including unannounced visits;
v. Documentation of annual
re-evaluations;
w. Reports of
non-compliance with licensing standards including findings, and any corrective
actions;
x. Closing
summary.
17. If the home
closes, the agency shall prepare a closing summary, including reasons for
closure.
18. The agency shall
promptly notify Arkansas' office of the Interstate Compact on the Placement of
Children (ICPC) upon discharging a child from outside Arkansas.
19. The agency shall approve and document the
use of all surveillance devices used in the home.
420
Monitoring &
Re-evaluation1. The agency shall
monitor the foster home at least quarterly for continued compliance with
licensing standards for foster homes.
2. At least one (1) unannounced quarterly
visit shall be conducted annually and shall be documented as unannounced in the
foster home record.
3. The agency
shall conduct an annual re-evaluation of the foster family home. Any foster
home that does not substantially comply with the standards for approval shall
not be approved for placement until compliance is achieved.
4. The agency shall keep documentation of
quarterly monitoring visits and annual reevaluations in the foster home record
signed and dated by the person conducting the visit and the foster
parent.
5. If the foster family
experiences any major life changes (for example, marriage, divorce, separation,
health problems, death, change of residence, or change of household
composition), the child placement agency shall re-evaluate the home at that
time.
6. If a home is inactive or
closed for one (1) year or more and desires to reopen, the agency shall:
a. Conduct a re-evaluation to ensure that
licensing requirements are met;
b.
Ensure that new background checks are conducted;
c. Ensure that CPR and First Aid training is
current;
d. Evaluate any major
changes. (See section 420.5.)
421
Discharge
1. The discharge of any child shall be
planned by agency staff.
2. The
agency may discharge a child on an emergency basis if failure to do so could
result in harm to the child or other persons or significant property
damage.
3. The agency shall
discharge the child to the custody of their parent, their guardian, a person
with authorization from the parent or guardian, or a person authorized by court
order to assume custody of the child.
4. The agency shall complete a discharge
statement on each child (including the date of and reason for discharge) and
provide a copy of it to the child's custodian.
5. Documentation of the discharge shall be
maintained in the child's record.
500
CHILD PLACEMENT AGENCIES:
ADOPTIONS
In addition to all standards in Section 100, the
following standards shall be met:
501
Selection of Adoptive Home
1. The agency shall select the home that is
in the best interest of each child and is matched to the child's physical and
emotional needs. The placement shall be based on an individual assessment of
each child's needs.
2. The agency
shall place children only in approved adoptive homes. All adoptive homes shall
be approved prior to placement.
3.
The agency shall have an established fee schedule for adoption services. The
agency is not required to charge the same fees for all adoptions, but a sliding
fee schedule shall have specified conditions and be equally applied. The fee
schedule may take into consideration the income of the adoptive family and
relevant factors such as children who are considered hard to place.
4. The agency shall have a foster care
license in order to place children in short-term foster care while awaiting an
adoptive placement.
502
Approval Process of Prospective Homes
1. In a two-parent home, both shall actively
participate in the approval process.
2. An adoptive parent shall be at least
twenty-one (21) years of age.
3.
The agency shall ensure there is a completed home study for each prospective
adoptive family to determine if they should be approved as an adoptive
home.
4. The licensed certified
social worker or agency caseworker conducting the home study shall have at
least two (2) visits in person with the prospective adoptive family during the
initial approval process. One (1) of the visits shall be in the home of the
prospective adoptive family.
5. The
caseworker shall have a separate, face-to-face interview with each prospective
adoptive parent.
6. The caseworker
shall interview each age-appropriate member of the household in
person.
7. Each member of the
adoptive household will have a physical exam within twelve (12) months before
being approved by the social worker or agency conducting the home study. Each
member will need to have a repeat physical exam annually (until placement) to
ensure that no household member has a health condition or disability that would
interfere with the family's ability to care for a child.
8. The licensed certified social worker or
agency shall notify applicants in writing within sixty (60) days of completion
of the final home visit concerning the acceptance, reason for further delay, or
denial of their application.
503
Contents of the Home Study
1. A home study shall be conducted by a
caseworker of the agency or a licensed certified social worker.
2. The adoptive home study shall contain the
following information, current to within one (1) year prior to each adoptive
placement:
a. The family's motivation for
adoption and the desired characteristics of the child or children to be
adopted;
b. Each family member's
attitudes toward adoption;
c.
Attitudes of the applicants toward the birth parent(s), including parent search
issues;
d. Resolution of any
infertility issues;
e. The mental
health, emotional stability, and maturity of the applicants;
f. The physical health of all household
members, including a physician's statement provided to the social worker or
agency conducting the home study stating that a medical exam was
performed;
g. The financial status
and stability of the family, including proof of income and payment to the
social worker or agency conducting the home study;
h. At least three (3) positive personal
references from nonrelatives regarding the family. The references do not need
to be updated unless this is a new adoption in the family or there have been
significant changes;
i. The
family's ability to cope with stress, loss, and crisis;
j. Adjustment and well-being of any minors
residing in the home;
k. The
family's child-caring skills and willingness to acquire additional
skills;
l. The family's discipline
practices;
m. Religious
affiliation;
n. A description of
the home, its location, and its environment;
o. An assessment of the safety of the home,
including all water hazards, dangerous pets, and firearm safety;
p. A statement in (or an addendum to) the
home study narrative stating that the adoptive parents will report to the
social worker or agency conducting the home study if they have been either
approved or denied as an adoptive home in the past and if denied,
why.
q. A statement regarding the
availability and results from criminal records and Child Maltreatment Central
Registry checks, dated within one (1) year prior to placement;
r. The stability of the adoptive family and
their marriage, if applicable, shall be discussed and determined to be
appropriate;
s. A recommendation
regarding adoption, including the age, gender, characteristics, and special
needs of children best served by this family;
t. If the adoptive family experiences any
major life changes (for example, marriage, divorce, separation, health changes,
change of residence, or change of household composition), the social worker or
agency shall re-evaluate the family prior to placement of a child. An
additional home visit is required if there has been a change of residence.
504
Services to the Adoptive Parents
1. The agency shall provide information to
the adoptive applicants regarding the potential risks associated with
adoption.
2. The agency shall
provide a written statement of exclusion (for example, single parents or unwed
couples) to adoptive applicants before a home study is conducted, if
applicable.
3. The following
information (if available) shall be provided to adoptive parents regarding the
child being considered for adoption:
a.
Specific and accurate information about the needs and characteristics of the
child;
b. The health and medical
history of the child and the child's biological family;
c. The health status of the child at the time
of placement;
d. Genetic and social
history of biological relatives, including:
i.
Medical history;
ii. Health status,
if alive;
iii. Cause and age of
death, if deceased;
iv. Height,
weight, eye color, and hair color;
v. Levels of education and professional
achievement;
vi. Ethnic origins;
and vii. Religion.
4. The agency caseworker shall ensure that at
least two (2) face-to-face post-placement visits are made within six (6) months
after the placement of the child. One (1) of the visits shall be in the home of
the adoptive family. If a finalized decree of adoption has been issued,
thenpost-placement visits are not required.
5. The agency shall have a plan for caring
for children if their placement is disrupted before the issuance of a decree of
adoption.
6. The agency shall offer
supportive services to the adoptive family for at least six (6) months
following placement.
505
Services to Birth Parents1. If
the agency is providing casework services to either birth parent, an intake
shall be completed within thirty (30) days to identify services
needed.
2. Counseling for both
parents (if applicable) shall be offered, and shall include the following:
a. Information, rights, options, and
obligations regarding the adoption process; and
b. Issues related to grief and
loss.
3. Financial
assistance to the birth mother may only be provided during the time of the
pregnancy and after the pregnancy during the time the birth mother requires
inpatient or outpatient postpartum care. This does not apply to future social
services provided by an agency that offers a broader range of services other
than adoptions.
4. All financial
assistance to the birth mother shall be documented, including the amount and
purpose of payment. This documentation shall be maintained in the individual
file of the birth mother.
506
Birth Parent Records
1. If the agency has provided casework
services to the birth parents, the following information shall be kept in a
confidential file:
a. The birth parents'
intake information, including any reviews and updates;
b. All correspondence with the birth
parents;
c. All signed documents
between the agency and the birth parents; and
d. Documentation of all casework services
provided before and after the adoption, current to within one (1) month of
occurrence.
507
Agency Responsibilities
1. The
agency shall provide written policy that includes a complete description of all
types of the birth mother's expenses that may be passed through to the adoptive
parents. The policy shall include notice to the adoptive parents that they may
be responsible for unforeseeable medical and legal expenses.
2. The agency shall inform the adoptive
parents in writing that a birth mother may choose not to relinquish a child for
adoption, including the applicable postpartum period during which the birth
mother may withdraw her consent for placement of her child.
3. The agency shall have a clear, written
policy on refunds that is provided, explained, and signed by the prospective
adoptive parents during the application process.
4. The agency shall apprise prospective
adoptive parents in writing that any financial assistance given to the birth
parent(s) is not recoverable if the birth parent(s) should decide not to
complete an adoption plan. The only exception is if intent to defraud the
prospective adoptive parents can be proven.
5. If the agency closes or ceases to provide
adoption services, all adoption records (including adoptive parents, birth
mother (if applicable), and children placed) shall be transferred to a licensed
adoption agency by written agreement.
6. The closing agency shall provide written
notification to the Licensing Unit regarding the transfer of records.
508
Adoptive Family
Records1. The agency shall keep a
confidential case record for each family that receives a child for adoption.
The record shall contain:
a. The application
to adopt;
b. The completed home
study;
c. Criminal Record checks
and Child Maltreatment Central Registry checks;
d. A copy of the information given to the
adoptive parents regarding the child they received; and
e. Copies of all legal documents concerning
the adoption.
509
Record Maintenance
1. The agency shall maintain a permanent file
on any adoption finalized that shall be accessed according to Arkansas
law.
2. If the agency establishes
or contracts with a Mutual Consent Voluntary Adoption Registry, it shall be
maintained according to Arkansas law.
510
Branch Offices
1. Any agency licensed in Arkansas shall
provide the following information to the Licensing Unit prior to opening a
branch office in Arkansas;
a. The address,
telephone numbers (if available), and office hours for the branch
office;
b. The name(s),
qualifications, and contact information of the person(s) responsible for the
day-to-day operations and the child placement activities of the branch; and
c. The name(s) and contact
information of the person(s) responsible for providing services in case of
emergencies or child-placement crises.
600
CHILD PLACEMENT AGENCIES:
RESIDENTIAL
In addition to all applicable standards in
section 100, the following standards shall be met:
1. The agency shall select the placement that
is in the best interest of the child and is matched to the child's physical and
emotional needs, based on an individual assessment.
2. A child placement agency shall only place
a child into a licensed or exempt facility. Documentation of current license is
required for any out-of-state placement.
3. The agency shall maintain a record of all
placements to include:
a. Child's
name;
b. Date of
placement;
c. Placement providers;
and
d. Person making referral,
placing child, or assisting with placement.
4. The agency shall maintain a list of
personnel involved in child placement activities.
5. The agency shall maintain a personnel
record for each employee involved in child placement activities. Agencies
providing mental health or other services that do not require a placement
license shall not have their personnel records subject to review.
Appendix A: DEFINITIONS
1. "Adoption agency" means a child placement
agency that places, plans for, or assists in the placement of an unrelated
minor in a household of one (1) or more persons that has been approved to
accept a child for adoption.
2. "Adoptive home" means a household of one (1) or
more persons that has been approved by a licensed child placement agency to
accept a child for adoption.
3. "Adverse action" means any petition by the
Department of Human Services before the Child Welfare Agency Review Board to
take any of the following actions against a licensee or applicant for a
license:
a. Revocation of license;
b. Suspension of license;
c. Conversion of license from regular or provisional status to
probationary status;
d. Imposition of a civil penalty;
e. Denial of application; or
f. Reduction of licensed capacity.
4. "Alternative compliance" means approval from
the Child Welfare Agency Review Board to allow a licensee to deviate from the
letter of a rule, provided that the licensee has demonstrated how an alternate
plan of compliance will meet or exceed the intent of the rule.
5. "Board" means the Child Welfare Agency Review
Board.
6. "Boarding school" means an institution that is
operated solely for educational purposes and that meets each of the following
criteria:
a. The institution is in operation for a period of time not to
exceed the minimum number of weeks of classroom instruction required of schools
accredited by the Department of Education;
b. The children in residence must customarily return to their
family homes or legal guardians during school breaks and must not be in
residence year-round, except that this provision does not apply to students
from foreign countries; and c. The parents of children placed in the
institution retain custody, planning, and financial responsibility for the
children.
7. "Child" means a person who is:
a. From birth to eighteen (18) years of age; or b. Adjudicated
dependent-neglected, dependent, or a member of a family in need of services
before eighteen (18) years of age and for whom the juvenile division of a
circuit court retains jurisdiction under the Arkansas Juvenile Code of 1989,
§ 927301 et seq.
8. "Child placement agency" means a child welfare
agency, excluding any person licensed to practice medicine or law in the State
of Arkansas who engages in any of the following activities:
a. Places a child in a foster home, adoptive home, or any type
of facility licensed or exempted by this subchapter;
b. Plans for the placement of a child into a foster home,
adoptive home, or any type of facility licensed or exempted by this
subchapter;
c. Assists the placement of a child in a foster home, adoptive
home, or any type of facility licensed or exempted by this subchapter;
or
d. Places, plans, or assists in the placement of a child
victim of human trafficking in a home or any type of shelter or
facility.
9. "Child welfare agency" means any person,
corporation, partnership, voluntary association, or other entity or
identifiable group of entities having a coordinated ownership of controlling
interest, whether established for profit or otherwise, that engages in any of
the following activities:
a. Receives a total number of six (6) or more unrelated minors
for care on a twenty-four- hour basis for the purpose of ensuring the minors
receive care, training, education, custody, or supervision, whether or not
there are six (6) or more children cared for at any single physical
location;
b. Places any unrelated minor for care on a twenty-four-hour
basis with persons other than themselves;
c. Plans for or assists in the placements of a child into a
foster home, adoptive home, or any type of facility licensed or exempted by
this subchapter; or
d. Places, plans, or assists in the placement of a child victim
of human trafficking in a home or any type of shelter or facility.
10. "Church-related exemption"
means:
a. Any church or group of churches exempt from the state income
tax levied by§ 2651-101 et seq. when operating a child welfare agency
shall be exempt from obtaining a license to operate the facility by the receipt
by the Child Welfare Agency Review Board of written request therefore, together
with the written verifications;
b. A written request shall be made to the board by those
churches desiring exemption, which is mandated under the authority of this
subchapter to license all child welfare agencies;
c. In order to maintain an exempt status, the child welfare
agency shall state every two (2) years in written form (signed by the persons
in charge) that the agency has met the fire, safety, and health inspections and
is in substantial compliance with published standards that similar nonexempt
child welfare agencies are required to meet; and
d. Visits to review and advise exempt agencies shall be made as
deemed necessary by the board to verify and maintain substantial compliance
with all published standards for nonexempt agencies.
11. "Emergency child care" means any residential
child care facility that provides care to children on a time-limited basis, not
to exceed ninety (90) days.
12. "Emergency Family Style Care" means any child
welfare agency that provides twenty-four-hour custodial care, in a home-like
setting, for six (6) or more unrelated children or a child victim of human
trafficking on an emergency basis, not to exceed ninety (90) days.
13. "Emergency Residential Child Care Facility"
means any child welfare agency that provides twenty-four-hour custodial care
for six (6) or more unrelated children or a child victim of human trafficking
on an emergency basis, not to exceed ninety (90) days. Any child admitted as an
emergency placement shall be designated as such and shall be discharged within
ninety (90) days.
14. "Exempt child welfare agency" means any
person, corporation, partnership, voluntary association, or other entity,
whether established for profit or otherwise, that otherwise fits the definition
of a child welfare agency but is specifically exempt from the requirement of
obtaining a license under this subchapter. Those agencies specifically exempt
from the license requirement are:
a. A facility or program owned or operated by an agency of the
United States Government;
b. Any agency of the State of Arkansas that is statutorily
authorized to administer or supervise child welfare activities. In order to
maintain exempt status, the state child welfare agency shall provide a written
document every two (2) years (signed by the persons in charge) stating that
their agency is in substantial compliance with published state agency child
welfare standards. Visits to review and advise exempt state agencies shall be
made as deemed necessary by the Child Welfare Agency Review Board to verify and
maintain substantial compliance with the standards;
c. A facility or program owned or operated by or under contract
with the Department of Correction;
d. A hospital providing acute care licensed pursuant to §
20-9-201
et seq.;
e. Any facility governed by the Department of Human Services
State Institutional System Board or its successor;
f. Human development centers regulated by the Board of
Developmental Disabilities Services pursuant to §
20-48-201 et
seq.;
g. Any facility licensed as a family home pursuant to §
20-48-601 et
seq.;
h. Any boarding school, as defined in this section;
i. Any temporary camp, as defined in this section;
j. Any state-operated facility to house juvenile delinquents or
any serious offender program facility operated by a state designee to house
juvenile delinquents. Those facilities shall be subject to program requirements
modeled on nationally recognized correctional facility standards that shall be
developed, administered, and monitored by the Division of Youth Services of the
Department of Human Services;
k. Any child welfare agency operated solely by a religious
organization that elects to be exempt from licensing and that complies within
the conditions of the exemption for church-operated agencies, as set forth in
this subchapter;
l. The Division of Developmental Disabilities Services of the
Department of Human Services; and
m. Any developmental disabilities services waiver provider
licensed under § 2048208 or §
20-48-601 et
seq.
15. "Foster Care Placement Agency" means a child
placement agency that places, plans for, or assists in the placement of an
unrelated minor in a private residence of one (1) or more family members for
care and supervision on a twenty-four-hour basis or places, plans, or assists
in the placement of a child victim of human trafficking in a home.
16. "Foster home" means a private residence of one
(1) or more family members that receives any child who is unattended by a
parent or guardian from a child placement agency in order to provide care,
training, education, or supervision on a twenty-four-hour basis, not to include
adoptive homes. "Foster home" does not include a home suspended or
closed by a child placement agency.
17. "Transitional Living" means any child welfare
agency that provides specialized services in adult living preparation in a
structured setting for persons eighteen (18) years of age or older who have
been admitted into the agency's residential program prior to eighteen (18)
years of age.
18. "Independent Living" means a child welfare
agency that provides specialized services in adult living preparation in an
experiential home-like setting for persons sixteen (16) years of age or
older.
19. "Independent Living Family Style Care" means a
child welfare agency that provides specialized services in adult living
preparation in an experiential home-like setting for persons sixteen (16) years
of age or older.
20. "Minimum standards" means those rules as
established by the Child Welfare Agency Review Board that set forth the minimum
acceptable level of practice for the care of children by a child welfare
agency.
21. "Placement Residential" means a child
placement agency that places, plans for, or assists in the placement of an
unrelated minor into a residential child care facility or the placement of a
child victim of human trafficking in any type of shelter or facility. The
agency may be licensed for any or all types of licenses, depending on the types
of services it provides.
22. "Provisional foster home" means a foster home
opened for no more than six (6) months by the Division of Children and Family
Services of the Department of Human Services on a relative or fictive kin of a
child in the custody of the Division of Children and Family Services of the
Department of Human Services after it:
a. Conducts a health and safety check, including a Child
Maltreatment Central Registry check, a criminal background check, or a check
with local law enforcement of the relative's home; and
b. Performs a visual inspection of the home of the relative to
verify that the relative and the home will meet the standards for opening a
regular foster home.
23. "Probationary" means a type of license issued
to an agency that has not maintained compliance with minimum licensing
standards, but the board believes that compliance can be restored and
subsequently maintained. This license may be issued for up to one (1) year, at
the discretion of the board.
24. "Psychiatric residential treatment facility"
means a residential child care facility in a nonhospital setting that
provides a structured, systematic, and therapeutic program of treatment under
the supervision of a psychiatrist for children who are emotionally disturbed
and in need of daily nursing services, psychiatrist's supervision, and
residential care, but who are not in an acute phase of illness requiring the
services of an inpatient psychiatric hospital.
25. "Relative" means a person within the fifth
degree of kinship by virtue of blood or adoption.
26. "Religious organization" means a church,
synagogue, mosque, or association of same whose purpose is to support and serve
the propagation of truly held religious beliefs.
27. "Residential child care facility" means any
child welfare agency that provides care, training, education, custody, or
supervision on a twenty-four-hour basis for six (6) or more unrelated children,
excluding foster homes that have six (6) or more children who are all related
to each other but who are not related to the foster parents. or receives a
child victim of human trafficking in any type of shelter or facility.
28. "Residential Family Style Care" means any
child welfare agency that provides care, training, education, custody, or
supervision, in a home-like setting, on a twenty-four-hour basis, for six (6)
or more unrelated minors or receives a child victim of human trafficking in any
type of shelter or facility.
29. "Sexual Rehabilitative Program" means a
treatment program that offers a specific and specialized therapeutic program
for children with sexually maladaptive behaviors. A licensed sexual
rehabilitative program may be in a residential childcare facility, a
therapeutic foster care home, or a psychiatric residential treatment
facility.
30. "Special consideration" means approval from
the Child Welfare Agency Review Boardto allow a licensee to deviate from the
letter of a rule if the licensee has demonstrated that the deviation is in the
best interest of the children and does not pose a risk to persons served by the
licensee.
31. "Substantial compliance" means compliance with
all essential standards necessary to protect the health, safety, and welfare of
the children in the care of the child welfare agency. Essential standards
include without limitation, those relating to issues involving fire, health,
safety, nutrition, discipline, staff-to-child ratio, and space.
32. "Temporary camp" means any facility or program
providing twenty-four-hour care or supervision to children that meets the
following criteria:
a. The facility or program is operated for recreational,
educational, or religious purposes only;
b. No child attends the program more than forty (40) days in a
calendar year; and
c. The parents of children placed in the program retain
custody, planning, and financial responsibility for the children during
placement.
33. "Therapeutic Foster Care" means any child
placement agency that places, plans for, or assists in the placement of an
unrelated minor or a child victim of human trafficking in a therapeutic foster
home. Therapeutic foster care is intensive therapeutic care for children
provided in specially trained family homes supported by licensed mental health
professionals (as recognized by Arkansas Medicaid). A therapeutic foster care
program is a family-based services delivery approach providing individualized
treatment for children, youth, and their families. Treatment is delivered
through an integrated set of services with key interventions and supports
provided by therapeutic foster parents who are trained, supervised, and
supported by qualified program staff. Therapeutic foster care services shall be
provided in a separately identified program of a larger agency or be provided
by an independent agency.
34. "Therapeutic Foster Care - Sexual Rehabilitative
Program" means a treatment program that offers a specific and
specialized therapeutic program for children with sexually maladaptive
behaviors. A licensed sexual rehabilitative program may be in a residential
childcare facility, a therapeutic foster care home, or a psychiatric
residential treatment facility.
35. "Unrelated minor" means a child who is not
related by blood, marriage, or adoption to the owner or operator of the child
welfare agency and who is not a ward of the owner or operator of the child
welfare agency pursuant to a guardianship order issued by a court of competent
jurisdiction.
Appendix B: PROHIBITED OFFENSES
1. A person who is required to have a criminal records check
under the Child Welfare Agency Licensing Act shall be absolutely and
permanently prohibited from having direct and unsupervised contact with a child
in the care of a child welfare agency if that person has pleaded guilty or nolo
contendere to or been found guilty of any of the following offenses by any
court in the State of Arkansas, of a similar offense in a court of another
state, or of a similar offense by a federal court (unless the conviction is
vacated or reversed):
01. Abuse of an endangered or impaired person, if
felony |
§
5-28-103
|
02. Arson |
§
5-28-103
|
03. Capital Murder |
§
5-10-101
|
04. Endangering the welfare of an incompetent person in
the first degree |
§
5-27-201
|
05. Kidnapping |
§
5-11-102
|
06. Murder in the first degree |
§
5-10-102
|
07. Murder in the second degree |
§
5-10-103
|
08. Rape |
§
5-14-103
|
09. Sexual assault in the first degree |
§
5-14-124
|
10. Sexual assault in the second degree |
§
5-14-125
|
2. A person who is required to have a criminal records check
under the Child Welfare Agency Licensing Act shall not be eligible to have
direct and unsupervised contact with a child in the care of a child welfare
agency if that person has pleaded guilty or nolo contendere to or been found
guilty of any of the following offenses by a court in the State of Arkansas, of
a similar offense in a court of another state, or of a similar offense by a
federal court, unless the conviction is vacated or reversed:
01. Criminal attempt to commit any
offenses |
§
5-3-201
|
02. Criminal complicity to commit any
offenses |
§
5-3-202
|
03. Criminal conspiracy to commit any
offenses |
§
5-3-401
|
04. Criminal solicitation, to commit any
offenses |
§
5-3-301
|
05. Assault in the first, second, or third
degree |
§
5-13-205
-
§
5-13-207
|
06. Aggravated assault |
§
5-13-204
|
07. Aggravated assault on a family or household
member |
§
5-26-306
|
08. Battery in the first, second, or third
degree |
§
5-13-201
-
§ 5-12-203 |
09. Breaking and entering |
§
5-39-202
|
10. Burglary |
§
5-39-201
|
11. Coercion |
§
5-13-208
|
12. Computer crimes against minors |
§ 5-27-
601et seq. |
13. Contributing to the delinquency of a
juvenile |
§
5-27-220
|
14. Contributing to the delinquency of a
minor |
§
5-27-209
|
15. Criminal impersonation |
§
5-37-208
|
16. Criminal use of a prohibited weapon |
§
5-73-104
|
17. Communicating a death threat concerning a school
employee or students |
§
5-17-101
|
18. Domestic battery in the first, second, or third
degree |
§
5-26-303
-
§
5-26-305
|
19. Employing or consenting to the use of a child in a
sexual performance |
§
5-27-401
|
20. Endangering the welfare of a minor in the first or
second degree |
§
5-27-205
-
§
5-27-206
|
21. Endangering the welfare of an incompetent person in
the second degree |
§
5-27-202
|
22. Engaging children in sexually explicit conduct for
use in visual or print media |
§
5-27-303
|
23. False imprisonment in the first or second
degree |
§
5-11-103
-
§
5-11-104
|
24. Felony abuse of an endangered or impaired
person |
§
5-28-103
|
25. Felony interference with a law enforcement
officer |
§
5-54-104
|
26. Felony violation of the Uniform Controlled
Substance Act |
§ 5-64101 et seq. §564-501 et
seq. |
27. Financial identity fraud |
§
5-37-227
|
28. Forgery |
§
5-37-201
|
29. Incest |
§
5-26-202
|
30. Interference with court-ordered
custody |
§
5-26-502
|
31. Interference with visitation |
§
5-26-501
|
32. Introduction of controlled substance into the body
of another person |
§
5-13-210
|
33. Manslaughter |
§
5-10-104
|
34. Negligent homicide |
§
5-10-105
|
35. Obscene performance at a live public
show |
§
5-68-305
|
36. Offense of cruelty to animals |
§
5-62-103
|
37. Offense of aggravated cruelty to dog, cat, or
horse |
§
5-62-104
|
38. Pandering or possessing visual or print medium
depicting sexually explicit conduct involving a child |
§
5-27-304
|
39. Sexual solicitation |
§
5-70-103
|
40. Permanent detention or restraint |
§
5-11-106
|
41. Permitting abuse of a minor |
§
5-27-221
|
42. Producing, directing, or promoting a sexual
performance by a child |
§
5-27-403
|
43. Promoting obscene materials |
§
5-68-303
|
44. Promoting obscene performance |
§
5-68-304
|
45. Promoting prostitution in the first, second, or
third degree |
§
5-70-104
-
§
5-70-106
|
46. Prostitution |
§
5-70-102
|
47. Public display of obscenity |
§
5-68-205
|
48. Resisting arrest |
§
5-54-103
|
49. Robbery |
§
5-12-102
|
50. Aggravated robbery |
§
5-12-103
|
51. Sexual offenses |
§
5-14-101 et
seq. |
52. Simultaneous possession of drugs and
firearms |
§
5-74-106
|
53. Soliciting money or property from
incompetents |
§
5-27-229
|
54. Stalking |
§
5-71-229
|
55. Terroristic act |
§
5-13-310
|
56. Terroristic threatening |
§
5-13-301
|
57. Theft of public benefits |
§
5-36-202
|
58. Theft by receiving |
§
5-36-106
|
59. Theft of property |
§
5-36-103
|
60. Theft of services |
§
5-36-104
|
61. Transportation of minors for prohibited sexual
conduct |
§
5-27-305
|
62. Unlawful discharge of a firearm from a
vehicle |
§
5-74-107
|
63. Voyeurism |
§
5-16-102
|
3. A former or future law of this or any other state or of the
federal government that is substantially equivalent to one (1) of the offenses
listed in the Child Welfare Licensing Act shall be considered as
prohibiting.
4. A person who is required to have a criminal records check
under the Child Welfare Agency Licensing Act who has pleaded guilty or nolo
contendere to or been found guilty of any of the offenses listed shall be
absolutely disqualified from being an owner, operator, volunteer, foster
parent, adoptive parent, member of a child welfare agency's board of directors,
or employee in a child welfare agency during the period of the person's
confinement, probation, or parole supervision (unless the conviction is vacated
orreversed).
5. Except as provided under the Child Welfare Agency Licensing
Act, a person who has pleaded guilty or nolo contendere to or been found guilty
of one (1) of the offenses listed shall not work in a child welfare agency
unless:
(a) The date of a plea of guilty or nolo contendere or the
finding of guilt for a misdemeanor offense is at least five (5) years from the
date of the record check; and
(b) There have been no criminal convictions or pleas of guilty
or nolo contendere of any type or nature during the five-year period preceding
the background check request.
6. Except as provided under the Child Welfare Licensing
Act:
(a) A person who is required to have a criminal records check
and who has pleaded guilty or nolo contendere to or been found guilty of any of
the offenses listed shall be presumed to be disqualified to be an owner,
operator, volunteer, foster parent, adoptive parent, member of a child welfare
agency's board of directors, or employee in a child welfare agency after the
completion of their term of confinement, probation, or parole supervision
unless the conviction is vacated or reversed.
(b) An owner, operator, volunteer, foster parent, adoptive
parent, household member of a foster parent or adoptive parent, member of any
child welfare agency's board of directors, or an employee in a child welfare
agency shall not petition the Child Welfare Agency Review Board unless the
agency supports the petition, which can be rebutted in the following
manner:
(i) The applicant shall petition the Child Welfare Agency
Review Board to make a determination that the applicant does not pose arisk of
harm to any person;
(ii) The applicant shall bear the burden of making such a
showing; and
(iii) The Child Welfare Agency Review Board may permit an
applicant to be an owner, operator, volunteer, foster parent, adoptive parent,
member of an agency's board of directors, or an employee in a child welfare
agency notwithstanding having pleaded guilty or nolo contendere to or been
found guilty of an offense listed in this section upon making a determination
that the applicant does not pose a risk of harm to any person served by the
facility.
7. The Child Welfare Agency Review Board's decision to
disqualify a person from being an owner, operator, volunteer, foster parent,
adoptive parent, member of a child welfare agency's board of directors, or an
employee in a child welfare agency under this section shall constitute the
final administrative agency action of the Child Welfare Agency Review Board and
is not subject to review.
INTRODUCTION
The Child Welfare Licensing Act (Ark. Code Ann. §
9-28-401 et. seq.) is
the legal authority under which the Child Welfare Agency Review Board
establishes minimum licensing standards for child welfare agencies, as defined
under the statute.
Child Welfare Agency Review Board
The Child Welfare Agency Review Board (the board) shall
promulgate and publish rules setting minimum standards governing the granting,
revocation, refusal, conversion, and suspension of licenses for a child welfare
agency and the operation of a child welfare agency.
The board may consult with such other agencies, organizations,
or individuals as it shall deem proper.
The board may amend the rules promulgated pursuant to this
section from time to time, in accordance with the rule promulgation procedures
in the Arkansas Administrative Procedure Act, §
25-15-201 et
seq.
The board shall promulgate rules that:
1. Promote the health, safety, and welfare of
children in the care of a child welfare agency;
2. Promote safe and healthy physical
facilities;
3. Ensure adequate
supervision of the children by capable, qualified, and healthy
individuals;
4. Ensure appropriate
educational programs and activities for children in the care of a child welfare
agency;
5. Ensure adequate and
healthy food service;
6. Include
procedures for the receipt, recordation, and disposition of complaints
regarding allegations of violations of this subchapter, of the rules
promulgated under the Child Welfare Agency Licensing Act, or of child
maltreatment laws;
7. Include
procedures for the assessment of child and family needs and for the delivery of
services designed to enable each child to grow and develop in a permanent
family setting;
8. Ensure that
criminal record checks and central registry checks are completed on owners,
operators, employees, volunteers, foster parents, adoptive parents, and other
persons in the homes, as set forth in this subchapter;
9. Require the compilation of reports and
making those reports available to the division when the board determines it is
necessary for compliance determination or data compilation; and
10. Establish rules governing retention of
licensing records maintained by the division.
A licensed child welfare agency may adopt and apply internal
operating procedures that meet or exceed the minimum standards required by the
board.
The Arkansas Administrative Procedure Act, Ark. Code Ann.
25-15-201 et
seq., shall apply to all proceedings brought to the board under this
subchapter, except that the following provisions shall control during adverse
action hearings to the extent that they conflict with the Arkansas
Administrative Procedure Act:
1. All
parties to an adverse action shall be entitled to engage in and use formal
discovery as provided for in Rules 26, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, and 36 of
the Arkansas Rules of Civil Procedure including:
a. Requests for admission;
b. Request for production of documents and
things;
c. Written interrogatories;
and
d. Oral and written
depositions.
2. All
evidentiary rulings in an adverse action hearing shall be governed by the
Arkansas Rules of Evidence with respect to the following types of evidence:
a. The requirements of personal knowledge of
a witness as required by Rule 602;
b. The admissibility of character evidence as
set forth by Rules 608 and 609;
c.
The admissibility of character evidence as set forth by Rules 701-703; and
d. The admissibility of hearsay
evidence as set forth by Rules 801-806.
Residential Agencies Requiring Licensing
Any person, organization, corporation, partnership, voluntary
association, or other entity which provides care, training, education, custody,
supervision for a total of six (6) or more unrelated minors on a
twenty-four-hour basis, or receives a child victim of human trafficking in any
type of shelter or facility, and is not otherwise exempt by the Act, requires a
license.
Residential Types of Licenses
Emergency Residential Child Care Facility
Any child welfare agency that provides twenty-four-hour
custodial care for six (6) or more unrelated children or a child victim of
human trafficking on an emergency basis, not to exceed ninety (90) days. Any
child admitted as an emergency placement shall be designated as such and shall
be discharged within ninety (90) days.
Emergency Family Style Care
Any child welfare agency that provides twenty-four-hour
custodial care, in a home-like setting, for six (6) or more unrelated children
or a child victim of human trafficking on an emergency basis, not to exceed
ninety (90) days.
Residential Child Care Facility
Any child welfare agency that provides care, training,
education, custody, or supervision on a twenty-four-hour basis for six (6) or
more unrelated minors.
Residential Family Style Care
Any child welfare agency that provides care, training,
education, custody, or supervision, in a home-like setting on a
twenty-four-hour basis for six (6) or more unrelated minors or a child victim
of human trafficking.
Psychiatric Residential Treatment Facility
A residential child care facility in a non-hospital setting
that provides a structured, systematic, and therapeutic program of treatment
under the supervision of a physician licensed by the Arkansas State Medical
Board and experienced in the practice of psychiatry. It is for children who are
emotionally disturbed and in need of daily nursing services, physician's
supervision, and residential care, but who are not in an acute phase of illness
requiring the services of an inpatient psychiatric hospital.
Sexual Rehabilitative Program
A treatment program that offers a specific and specialized
therapeutic program for children with sexually maladaptive behaviors. A
licensed sexual rehabilitative program may be in a residential childcare
facility, a therapeutic foster care home, or a psychiatric residential
treatment facility.
Independent Living
A child welfare agency that provides specialized services in
adult living preparation in an experiential setting for persons sixteen (16)
years of age or older.
Independent Living Family Style Care
A child welfare agency that provides specialized services in
adult living preparation in an experiential home-like setting for persons
sixteen (16) years of age or older.
Transitional Living
A child welfare agency that provides specialized adult living
preparation services in a structured setting for persons eighteen (18) years of
age or older who have been admitted into the agency's residential program prior
to eighteen (18) years of age.
An agency may be licensed for any or all types of licenses,
depending on the types of services it provides.
License Status
The board shall issue all licenses to child welfare agencies
upon majority vote of members present during each properly called board meeting
at which a quorum is present. The board shall have the power to deny an
application to operate a child welfare agency or to revoke or suspend a
previously issued license to operate a child welfare agency. The board may also
issue letters of reprimand or caution to a child welfare agency. Any revocation
of a license, suspension of a license, or denial of application for a license
shall be effective when made.
Provisional
Issued to a newly licensed agency for a one-year period, to
give the agency time to demonstrate substantial compliance with minimum
licensing standards. At the discretion of the board, a provisional license may
be issued up to one (1) additional year.
Probationary
Issued to an agency that has not maintained compliance with
minimum licensing standards, but the board believes that compliance can be
restored and subsequently maintained. This license may be issued for up to one
(1) year, at the discretion of the board.
Regular
Issued either to a previously licensed agency that continues to
meet all minimum licensing standards or to an agency that meets all essential
standards and has a favorable compliance history (which predicts full
compliance with all standards within a reasonable time). A regular license
shall remain open and effective until closed at the request of the agency or
board action.
Suspended
Board action taken when an agency has failed to maintain
compliance with minimum licensing standards, but the violations do not warrant
revocation. A license may not be suspended for longer than one (1) year at a
time. The board may issue a probationary or regular license when compliance is
restored.
Closed
Action taken when the agency requests that the license be
closed.
Revoked
Board action taken when an agency has failed to maintain
compliance with minimum licensing standards. The agency may not apply for a new
license for at least one (1) year from the date of revocation.
Status Change
After a board action, an amended license shall be issued any
time there is a change in the agency's program that affects the license type,
status, capacity, ages of children served, a name change, or an address
change.
A license to operate a child welfare agency shall apply only to
the address and location stated on the application and license issued, and it
shall be transferable from one holder of the license to another or from one
place to another.
Whenever ownership of a controlling interest in the operation
of a child welfare agency is sold, the following procedures shall be
followed:
1. The seller shall notify
the division of the sale at least thirty (30) days prior to the completed
sale;
2. The seller shall remain
responsible for the operation of the child welfare agency until such time as
the agency is closed or a license is issued to the buyer;
3. The seller shall remain liable for all
penalties assessed against the child welfare agency which are imposed for
violations or deficiencies occurring before the transfer of a license to the
buyer;
4. The buyer shall be
subject to any corrective action notices to which the seller was subject;
and
5. The provisions of subsection
(a) of this section, including those provisions regarding obtaining licenses or
permits from the Office of Long-Term Care of the Division of Medical Services
of the Department of Human Services and regarding obtaining any permits from
the Health Services Permit Agency or the Health Services Permit Commission
shall apply in their entirety to the new owner of the child welfare agency.
The child placement agency shall inform current and potential
clients if their license has been suspended, revoked, or if they have
voluntarily surrendered their license.
How To Apply The Standards
Section 100 of the Minimum Licensing
Standards for Child Welfare Agencies applies to all
agencies. Subsequent sections apply to specific types of residential agencies.
The agency shall meet the license requirements of its agency category.
Special Consideration
The Child Welfare Agency Review Board may approve an agency's
request for special consideration to allow a licensee to deviate from the
letter of a rule if the licensee has demonstrated that the deviation is in the
best interest of the children and does not pose a risk to persons served by the
licensee.
If the board grants a request for special consideration, the
child welfare agency's practice as described in the request shall be the
compliance terms under which the child welfare agency will be held responsible
and violations of those terms shall constitute a rule violation.
The board has authorized the managers and supervisors of the
Licensing Unit to make temporary rulings regarding special consideration
requests when the best interests of a child requires an immediate decision,
subject to final approval at the next regularly scheduled meeting of the
board.
Alternative Compliance
The board may grant an agency's request for alternative
compliance upon a finding that the agency does not meet the letter of a rule
promulgated under the Child Welfare Agency Licensing Act, but that the agency
meets or exceeds the intent of that rule through alternative means.
If the board grants a request for alternative compliance, the
agency's practice as described in the request for alternative compliance shall
be the compliance terms under which the agency will be held responsible and
violations of those terms shall constitute a rule violation.
The board has authorized the managers and supervisors of the
Licensing Unit to make temporary rulings regarding Alternative Compliance
requests when the best interests of a child requires an immediate decision,
subject to final approval at the next regularly scheduled meeting of the
board.
Alternative Compliance requests granted in the areas listed
below shall be time limited and shall not exceed two (2) years in length. These
alternative compliances shall be monitored on an ongoing basis for compliance
and shall be reviewed by the board every two (2) years:
1. Staff to child ratio;
2. Capacity;
3. Sleeping arrangements; and
4. Bathrooms.
100
GENERAL REQUIREMENTS
The standards in Section 100 apply to all
agencies unless otherwise indicated.
101
Applications & Licensing
Procedure1. The owner or board shall
prepare and furnish an application packet for a license that contains the
following:
a. A completed application
form;
b. A letter from the agency's
board or owner (as applicable) authorizing a person to sign the
application;
c. A copy of the
Articles of Incorporation, bylaws, and current board roster, if applicable,
including names, addresses, and contact information of officers. Out of state
agencies shall have legal authorization from the Arkansas Secretary of State to
do business in Arkansas;
d. A
personnel list with verifications of qualifications and experience;
e. Substantiation of the agency's financial
soundness. This shall include without limitation: a budget showing sufficient
resources to operate for a period of six (6) months, either with resources on
hand or with projected revenue from verifiable sources. Verifiable letters of
financial support and monthly bank account statements may be included to
project income;
f. Proof of general
and professional liability insurance (does not apply to state
agencies);
g. A written description
of the agency's program of care, including intake policies, types of services
offered, and a written plan for providing health care services to children in
care;
h. Fire inspection;
i. Arkansas Department of Health inspection,
including food service inspection, septic or sewage inspection, non-municipal
water sources and general sanitation inspection, as applicable;
j. Floor plan with room dimensions;
k. Zoning approval, where applicable; and
l. Any additional information
requested by the Licensing Specialist to verify compliance with these standards
and to make a recommendation regarding the granting of a
license.
2. Once a
completed application packet has been received, the division shall complete a
licensing study and recommendation within ninety (90) days. If a recommendation
is not made within ninety (90) days, the applicant may appear before the board
to request a license.
102
Organization & Administration
1. The agency shall obtain a license before
receiving six (6) or more children who are unrelated to the caregiver for care
on a twenty-four-hour basis, or receives a child victim of human trafficking in
any type of shelter or facility.
2.
The purpose and mission of the agency, including treatment philosophy, services
provided, and characteristics of children it is designed to serve, shall be
stated in writing.
3. The following
policies of the agency shall be current and available to all employees of the
agency and the Licensing Specialist:
a.
Personnel policies;
b. Volunteer
policy;
c. Student intern
policy;
d. Admission
policy;
e. Intake policy;
f. Behavior Management policy: Corporal
punishment is prohibited for all residential licenses (See Arkansas code §
9-28-405(d)
(1) e.);
g. Crisis Management policy;
h. Child Maltreatment/Mandated Reporter
policy: according to Arkansas law, including procedures to ensure that alleged,
suspected, or witnessed incidents of maltreatment are reported to the Child
Maltreatment Hotline and documented as required by these or other applicable
rule or laws;
i. Child Exploitation
policy;
j. Visitation
policy;
k. Family Therapy or
Therapeutic Pass policy (psychiatric only);
l. Admission Health Assessments policy
(psychiatric only);
m. Public
Safety policy (sexual rehabilitative programs only); and
n. Target Population and Admission,
Exclusion, and Discharge Criteria policy (sexual rehabilitative programs
only).
4. If cameras are
used for security or surveillance, the agency shall have written policy
governing their use, including the following:
a. Access to the live viewing or recordings
is limited to:
i. Persons approved by the
Administrator;
ii. Law
enforcement;
iii. Division of
Children and Family Services Investigators;
iv. Division of Children and Family Services
personnel as approved or designated by the Director; or
v. And regulatory authorities.
b. The placing authority and the
child shall be informed regarding the use of cameras; and
c. Cameras shall not be used to observe or
record children while toileting, bathing, dressing, or undressing.
5. The agency shall be legally
authorized to conduct business in Arkansas by state law and local
ordinance.
6. The agency shall
provide copies of all programmatic licenses, certifications, and accreditations
held by the agency.
7. The agency
shall meet all federal, state, and local laws and ordinances that apply to
child welfare agencies and to the proper care of children in such
facilities.
8. The owner or Board
of Directors shall be responsible for operating the facility and shall have
final responsibility to ensure that the facility meets licensing requirements.
Names and addresses of board members shall be provided to the Licensing
Specialist annually.
9. The agency
shall maintain a current organizational chart showing the administrative
structure of the organization.
10.
The agency shall maintain proof of current general and professional liability
insurance.
11. The agency shall
notify the Licensing Unit within five (5) days of any change of Administrator,
Social Service Director, or Clinical Director.
12. The agency shall establish and follow
written policies and procedures that meet or exceed the Minimum Licensing
Standards for Child Welfare Agencies.
13. Agencies applying for an Arkansas license
shall provide proof that they are licensed in good standing in their home
state, if applicable, and are in good standing in all other states where they
are licensed. If an agency is being disciplined or sanctioned in another
jurisdiction, the board shall be notified.
14. Agencies licensed in Arkansas after
January 18, 2002, shall have an office in Arkansas.
15. Agencies licensed in Arkansas shall
maintain all required files for licensing review as needed. They may choose
to:
16. Maintain these files in
their office in Arkansas; or
17.
Arrange to provide the required files to the licensing staff.
18. Agencies licensed in Arkansas shall have
a qualified person on call to supervise emergency services.
19. A residential childcare facility license
shall not be granted to an applicant to operate the facility their own
residence or in a home owned and occupied by an employee of the
agency.
20. If electronic records
are kept, these records shall be made available to the Licensing Specialist for
purposes of monitoring and investigation.
21. Any disciplinary action taken against the
agency by another jurisdiction shall be reported to the Licensing
Unit.
22. The license shall be
closed in good standing if an agency is inactive for one (1) year, unless the
agency requests annually in writing that the license remains active. This
request shall be approved by the CWARB.
23. If a facility has been inactive for more
than six (6) months, the Licensing Unit shall be notified before children are
taken into care.
24. If a facility
becomes inactive, the Licensing Unit shall be notified within thirty (30)
days.
25. The agency shall not
permit, aid, or abet an unlicensed person to perform activities requiring a
license.
26. The agency shall not
misrepresent the type or status of education, training, expertise, licensure,
or professional affiliations.
103
Central Registry & Criminal
Record Checks1. The agency shall
conduct background checks, as required by the Child Welfare Agency Licensing
Act (§
9-28-409), using forms approved by the Licensing Unit. Background checks conducted by or
for other licensing authorities (for example, Office of Long-Term Care,
Division of Developmental Disabilities Services, et.al) do not meet the
requirement of this standard.
2.
The following persons in a child welfare agency shall be checked with the Child
Maltreatment Central Registry in their state of residence, if available, and
any state of residence in which the person has lived for the past five (5)
years, and in the person's state of employment, if different, for reports of
child maltreatment:
a. Employees, having
direct and unsupervised contact with children;
b. House parents and each member of the
household fourteen (14) years of age and older;
c. Volunteers, mentors, sponsors, and student
interns having direct and unsupervised contact with children;
d. Owners having direct and unsupervised
contact with children; and
e.
Members of the agency's board of directors having direct and unsupervised
contact with children.
3.
Persons required to have the Child Maltreatment Central Registry Check shall
repeat the check every two (2) years.
4. Any person found to have a record of child
maltreatment shall be reviewed by the owner or administrator of the agency, in
consultation with the Child Welfare Agency Review Board or its designee, to
determine corrective action. Corrective action may include without limitation,
counseling, training, probationary employment, non-selection for employment, or
termination.
5. The following
persons in a child welfare agency shall be checked with the Identification
Bureau of the Arkansas State Police for convictions of offenses listed in
Arkansas Code Annotated §
9-28-409:
a. Employees having direct and unsupervised
contact with children;
b.
Volunteers, mentors, sponsors, and student interns having direct and
unsupervised contact with children;
c. House parents, and each member of the
household eighteen (18) years of age and older. The house parents shall certify
in writing annually whether or not household members fourteen (14) thru
seventeen (17) years of age have criminal records;
d. Owners having direct and unsupervised
contact with children; and
e.
Members of the agency's board of directors having direct and unsupervised
contact with children.
6.
Individuals required to submit to a criminal background check with the
Identification Bureau of the Arkansas State Police shall also complete a
background check with the Federal Bureau of Investigations.
7. All persons required to be checked with
the Department of Arkansas State Police under this subsection shall repeat the
check at a minimum of every five (5) years.
8. Child Maltreatment Central Registry Checks
and Arkansas State Police and Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Criminal
Record Checks shall be initiated within ten (10) days of employment.
9. The agency shall provide a copy of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation Criminal Record Check form and the Arkansas
State Police Criminal Record Check form to the Licensing Office upon
initiation.
10. The agency shall
maintain on file evidence that background checks have been initiated as
required and results of the completed checks.
11. No person guilty of an excluded criminal
offense pursuant to A.C.A. §
9-28-409
shall be permitted to have direct and unsupervised contact with children,
except as provided in the statute.
12. A child welfare agency shall immediately
notify the Licensing Unit when an individual is found to have a record of an
excluded criminal offense.
104
General Personnel
Requirements
All personnel employed on or after April 12, 1999
shall meet the following requirements:
1. The agency shall have an administrator who
shall be responsible for the general management of the agency, possessing at
least one (1) of the following qualifications:
a. A doctorate degree;
b. A master's degree in a human services
field (child development, psychology, sociology, social work, guidance and
counseling, divinity, education), administration, business, or a related field;
or
c. A bachelor's degree in a
human services field, administration, business, or a related field, and at
least two (2) years of work experience in a human services agency.
d. Psychiatric facilities require an
administrator or who possesses either a doctorate degree or a master's degree
in a human services field (child development, psychology, sociology, social
work, guidance and counseling, divinity, education), administration, business,
or a related field.
2.
The agency shall have a Social Services Director who shall supervise child
placement activities and casework services by the agency, possessing at least
one (1) of the following qualifications (Psychiatric facilities see section 906
and Sexual Rehabilitative Program see 1006):
a. A master's degree or higher in a human
services field (child development, psychology, sociology, social work,
counseling and guidance, divinity, or education);
b. A bachelor's degree in a human services
field and two (2) years of work experience in a child welfare agency; or
c. Anyone permitted to supervise
child placement or casework services shall meet the qualifications for Social
Services Director.
3.
Each agency shall have a caseworker who is responsible for doing assessments,
case planning, and casework services, possessing at least one (1) of the
following (Psychiatric facilities see section 906):
a. A bachelor's degree in a human services
field; or
b. A bachelor's degree and
two (2) years work experience in a human services field.
4. If casework services are contracted, the
agency shall maintain all required personnel information on the contracted
caseworkers.
5. A caseworker shall
not have more than twenty-five (25) children's cases at a
time.
105
Staff
Qualifications & Training1.
Childcare staff shall be at least twenty-one (21) years of age and have a high
school diploma or the equivalent.
2. Assistant childcare staff shall be at
least nineteen (19) years of age, have a high school diploma or the equivalent,
and be under the direct supervision of regular staff (excludes psychiatric and
sexual rehabilitative programs).
3.
Childcare staff shall complete pre-service training prior to being counted in
the staff to child ratio. This training may be counted toward training hours
for the first year. This applies to personnel employed on or after January 1,
2011.
4. Pre-service training shall
include without limitation:
a.
Confidentiality;
b. Resident
grievance process (psychiatric only);
c. Fire and disaster plans;
d. Suicide awareness and protocol;
e. Behavior management;
f. Crisis intervention strategies;
g. Agency policies and procedures;
h. Child Maltreatment/Mandated Reporter
policy;
i. One (1) hour of training
on the program's safety plan (sexual rehabilitative only); and
j. Minimum Licensing Standards for Child
Welfare Agencies (that pertains to license type).
5. All childcare staff shall have a current
certificate of successful completion of First Aid and CPR. The training shall
require hands on skill base instruction as well as practical testing. Training
and certification that is provided solely online will not be accepted. Staff
shall complete this requirement within ninety (90) days of hire.
6. At least one (1) childcare staff currently
certified in hands on, skill-based CPR and First Aid must be able to
immediately respond to an emergency.
7. No staff shall be allowed to participate
in a physical restraint until properly trained to do so.
8. All full-time childcare staff shall have
thirty (30) hours of job related in-service or workshop training each year.
First aid, CPR, and in-service training at the facility may be
included.
9. Childcare staff
working twenty-four (24) hours a week or less shall have at least fifteen (15)
hours of job related in-service or workshop training each year. First Aid, CPR,
and in-service training at the facility may be included.
10. All childcare staff in psychiatric
facilities shall complete ten (10) hours of psychiatric specific training
before being counted in the staff to child ratio. This applies to employees
hired on or after September 1, 2016.
11. Sexual rehabilitative program childcare
staff shall receive their initial ten (10) hours of sexual rehabilitative
training within sixty (60) days of employment.
12. All childcare staff in sexual
rehabilitative programs shall have at least ten (10) hours of sexual
rehabilitative training annually, which may be included in the required thirty
(30) hours of annual training.
13.
Documentation verifying annual training shall include the date, number of
hours, the name of the source, and the topic or title.
14. The Administrator, Social Services
Director, each caseworker, and each therapist of a child welfare agency shall
have twenty-four (24) hours of job-related continuing education each
year.
15. The agency shall maintain
a personnel file for each employee, which shall include:
a. A resume or application;
b. Date of hire;
c. Verifications of qualifications;
d. Documentation of required annual
training;
e. Criminal Record Check
and Child Maltreatment Central Registry Check information as required by
law;
f. Documentation that
applicable employees are informed that they are mandated reporters of suspected
child maltreatment, according to A.C.A §
12-18-402, and
are provided the information needed to make a report;
g. A functional job description;
and
h. At least three (3) positive
personal references from non-relatives.
16. All owners, operators, employees, or
volunteers in a child welfare agency shall be responsible for ensuring the
proper care, treatment, safety, and supervision of the children they
supervise.
106
Sponsors, Mentors, Volunteers & Student
Interns
1. The agency shall have a
policy clearly defining the qualifications, duties, and supervision of
sponsors, mentors, and volunteers.
2. A sponsor is a non-relative person
approved to take a child to the sponsor's home. This does not include normal
age-appropriate activities such as overnight visits with friends,
extra-curricular activities, church activities, or short-term summer camps. A
sponsor's record shall contain the following documentation and narrative:
a. Documentation and narrative of at least
one (1) home visit for evaluation purposes prior to visitation occurring. (A
visual inspection of the home to ensure the home is appropriate and free of
health and safety hazards.);
b. At
least three (3) non-relative character references;
c. Documentation of Child Maltreatment
Central Registry, State Police Criminal Record Checks, and Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) Criminal Record Checks, if applicable, as required for all
household members; and
d.
Documentation of continuing contact and an annual inspection of the sponsor's
home to ensure continued compliance.
3. A mentor is a person who offers supportive
services to the child on or off campus such as, shopping, movies, sporting
events, etc. A mentor's record shall contain:
a. At least three (3) non-relative character
references; and
b. Documentation of
Child Maltreatment Central Registry Checks, State Police Criminal Record
Checks, and FBI Criminal Record Checks, if applicable.
4. A volunteer is a non-paid person who
donates their time or service, or both, to an agency or the child. A volunteer:
a. Who provides direct care, substitutes as
staff, and is counted in the staff to child ratio shall meet all qualifications
required for a paid employee in that position; and
b. Shall have appropriate supervision by a
designated staff person.
5. A student intern is a student or a recent
graduate who is undergoing supervised practical training at an agency. Student
interns:
a. Who provide direct care,
substitute as staff, and are counted in the staff to child ratio shall meet all
qualifications required for a paid employee in that position; and
b. Shall have appropriate supervision by a
designated staff person.
107
Exploitation of Children
1. The agency shall not require a child to
acknowledge dependency, destitution, or neglect or to make public statements
about their background.
2. The
agency shall not use or allow to be used, any reports, pictures, or any other
information from which a child can be identified, except under the following
conditions:
a. The child and the parent or
guardian sign a consent form that describes the purposes for which the
identification is being made;
b.
The signed consent shall say in which publication or broadcast the
identification will appear; and
c.
The parent or guardian and child shall be informed that the consent may be
withdrawn.
3. All
information regarding children and their families shall be kept strictly
confidential and may only be released with the consent of the child or a parent
or guardian, except to authorized persons or agencies.
4. The agency shall document that all staff
have been made aware of the need to protect the confidentiality of children in
the use of social media.
108
Ethical Standards
1. The Arkansas Child Welfare Agency Review
Board sets forth this section as a Code of Ethics/Standards for Practice for
all child welfare agencies within the State of Arkansas Violations of the
following shall be grounds for disciplinary action:
a. Confidentiality: In providing services, a
child welfare agency shall safeguard information given by clients. A child
welfare agency shall obtain the client's informed written consent before
releasing confidential information, except when consent to disclose is
permitted by law or required by judicial order. If the client is a minor, then
the written consent shall be made with the minor and their legal representative
or guardian;
b. Misrepresentation:
A child welfare agency shall not misrepresent its program services or
experience; and
c. Client
Relationships: Relationships with clients shall not be exploited by the child
welfare agency staff for personal gain.
109
Unprofessional Conduct
1. Unprofessional conduct in the practice of
child welfare activities shall include without limitation:
a. Permitting, aiding, or abetting an
unlicensed person in performing activities that require a professional
license;
b. Misrepresenting type or
status of education, training, expertise, licensure, or professional
affiliations;
c. Failing to
maintain confidentiality, except as otherwise required or permitted by law, of
all information that has been received from a client in confidence during the
course of services;
d. Violating
the ethical standards adopted by the board;
e. Failing to report to the Licensing Unit
any disciplinary action taken against the child welfare agency by another
jurisdiction, domestic or international, the surrender of a license, or loss of
authorization to practice child welfare activities in another
jurisdiction;
f. Failing to comply
with any stipulation or agreement with the board involving probation or a
settlement of any disciplinary matters; and
g. Engaging in behavior that could be viewed
as sexual, dangerous, exploitative, or physically harmful to children.
110
Inspections, Investigations & Corrective Action
1. The Licensing Specialist shall conduct
inspections to ensure continued compliance with licensing standards.
2. The Licensing Specialist shall investigate
complaints of alleged violation of licensing standards against all residential
facilities and may participate in investigations of alleged child
maltreatment.
3. The agency shall
cooperate with the Licensing Unit in conducting inspections and investigations
and shall provide information required to verify compliance with
rules.
4. Inspections and
investigations may be scheduled or unscheduled, at the discretion of the
Licensing Specialist, and may be conducted outside regular working
hours.
5. The frequency of
inspections shall be at the discretion of the Licensing Unit and may be based
on the agency's compliance history.
6. At the discretion of the Licensing Unit, a
multi-disciplinary team may be asked to advise the Licensing Specialist during
initial approval or during inspections. This team may include a professional in
the appropriate field.
7. Upon
finding any violations of licensing standards, the Licensing Specialist shall
issue to the agency a corrective action notice, which shall state:
a. A factual description of the conditions
that constitute a violation of the standard;
b. The specific law or standard violated; and
c. A reasonable time frame within
which the violation shall be corrected.
8. The agency shall provide a written
corrective action plan, when requested to do so, by the Licensing Specialist in
a corrective action notice.
9. Any
owner, operator, employee, foster parent, or volunteer in a child welfare
agency shall immediately notify the Child Abuse Hotline if they have reasonable
cause to suspect that a child has
a. Been
subjected to child maltreatment
b.
Died as a result of child maltreatment; or
c. If they observe a child being subjected to
conditions or circumstances that would reasonably result in child
maltreatment.
10. If a
complaint of child maltreatment is filed against any owner, operator, employee,
foster parent, volunteer, or other person in a child welfare agency, the agency
administration shall evaluate the risk to children and determine the
suitability of the person(s) to supervise, be left alone with children, have
disciplinary control over children, or remain in the child welfare agency until
the allegations are determined to be true or unsubstantiated. Any interim
corrective action measures shall be approved by the Licensing Unit.
11. The agency shall maintain a log or file
of all calls to the child abuse hotline.
12. The agency shall notify the Licensing
Unit by the next business day when a report of child maltreatment is accepted
by the child abuse hotline against the owner, operator, employee, foster
parent, volunteer, child, or other person in a child welfare agency.
13. The agency and all staff shall cooperate
fully with investigators during a child maltreatment investigation.
14. The agency shall take steps to prevent
harm or retaliation against the child while an allegation of child maltreatment
is being investigated.
15. Any
person with a true finding of child maltreatment shall have a review by the
owner or administrator of the agency, in consultation with the Child Welfare
Agency Review Board or its designee, to determine corrective action. Corrective
action may include without limitation, counseling, training, probationary
employment, non-selection for employment, or termination.
16. Any employee who has been sanctioned by
any licensing or certifying entity for any reason pertaining to child safety
shall be reviewed by the owner or administrator of the agency, in consultation
with the Child Welfare Agency Review Board or its designee, to determine
corrective action. Corrective action may include without limitation,
counseling, training, probationary employment, non-selection for employment, or
termination.
17. The agency shall
notify the Licensing Unit by the next business day of serious injuries
requiring emergency medical treatment, agency vehicle accidents, arrests,
elopements, suicide attempts, or deaths and maintain documentation of the
incident and notification.
18. The
agency shall maintain reports on all incidents that cause injury, property
damage, or disruption to routine operation or services.
200
EMERGENCY RESIDENTIAL FACILITIES
In addition to all standards in Section 100, the
following standards shall be met: Facilities holding an Emergency Residential
Facility license provide residential care on an emergency basis for up to
ninety (90) days.
201
Admission
1. The agency shall
establish written criteria for admitting as well as excluding
children.
2. The facility shall not
admit any child for whom the facility cannot provide adequate care.
3. Each child shall have a medical
examination no more than one (1) year before admission or a documented
appointment date for an exam within one (1) week after admission.
4. Each child shall have proof of current
immunizations, a letter of exemption in accordance with the Arkansas Department
of Health, or a scheduled appointment within one (1) week after
admission.
5. The facility shall
obtain written verification of the placing agent's authority to place the child
within five (5) working days.
6.
The facility shall obtain written authority for medical care for the child from
the placing agent within seventy-two (72) hours.
7. The agency shall comply with the
Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children when admitting children from
outside Arkansas, if applicable.
8.
The facility shall establish that all persons referred for admission are under
eighteen (18) years of age at the time of admission.
9. Residents may remain in the program after
reaching eighteen (18) years of age with the reason for continued placement
documented.
10. The facility may
admit children birth to eighteen (18) years of age.
11. The facility shall admit children for a
maximum of ninety (90) days.
12. At
the time of admission, the following information shall be documented in the
child's record.
a. Name, signature, and role
or relationship of the person who relinquished the child into care;
b. A brief description of the circumstances
requiring admission;
c. The date
and time of the admission;
d. A
brief description of the child's history (if known) including behavioral
history;
e. Any known medical
history and known current health conditions;
f. All medications currently prescribed for
the child (if known and available); and
g. The child's current behavior or known
emotional condition.
13.
Intake information shall be completed on each child in care within ten (10)
working days after admission.
14.
The intake shall include:
a. Demographic
information on the child and parent(s), including name, address, birth date,
gender, race, and religious preference;
b. A factual description of the circumstances
requiring placement;
c. A brief
social history of the family;
d.
The child's current legal status or custody; and
e. Any history of previous placements outside
the family.
15. The
facility shall obtain copies of legal documents within thirty (30) days of
admission or shall document their attempts to obtain the documents. The legal
documents shall include without limitation, birth certificates, social security
cards, and court orders.
16. A
dependent juvenile child of a parent who is in the custody of the Division of
Child and Family Services (DCFS) shall be subject to all rules regarding space,
ratio, health, and safety.
17.
Facilities that have an adult program shall provide sleeping and living
arrangements to ensure separation of adults from children.
202
Assessment & Case
Planning1. The agency shall assign a
caseworker to each child who is responsible for doing assessments, case
planning, and casework services.
2.
A plan of safe care shall be developed for all children with physical
limitations, medical conditions, or behaviors that are indicative of harm to
self or others; to include without limitation: arson, physical aggression,
sexual aggression, suicidal behaviors, or other selfharming tendencies. This
plan shall identify the behavior or problem and shall specify the safeguards
that are to be implemented. The agency shall document that the childcare staff
are informed of the provisions of the plan and place a copy of the plan in the
child's record.
3. An assessment of
services needed to ensure the health and welfare of the child, including
medical history and psychological history, shall be completed for each child
and included in the case plan.
4. A
case plan shall be developed for each resident received for care.
5. The case plan shall be developed within
thirty (30) days after placement.
6. The child's case plan shall contain, at
the minimum:
a. Specific needs of the
child;
b. Plan for meeting the
child's needs;
c. Special treatment
issues (for example, psychotropic medications, sexual misconduct, and
neurological disorders) shall be identified with a statement of how the special
needs shall be met; and
d. A plan
to ensure that the child's educational needs are met according to applicable
state law.
7. A copy of
the case plan shall be made available to the parent(s), guardian(s), court, or
other agencies involved in case plan services delivery.
8. The agency caseworker shall visit the
child monthly to monitor the progress of the case plan.
203
Children's Records
1. The agency shall keep a confidential case
record for each child that includes the following:
a. Demographic information;
b. Plan of safe care, if
applicable;
c. A complete
intake;
d. Consents, including
consent for medical care and authority to place the child;
e. Interstate Compact information, if
applicable;
f. Case
plans;
g. Copies of legal documents
(for example, birth certificate, social security card, or court orders) or
documentation of their attempts to obtain the documents;
h. Physical exams and immunization records or
documentation of their attempts to obtain the documents;
i. Psychological reports, if
applicable;
j. Educational reports,
if applicable;
k. Disciplinary and
incident reports, if applicable;
l.
Documentation of casework services and child contact; and
m. Discharge statement.
2. Records for each child shall be kept for
five (5) years from the date of discharge, unless otherwise specified by
Arkansas law.
204
Behavior Management1. The agency
shall have a written discipline policy that is consistently followed.
2. Discipline shall be directed toward
teaching the child acceptable behavior and selfcontrol.
3. Discipline shall be appropriate to the
child's age, development, and history.
4. The following disciplinary actions shall
not be used:
a. Denial of meals, sleep,
shelter, essential clothing, or case plan activities;
b. Denial of parental visits or regular phone
and mail contact with family. Non-disciplinary case planning issues are
accepted;
c. Lewd or obscene
language;
d. Derogatory comments
about the child, the child's family, race, or gender;
e. Restriction to a room for more than a
short period of time without periodic observation;
f. Restriction to a dark room or
area;
g. Locked
isolation;
h. Physical injury or
threat of bodily harm;
i.
Humiliating or degrading action;
j.
Extremely strenuous work or exercise; nor
k. Mechanical or chemical
restraints.
5. Physical
restraint shall be initiated only by a trained staff; only to prevent injury to
the child, other people, or property; and shall not be initiated solely as a
form of discipline.
6. Physical
restraints shall be performed using minimal force and time necessary. Physical
restraint means the application of physical force without the use of any device
for the purposes of restraining the free movement of a resident's body. Briefly
holding a child without undue force in order to calm or comfort, or holding a
hand to safely escort a child from one area to another, is not considered a
physical restraint.
7.
Documentation of all physical restraints shall be maintained and include
child's name, date, time, reason, staff involved, and measures taken prior to
restraint.
8. A child shall not be
allowed to administer discipline, except teen parents may discipline their own
children under the supervision and guidance of staff.
9. Searches of a child or a child's personal
property shall be for reasons limited to safety and security of children and
staff, in cases of suspected theft, or suspicion of possession of items which
are not permitted by agency policy.
10. Any searches requiring removal of
clothing shall be done in privacy and shall be witnessed by two (2) staff of
the same gender as the child.
205
Ratio & Supervision
1. The facility shall not exceed its total
licensed capacity.
2. There shall
be a staff to child ratio of at least one to nine (1:9) during waking hours and
at least one to twelve (1:12) during sleeping hours. Staff members' children
shall be counted in the ratio.
3.
If any child is under six (6) years of age, the ratio shall be at least one to
seven (1:7) at all times.
4. Only
staff who directly supervise children shall be counted in this ratio.
5. Childcare staff shall be responsible for
providing the level of supervision, care, and treatment necessary to ensure the
safety and well-being of each child at the facility, taking into account the
child's age, individual differences and abilities, surrounding circumstances,
hazards, and risks.
6. All
childcare shift staff counted in the staff to child ratio shall remain awake at
all times. House parents are excluded from this requirement.
7. The facility shall maintain a daily census
report to include the child's name and room or building assignment.
206
Health &
Medical Care1. Each child shall have a
medical exam at least annually. Health exams need not be repeated during the
year if a child moves from one (1) facility or agency to another, provided the
results of the exam are available to the receiving facility or
agency.
2. All medications shall be
administered to children by staff according to medical instructions.
3. The administering of all medications,
including over-the-counter, shall be logged by the person administering the
medication at the time the medication is given.
4. The medication log shall include:
a. The child's name;
b. Time and date;
c. Medication dosage; and
d. Initials of the person administering the
medication.
5. All
medications excluding Epi-pens, inhalers, and Glucagon kits shall be kept
securely locked and stored according to pharmaceutical recommendations. An
age-appropriate and developmentally capable child may be provided or have
access to non-narcotic prescriptions with an approved safety plan. Examples
include without limitation,, birth control, acne cream, and topical
creams.
6. Keys to medication
storage areas shall be on the premises and readily accessible by staff at all
times.
7. Currently prescribed
medications belonging to children shall be returned to the parent or custodian
upon discharge.
207
Program
1. The facility shall
ensure each child receives education in accordance with the Arkansas Department
of Education.
2. The facility shall
teach each child the daily living tasks required as a part of living in a group
setting and shall assign only light chores that are age-appropriate.
3. The agency shall have a policy regarding
each child's money received and shall ensure that each child's funds are
available to that child under staff supervision for personal use.
4. The facility shall not allow a child's
outside employment, chores, or extracurricular activities to interfere with the
child's time for school, sleep, family visits, or case plan
activities.
5. The facility shall
provide each child with adequate and nutritious food.
6. The facility shall ensure that each child
has sufficient sleep for their age and physical condition.
7. The facility shall instruct each child in
good grooming and personal hygiene habits.
8. The facility shall ensure each child is
provided with their own clothing that is clean, well fitting, seasonal, and
appropriate to age and gender, unless otherwise directed by a
physician.
9. The facility shall
ensure each child is provided with opportunities for regular recreational
activities and exercise.
10. The
facility shall provide activities and equipment that are age appropriate to the
children in their care.
11. The
facility shall monitor and time limit the use of television, videos, computer
games, and other screen time activities.
208
Grounds
1. The grounds of the facility shall be kept
clean and free of safety hazards.
2. The facility shall provide sufficient
outdoor recreation space for age appropriate physical activities.
3. Swimming pools shall be inspected and
approved annually by the Arkansas Department of Health.
209
Buildings
1. No facility shall be located in a shopping
center, strip mall, or other buildings used for commercial activity.
2. Unused or vacant portions of a facility
shall not be rented, leased, loaned, or otherwise occupied by any commercial or
other business entity (or private individuals) not associated with the facility
or its management.
3. All buildings
used by children or staff shall be inspected and approved annually for fire
safety by fire department officials.
4. All buildings used by children or staff
shall be inspected and approved annually for health and sanitation as required
by the Arkansas Department of Health.
5. All buildings shall comply with local
zoning ordinances and land use requirements where those exist.
6. All buildings and furnishings shall be
safe, clean, and in good repair.
7.
There shall be no more than twelve (12) children in a sleeping unit. A sleeping
unit is considered to be a group of bedrooms.
8. Sleeping units sharing the same building
shall be separated (for example, into different corridors, wings, or floors).
Sleeping units modified or newly constructed after September 1, 2016, shall
comply with this standard.
9.
Licensing shall be notified of any changes to buildings that affect usage,
size, capacity, or structural changes.
10. Building usage shall be approved by
licensing prior to resident occupancy, and all required inspections, permits,
and authorizations shall be provided.
11. Any modifications to buildings used by
children, or an increase in capacity, shall require inspection and approval by
the Fire and Health Department, if applicable.
12. All parts of buildings used as living,
sleeping, or bath areas shall have a heating, ventilating, and air conditioning
source that keeps the temperature a minimum of sixty-five degrees (65°) and
a maximum of eighty-five degrees (85°).
13. The facility shall provide a living area
that has at least thirty-five square feet (35'²) of floor space per child.
The dining area and indoor recreation area may be included in this
space.
14. The facility shall
provide a dining room.
15. The
facility shall have a kitchen.
16.
Manufactured homes, used as residential facilities, shall be tied down and
underpinned as required by the Arkansas Manufactured Home Commission. The home
shall obtain an inspection and approval from the Arkansas Manufactured Home
Commission prior to being licensed.
210
Bathrooms
1. The facility shall provide bathrooms for
the children.
2. There shall be a
separate toilet, bathtub or shower, and sink for each six (6)
children.
3. There shall be an
adequate supply of hot and cold running water.
4. The bathroom shall be clean and
sanitary.
5. There shall be
separate bath and toilet facilities for males and females.
6. There shall be an adequate supply of soap,
towels, and tissue.
211
Sleeping Arrangements1. The
facility shall provide bedrooms for the children.
2. There shall be no more than four (4)
children per bedroom.
3. There
shall be at least fifty square feet (50'²) of floor space per child in
each bedroom.
4. No child four (4)
years of age or over shall share a bedroom with a child of the opposite gender,
except teenaged parents who participate in the care of their own
children.
5. Each child shall have
a separate bed with a mattress, sheets, pillow, pillowcase, and adequate cover,
all in good condition.
6. All cribs
used for children shall have current certification of compliance with Consumer
Product Safety Commission (CPSC) standards.
7. Children twelve (12) months of age and
below shall be placed flat on their backs to sleep, in accordance with American
Academy of Pediatrics guidelines, to lessen the risk of suffocation and Sudden
Infant Death Syndrome. (If a child rolls over on their own, the facility is not
required to reposition the child.) If there is a medical reason a child cannot
sleep on their back, a signed statement from the child's physician shall be in
the file stating the reason, the sleep position indicated, and the time frame
required.
8. Beds shall be
positioned to ensure all children can easily exit the room in case of
emergency.
9. No child under six
(6) years of age shall occupy a top bunk.
10. Bedding shall be changed at least weekly,
or more often if needed.
11. Each
child shall have an area to store personal belongings.
12. Staff sleeping quarters shall be separate
from children's sleeping rooms.
13.
Room arrangements shall be based on characteristics of each resident to ensure
the safety of each child.
212
Safety
1. The facility shall have an operable
telephone or comparable communication system.
2. The facility shall have a continuous
supply of clean drinking water. If the water source is not a municipal system,
the source shall be approved by the Arkansas Department of Health
annually.
3. A private sewage and
septic system shall be approved initially and upon any increase in capacity by
the Arkansas Department of Health.
4. There shall be operational smoke detectors
near the cooking area, heating units, and within ten feet (10') of each
bedroom.
5. An operational chemical
fire extinguisher or other fire suppression system approved by local fire
inspection officials shall be in the cooking area of each building. Approval of
the fire suppression system shall be documented.
6. There shall be an emergency evacuation
plan diagramed and posted in each building used by children.
7. Fire drills shall be practiced with
children each month.
8. Severe
weather drills shall be practiced with children quarterly.
9. A record of drills shall be maintained,
showing date and time of day of the drill, number of participants, and length
of time required to reach safety.
10. Each child shall be instructed in
emergency procedures at admission.
11. The facility shall have proof of current
rabies vaccinations for all household pets as required by Arkansas
law.
12. No child shall be allowed
to operate dangerous machinery or equipment, including firearms, without proper
adult supervision and following manufacturers' guidelines for age, safety
precautions, and safety gear.
13.
The agency shall have policy and procedure for carrying, storage and use of all
firearms located at the facility.
14. All firearms shall be maintained in a
secure, locked location or be secured by a trigger lock.
15. All ammunition shall be secured and
locked separately from firearms unless they are stored in a safe (for example,
a hand gun safe or a long gun safe).
213
Transportation
1. The facility shall have agency procured
transportation available at all times.
2. The facility vehicle(s) shall not be used
for personal use, unless other facility transportation is available.
3. Any vehicle used to transport children
shall be in safe working condition and maintained in compliance with motor
vehicle laws.
4. Any vehicle used
to transport children shall be insured.
5. Children shall be transported only by an
authorized person possessing a valid driver's license.
6. Children shall be transported according to
Arkansas law, including without limitation, use of safety belts, child safety
seats, and smoking restrictions.
214
Discharge
1. The discharge shall be planned by agency
staff.
2. The agency may discharge
a child on an emergency basis if failure to do so could result in harm to the
child, other persons, or significant property damage.
3. The agency shall discharge the child to
the custody of the child's parent or a person with authorization from the
parent, guardian, or a person authorized by court order to assume custody of
the child.
4. The agency shall
complete a discharge statement on each child that includes the discharge date
and reason for discharge and provide a copy of it to the child's
custodian.
5. Documentation of the
discharge shall be maintained in the child's record.
300
EMERGENCY FAMILY STYLE CARE
In addition to all standards in Section 100, the
following standards shall be met: Facilities holding an Emergency Family Style
Care license provide residential care on an emergency basis for up to ninety
(90) days in a home-like setting.
301
Admission
1. The agency shall establish written
criteria for admitting and excluding children.
2. The facility shall not admit any child for
whom the facility cannot provide adequate care.
3. Each child shall have a medical exam no
more than one (1) year before admission or a documented appointment date for an
exam within one (1) week after admission.
4. Each child shall have proof of current
immunizations, a letter of exemption in accordance with the Arkansas Department
of Health, or a scheduled appointment within one (1) week after
admission.
5. The facility shall
obtain written verification of the placing agents' authority to place the child
within five (5) working days.
6.
The facility shall obtain written authority for medical care for the child from
the placing agent within seventy-two (72) hours.
7. The agency shall comply with the
Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children when admitting children from
outside Arkansas, if applicable.
8.
The facility shall establish that all persons referred for admission are under
eighteen (18) years of age at the time of admission.
9. Residents may remain in the program after
reaching eighteen (18) years of age with the reason for continued placement
documented.
10. The facility may
admit children birth to eighteen (18) years of age.
11. The facility shall admit children for a
maximum of ninety (90) days.
12. At
the time of admission, the following information shall be documented in the
child's record:
a. Name, signature, and role
or relationship of the person who relinquished the child into care;
b. A brief description of the circumstances
requiring admission;
c. The date
and time of the admission;
d. A
brief description of the child's history (if known) including behavioral
history;
e. Any known medical
history and known current health conditions;
f. All medications currently prescribed for
the child (if known and available); and
g. The child's current behavior or known
emotional condition.
13.
Intake information shall be completed on each child in care within ten (10)
working days after admission.
14.
The intake shall include:
a. Demographic
information on the child and parent(s), including name, address, birth date,
gender, race, and religious preference;
b. A factual description of the circumstances
requiring placement;
c. A brief
social history of the family;
d.
The child's current legal status or custody; and
e. Any history of previous placements outside
the family.
15. The
facility shall obtain copies of legal documents within thirty (30) days of
admission or shall document their attempts to obtain the documents. The legal
documents shall include without limitation, birth certificates, social security
cards, and court orders.
16. A
dependent juvenile child of a parent who is in the custody of the Division of
Child and Family Services (DCFS) shall be subject to all rules regarding space,
ratio, health, and safety.
17.
Facilities that have an adult program shall provide sleeping and living
arrangements to ensure separation of adults from children.
302
Assessment & Case
Planning1. The agency shall assign a
caseworker to each child who is responsible for doing assessments, case
planning, and casework services.
2.
A plan of safe care shall be developed for all children with physical
limitations, medical conditions, or behaviors that are indicative of harm to
self or others; to include without limitation: arson, physical aggression,
sexual aggression, suicidal behaviors, or other selfharming tendencies. This
plan shall identify the behavior or problem and shall specify the safeguards
that are to be implemented. The agency shall document that the childcare staff
are informed of the provisions of the plan and place a copy of the plan in the
child's record.
3. An assessment of
services needed to ensure the health and welfare of the child, including
medical history and psychological history, shall be completed for each child
and included in the case plan.
4. A
case plan shall be developed for each resident received for care.
5. The case plan shall be developed within
thirty (30) days after placement.
6. The child's case plan shall contain, at
the minimum:
a. Specific needs of the
child;
b. Plan for meeting the
child's needs;
c. Special treatment
issues (for example, psychotropic medications, sexual misconduct, and
neurological disorders) shall be identified with a statement of how the special
needs shall be met; and
d. A plan
to ensure that the child's educational needs are met according to applicable
state law.
7. A copy of
the case plan shall be made available to the parent(s), guardian(s), court, or
other agencies involved in case plan services delivery.
8. The agency caseworker shall visit the
child monthly to monitor the progress of the case plan.
303
Children's Records
1. The agency shall keep a confidential case
record for each child that includes the following:
a. Demographic information;
b. Plan of safe care, if
applicable;
c. A complete
intake;
d. Consents, including
consent for medical care and authority to place the child;
e. Interstate Compact information, if
applicable;
f. Case
plans;
g. Copies of legal documents
(for example, birth certificate, social security card, court orders) or
documentation of their attempts to obtain the documents;
h. Physical exams and immunization records or
documentation of their attempts to obtain the documents;
i. Psychological reports, if
applicable;
j. Educational reports,
if applicable;
k. Disciplinary and
incident reports, if applicable;
l.
Documentation of casework services and child contact; and
m. Discharge statement.
2. Records for each child shall be kept for
five (5) years from the date of discharge, unless otherwise specified by
Arkansas law.
304
Behavior Management1. The agency
shall have a written discipline policy that is consistently followed.
2. Discipline shall be directed toward
teaching the child acceptable behavior and self control.
3. Discipline shall be appropriate to the
child's age, development, and history.
4. The following disciplinary actions shall
not be used:
a. Denial of meals, sleep,
shelter, essential clothing, or case plan activities;
b. Denial of parental visits or regular phone
and mail contact with family.
c.
Non-disciplinary case planning issues are accepted;
d. Lewd or obscene language;
e. Derogatory comments about the child, the
child's family, race, or gender;
f.
Restriction to a room for more than a short period of time without periodic
observation;
g. Restriction to a
dark room or area;
h. Locked
isolation;
i. Physical injury or
threat of bodily harm;
j.
Humiliating or degrading action;
k.
Extremely strenuous work or exercise; nor
l. Mechanical or chemical
restraints.
5. Physical
restraint shall be initiated only by a trained staff; only to prevent injury to
the child, other people, or property; and shall not be initiated solely as a
form of discipline.
6. Physical
restraints shall be performed using minimal force and time necessary. Physical
restraint means the application of physical force without the use of any device
for the purposes of restraining the free movement of a resident's body. Briefly
holding a child without undue force in order to calm or comfort, or holding a
hand to safely escort a child from one area to another, is not considered a
physical restraint.
7.
Documentation of all restraints shall be maintained and include child's name,
date, time, reason, staff involved, and measures taken prior to
restraint.
8. A child shall not be
allowed to administer discipline, except teen parents may discipline their own
children under the supervision and guidance of staff.
9. Searches of a child or a child's personal
property shall be for reasons limited to safety and security of children and
staff, in cases of suspected theft, or suspicion of possession of items which
are not permitted by agency policy.
10. Any searches requiring removal of
clothing shall be done in privacy.
305
Ratio & Supervision
1. The facility shall use a houseparent
staffing model.
2. The facility
shall not exceed its total licensed capacity.
3. The facility shall have no more than eight
(8) children in each unit, including the houseparent's children.
4. There shall be a staff to child ratio of
at least one to eight (1:8) at all times. Staff members' children shall be
counted in the ratio.
5. Childcare
staff shall be responsible for providing the level of supervision, care, and
treatment necessary to ensure the safety and well-being of each child at the
facility, taking into account the child's age, individual differences and
abilities, surrounding circumstances, hazards, and risks.
6. The facility shall maintain a daily census
report to include the child's name and building or room assignment.
306
Health &
Medical Care1. Each child shall have a
medical exam at least annually. Health exams need not be repeated during the
year if a child moves from one (1) facility or agency to another, provided the
results of the exam are available to the receiving facility or
agency.
2. All medications shall be
administered to children by staff according to medical instructions.
3. The administering of all medications,
including over-the-counter, shall be logged by the person administering the
medication at the time the medication is given.
4. The medication log shall include:
a. The child's name;
b. Time and date; and
c. Medication dosage;
d. Initials of the person administering the
medication.
5. All
medications excluding Epi-pens, inhalers, and Glucagon kits shall be kept
securely locked and stored according to pharmaceutical recommendations. An
age-appropriate and developmentally-capable child may be provided or have
access to non-narcotic prescriptions with an approved safety plan. Examples
include without limitation, birth control, acne cream, and topical
creams.
6. Keys to medication
storage areas shall be on the premises and readily accessible by staff at all
times.
7. Currently prescribed
medications belonging to children shall be returned to the parent or custodian
upon discharge.
307
Program1. The facility shall
ensure each child receives education in accordance with the Arkansas Department
of Education.
2. The facility shall
teach each child the daily living tasks required as a part of living in a group
setting and shall assign only light chores that are age-appropriate.
3. The agency shall have a policy regarding
each child's money received and shall ensure that each child's funds are
available to that child under staff supervision for personal use.
4. The facility shall not allow a child's
outside employment, chores, or extracurricular activities to interfere with the
child's time for school, sleep, family visits, or case plan
activities.
5. The facility shall
provide each child with adequate and nutritious food, routinely eaten in the
home, cottage, or unit.
6. The
facility shall ensure that each child has sufficient sleep for their age and
physical condition.
7. The facility
shall instruct each child in good grooming and personal hygiene
habits.
8. The facility shall
ensure each child is provided with their own clothing that is clean, well
fitting, seasonal, and appropriate to age and gender, unless otherwise directed
by a physician.
9. The facility
shall ensure each child is provided with opportunities for regular recreational
activities and exercise.
10. The
facility shall provide activities and equipment that are age appropriate to the
children in their care.
11. The
facility shall monitor and time limit the use of television, videos, computer
games, and other screen time activities.
12. The agency shall have policy and
procedure to ensure children in care are allowed to participate in age
appropriate activities away from the facility.
308
Grounds
1. The grounds of the facility shall be kept
clean and free of safety hazards.
2. The facility shall provide sufficient
outdoor recreation space for age appropriate physical activities.
3. Swimming pools shall be inspected and
approved annually by the Arkansas Department of Health.
309
Buildings
1. The building shall be a single-style
dwelling, such as a house, cottage, or duplex in which the facility occupies
both units. Multiple units may be located on campus.
2. The building(s) shall house only children
in Emergency Family Style Care or Residential Family Style Care.
3. No facility shall be located in a shopping
center, strip mall, or other buildings used for commercial activity.
4. Unused or vacant portions of a facility
shall not be rented, leased, loaned, or otherwise occupied by any commercial or
other business entity (or private individuals) not associated with the facility
or its management.
5. All buildings
used by children or staff shall be inspected and approved annually for fire
safety by fire department officials.
6. All buildings used by children or staff
shall be inspected and approved annually for health and sanitation as required
by the Arkansas Department of Health.
7. All buildings shall comply with local
zoning ordinances and land use requirements where those exist.
8. All buildings and furnishings shall be
safe, clean, and in good repair.
9.
Licensing shall be notified of any changes to buildings that affect usage,
size, capacity, or structural changes.
10. Building usage shall be approved by
licensing prior to resident occupancy, and all required inspections, permits,
and authorizations shall be provided.
11. Any modification to buildings used by
children, or an increase in capacity shall require inspection and approval by
the Fire and Health Department, if applicable.
12. All parts of buildings used as living,
sleeping, or bath areas shall have a heating, ventilating, and air conditioning
source that keeps the temperature a minimum of sixty-five degrees (65°) and
a maximum of eighty-five degrees (85°).
13. The facility shall provide a living area
that has at least thirty-five square feet (35'²) of floor space per child.
The dining area and indoor recreation area may be included in this
space.
14. The facility shall
provide a dining area.
15. The
facility shall have a kitchen.
16.
Manufactured homes, used as residential facilities, shall be tied down and
underpinned as required by the Arkansas Manufactured Home Commission. The home
shall obtain an inspection and approval from the Arkansas Manufactured Home
Commission prior to being licensed.
310
Bathrooms
1. The facility shall provide bathrooms for
the children.
2. There shall be a
separate toilet, bathtub or shower, and sink for each six (6)
children.
3. There shall be an
adequate supply of hot and cold running water.
4. The bathroom shall be clean and
sanitary.
5. There shall be an
adequate supply of soap, towels, and tissue.
311
Sleeping Arrangements
1. The facility shall provide bedrooms for
the children.
2. There shall be no
more than four (4) children per bedroom.
3. There shall be at least fifty square feet
(50'²) of floor space per child in each bedroom.
4. No child four (4) years of age or over
shall share a bedroom with a child of the opposite gender, except teenaged
parents who participate in the care of their own children.
5. Each child shall have a separate bed with
a mattress, sheets, pillow, pillowcase, and adequate cover, all in good
condition.
6. All cribs used for
children shall have current certification of compliance with Consumer Product
Safety Commission (CPSC) standards.
7. Children twelve (12) months of age and
below shall be placed flat on their backs to sleep, in accordance with American
Academy of Pediatrics guidelines, to lessen the risk of suffocation and Sudden
Infant Death Syndrome. (If a child rolls over on their own, the facility is not
required to reposition the child.) If there is a medical reason a child cannot
sleep on their back, a signed statement from the child's physician shall be in
the file stating the reason, the sleep position indicated, and the time frame
required.
8. Beds shall be
positioned to ensure all children can easily exit the room in case of
emergency.
9. No child under six
(6) years of age shall occupy a top bunk.
10. Bedding shall be changed at least weekly,
more often if needed.
11. Each
child shall have an area to store personal belongings.
12. Staff sleeping quarters shall be separate
from children's sleeping rooms.
13.
Room arrangements shall be based on characteristics of each resident to ensure
the safety of each child.
312
Safety
1. The facility shall have an operable
telephone or comparable communication system.
2. The facility shall have a continuous
supply of clean drinking water. If the water source is not a municipal system,
the source shall be approved by the Arkansas Department of Health
annually.
3. A private sewage and
septic system shall be approved initially and upon any increase in capacity by
the Arkansas Department of Health.
4. There shall be operational smoke detectors
near the cooking area, heating units, and within ten feet (10') of each
bedroom.
5. An operational chemical
fire extinguisher or other fire suppression system approved by local fire
inspection officials shall be in the cooking area of each building. Approval of
the fire suppression system shall be documented.
6. There shall be an emergency evacuation
plan diagramed and posted in each building used by children.
7. Fire drills shall be practiced with
children each month.
8. Severe
weather drills shall be practiced with children quarterly.
9. A record of drills shall be maintained,
showing date and time of day of the drill, number of participants, and length
of time required to reach safety.
10. Each child shall be instructed in
emergency procedures at admissions.
11. The facility shall have proof of current
rabies vaccinations for all household pets as required by Arkansas
law.
12. No child shall be allowed
to operate dangerous machinery or equipment, including firearms without proper
adult supervision, and following manufacturers' guidelines for age, safety
precautions, and safety gear.
13.
The agency shall have policy and procedure for carrying, storage and use of all
firearms located at the facility.
14. All firearms shall be maintained in a
secure, locked location or be secured by a trigger lock.
15. All ammunition shall be secured and
locked separately from firearms unless they are stored in a safe (for example,
a hand gun safe or a long gun safe).
313
Transportation
1. The facility shall have agency procured
transportation available at all times.
2. The facility vehicle(s) shall not be used
for personal use, unless other facility transportation is available.
3. Any vehicle used to transport children
shall be in safe working condition and maintained in compliance with motor
vehicle laws.
4. Any vehicle used
to transport children shall be insured.
5. Children shall be transported only by an
authorized person possessing a valid driver's license.
6. Children shall be transported according to
Arkansas law, including without limitation, use of safety belts, child safety
seats, and smoking restrictions.
314
Discharge
1. The discharge shall be planned by agency
staff.
2. The agency may discharge
a child on an emergency basis if failure to do so could result in harm to the
child, other persons, or significant property damage.
3. The agency shall discharge the child to
the custody of the child's parent or a person with authorization from the
parent, guardian, or a person authorized by court order to assume custody of
the child.
4. The agency shall
complete a discharge statement on each child that includes the discharge date
and reason for discharge and provide a copy of it to the child's
custodian.
5. Documentation of the
discharge shall be maintained in the child's record.
400
RESIDENTIAL FACILITIES
In addition to all standards in Section 100, the
following standards shall be met: Facilities holding a Residential Facility
license provide residential care on a long-term basis.
401
Admission
1. The agency shall establish written
criteria for admitting and excluding children.
2. The facility shall not admit any child for
whom the facility cannot provide adequate care.
3. Each child shall have a medical exam no
more than one (1) year before admission or a documented appointment date for an
exam within one (1) week after admission.
4. Each child shall have proof of current
immunizations, a letter of exemption in accordance with the Arkansas Department
of Health, or a scheduled appointment within one (1) week after
admission.
5. The facility shall
obtain written verification of the placing agent's authority to place the child
at the time of admission.
6. The
facility shall obtain written authority for medical care for the child from the
placing agent at the time of admission.
7. The agency shall comply with the
Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children when admitting children from
outside Arkansas, if applicable.
8.
The facility shall establish that all persons referred for admission are under
eighteen (18) years of age at the time of admission.
9. Residents may remain in the program after
reaching eighteen (18) years of age with the reason for continued placement
documented. The resident shall be discharged no later than their twenty-first
birthday.
10. The facility may
admit a child under five (5) years of age, only if that child is a part of a
sibling group of which one (1) child is five (5) years of age or older, or if
it is the summer before the child is eligible to enter kindergarten. Exception
is made for the infant child or children of a parent who is admitted to the
facility.
11. At the time of
admission, the following information shall be documented in the child's record:
a. Name, signature, and role or relationship
of the person who relinquished the child into care;
b. A brief description of the circumstances
requiring admission;
c. The date
and time of the admission;
d. A
brief description of the child's history (if known) including behavioral
history;
e. Any known medical
history and known current health conditions;
f. All medications currently prescribed for
the child (if known and available); and
g. The child's current behavior or known
emotional condition.
12.
Intake information shall be completed on each child in care within ten (10)
working days after admission.
13.
The intake shall include:
a. Demographic
information on the child and parent(s), including name, address, birth date,
gender, race, and religious preference;
b. A factual description of the circumstances
requiring placement;
c. A brief
social history of the family;
d.
The child's current legal status or custody; and
e. Any history of previous placements outside
the family.
14. The
facility shall obtain copies of legal documents within thirty (30) days of
admission or shall document their attempts to obtain the documents. The legal
documents shall include without limitation, birth certificates, social security
cards, and court orders.
15. A
dependent juvenile child of a parent who is in the custody of the Division of
Child and Family Services (DCFS) shall be subject to all rules regarding space,
ratio, health, and safety.
16.
Facilities that have an adult program shall provide sleeping and living
arrangements to ensure separation of adults from children.
402
Assessment & Case
Planning1. The agency shall assign a
caseworker to each child who is responsible for doing assessments, case
planning, and casework services.
2.
A plan of safe care shall be developed for all children with physical
limitations, medical conditions, or behaviors that are indicative of harm to
self or others; to include without limitation, physical aggression, sexual
aggression, suicidal behaviors, or other selfharming tendencies. This plan
shall identify the behavior or problem and shall specify the safeguards that
are to be implemented. The agency shall document that the childcare staff are
informed of the provisions of the plan and place a copy of the plan in the
child's record.
3. An assessment of
services needed to ensure the health and welfare of the child, including
medical history and psychological history, shall be completed for each child
and included in the case plan.
4. A
case plan shall be developed for each resident received for care.
5. The case plan shall be developed within
thirty (30) days after placement.
6. The child's case plan shall contain, at
the minimum:
a. Specific needs of the
child;
b. Plan for meeting the
child's needs;
c. Special treatment
issues (for example, psychotropic medications, sexual misconduct, and
neurological disorders) shall be identified with a statement of how the special
needs shall be met;
d. A plan to
ensure that the child's educational needs are met according to applicable state
law; and
e. Date of next review of
the case plan.
7. A copy
of the case plan shall be made available to the parent(s), guardian(s), court,
or other agencies involved in case plan services delivery.
8. The case plan shall be reviewed at least
semi-annually and shall be updated to reflect the child's progress.
403
Children's
Records1. The agency shall keep a
confidential case record for each child that includes the following:
a. Demographic information;
b. Plan of safe care, if
applicable;
c. A complete
intake;
d. Consents, including
consent for medical care and authority to place the child;
e. Interstate Compact information, if
applicable;
f. Case plans and case
plan reviews;
g. Copies of legal
documents (for example, birth certificate, social security card, court orders)
or documentation of their attempts to obtain the documents;
h. Physical exams and immunization records or
documentation of their attempts to obtain the documents;
i. Psychological reports, if
applicable;
j. Educational reports,
if applicable;
k. Disciplinary and
incident reports, if applicable;
l.
Documentation of casework services and child contact; and
m. Discharge statement.
2. Records for each child shall be kept for
five (5) years from the date of discharge, unless otherwise specified by
Arkansas law.
404
Behavior Management1. The agency
shall have a written discipline policy that is consistently followed.
2. Discipline shall be directed toward
teaching the child acceptable behavior and selfcontrol.
3. Discipline shall be appropriate to the
child's age, development, and history.
4. The following disciplinary actions shall
not be used:
a. Denial of meals, sleep,
shelter, essential clothing, or case plan activities;
b. Denial of parental visits or regular phone
and mail contact with family. Non-disciplinary case planning issues are
accepted;
c. Lewd or obscene
language;
d. Derogatory comments
about the child, the child's family, race, or gender;
e. Restriction to a room for more than a
short period of time without periodic observation;
f. Restriction to a dark room or
area;
g. Locked
isolation;
h. Physical injury or
threat of bodily harm;
i.
Humiliating or degrading action;
j.
Extremely strenuous work or exercise; nor
k. Mechanical or chemical
restraints.
5. Physical
restraint shall be initiated only by trained staff; only to prevent injury to
the child, other people, or property; and shall not be initiated solely as a
form of discipline.
6. Physical
restraints shall be performed using minimal force and time necessary. Physical
restraint means the application of physical force without the use of any device
for the purposes of restraining the free movement of a resident's body. Briefly
holding a child without undue force in order to calm or comfort, or holding a
hand to safely escort a child from one area to another, is not considered a
physical restraint.
7.
Documentation of all restraints shall be maintained and include child's name,
date, time, reason, staff involved, and measures taken prior to
restraint.
8. A child shall not be
allowed to administer discipline, except teen parents may discipline their own
children under the supervision and guidance of staff.
9. Searches of a child or a child's personal
property shall be for reasons limited to safety and security of children and
staff, in cases of suspected theft, or suspicion of possession of items which
are not permitted by agency policy.
10. Any searches requiring removal of
clothing shall be done in privacy and shall be witnessed by two (2) staff of
the same gender as the child.
405
Ratio & Supervision
1. The facility shall not exceed its total
licensed capacity.
2. There shall
be a staff to child ratio of at least one to nine (1:9) during waking hours and
at least one to twelve (1:12) during sleeping hours. Staff members' children
shall be counted in the ratio.
3.
If any child is under six (6) years of age, the ratio shall be at least one to
seven (1:7) at all times.
4. Only
staff who directly supervise children shall be counted in this ratio.
5. Childcare staff shall be responsible for
providing the level of supervision, care, and treatment necessary to ensure the
safety and well-being of each child at the facility, taking into account the
child's age, individual differences and abilities, surrounding circumstances,
hazards, and risks.
6. All
childcare shift staff counted in the staff to child ratio shall remain awake at
all times. House parents are excluded from this requirement.
7. The facility shall maintain a daily census
report to include the child's name and room or building assignment.
406
Health &
Medical Care1. Each child shall have a
medical exam at least annually. Health exams need not be repeated during the
year if a child moves from one (1) facility or agency to another, provided the
results of the exam are available to the receiving facility or
agency.
2. All medications shall be
administered to children by staff according to medical instructions.
3. The administering of all medications,
including over-the-counter, shall be logged by the person administering the
medicine at the time the medication is given.
4. The medication log shall include:
a. The child's name;
b. Time and date;
c. Medication dosage; and
d. Initials of the person administering the
medication.
5. All
medications excluding Epi-pens, inhalers, and Glucagon kits shall be kept
securely locked and stored according to pharmaceutical recommendations. An
age-appropriate and developmentally-capable child may be provided or have
access to non-narcotic prescriptions with an approved safety plan. Examples
include without limitation, birth control, acne cream, and topical
creams.
6. Keys to medication
storage areas shall be on the premises and readily accessible by staff at all
times.
7. Currently prescribed
medications belonging to children shall be returned to the parent or custodian
upon discharge.
407
Program1. The facility shall
ensure each child receives education in accordance with the Arkansas Department
of Education.
2. The facility shall
teach each child the daily living tasks required as a part of living in a group
setting and shall assign only light chores that are age- appropriate.
3. The agency shall have a policy regarding
each child's money received and shall ensure that each child's funds are
available to that child under staff supervision for personal use.
4. The facility shall not allow a child's
outside employment, chores, or extracurricular activities to interfere with the
child's time for school, sleep, family visits, or case plan
activities.
5. The facility shall
provide each child with adequate and nutritious food.
6. The facility shall ensure that each child
has sufficient sleep for their age and physical condition.
7. Each child shall be instructed in good
grooming and personal hygiene habits.
8. The facility shall ensure each child is
provided with their own clothing that is clean, well fitting, seasonal, and
appropriate to age and gender, unless otherwise directed by a
physician.
9. The facility shall
ensure each child in care is provided with opportunities for regular
recreational activities and exercise.
10. The facility shall provide activities and
equipment that are age appropriate to the children in their care.
11. The use of television, videos, computer
games, and other screen time activities shall be monitored and time limited.
408
Grounds
1. The grounds of the facility shall be kept
clean and free of safety hazards.
2. The facility shall provide sufficient
outdoor recreation space for age appropriate physical activities.
3. Swimming pools shall be inspected and
approved annually by the Arkansas Department of Health.
409
Buildings
1. No facility shall be located in a shopping
center, strip mall, or other buildings used for commercial activity.
2. Unused or vacant portions of a facility
shall not be rented, leased, loaned, or otherwise occupied by any commercial or
other business entity (or private individuals) not associated with the facility
or its management.
3. All buildings
used by children or staff shall be inspected and approved annually for fire
safety by fire department officials.
4. All buildings used by children or staff
shall be inspected and approved annually for health and sanitation as required
by the Arkansas Department of Health.
5. All buildings shall comply with local
zoning ordinances and land use requirements where those exist.
6. All buildings and furnishings shall be
safe, clean, and in good repair.
7.
There shall be no more than twelve (12) children in a sleeping unit. A sleeping
unit is considered to be a group of bedrooms.
8. Sleeping units sharing the same building
shall be separated (for example, into different corridors, wings, or floors).
Sleeping units modified or newly constructed after September 1, 2016, shall
comply with this standard.
9.
Licensing shall be notified of any changes to buildings that affect usage,
size, capacity, or structural changes.
10. Building usage shall be approved by
licensing prior to resident occupancy, and all required inspections, permits,
and authorizations shall be provided.
11. Any modification to buildings used by
children, or an increase in capacity shall require inspection and approval by
the Fire and Health Department, if applicable.
12. All parts of buildings used as living,
sleeping, or bath areas shall have a heating, ventilating and air conditioning
source that keeps the temperature a minimum of sixty-five degrees (65°) and
a maximum of eighty-five degrees (85°).
13. The facility shall provide a living area
that has at least thirty-five square feet (35'²) of floor space per child.
The dining area and indoor recreation area may be included in this
space.
14. The facility shall
provide a dining room.
15. The
facility shall have a kitchen.
16.
Manufactured homes, used as residential facilities, shall be tied down and
underpinned as required by the Arkansas Manufactured Home Commission. The home
shall obtain an inspection and approval from the Arkansas Manufactured Home
Commission prior to being licensed.
410
Bathrooms
1. The facility shall provide bathrooms for
the children.
2. There shall be a
separate toilet, bathtub or shower, and sink for each six (6)
children.
3. There shall be an
adequate supply of hot and cold running water.
4. The bathroom shall be clean and
sanitary.
5. There shall be
separate bath and toilet facilities for males and females.
6. There shall be an adequate supply of soap,
towels, and tissue.
411
Sleeping Arrangements1. The
facility shall provide bedrooms for the children.
2. There shall be no more than four (4)
children per bedroom.
3. There
shall be at least fifty square feet (50'²) of floor space per child in
each bedroom.
4. No child four (4)
years of age or over shall share a bedroom with a child of the opposite gender,
except teenaged parents who participate in the care of their own
children.
5. Each child shall have
a separate bed with a mattress, sheets, pillow, pillowcase, and adequate cover,
all in good condition.
6. All cribs
used for children shall have current certification of compliance with Consumer
Product Safety Commission (CPSC) standards.
7. Children twelve (12) months of age and
below shall be placed flat on their backs to sleep, in accordance with American
Academy of Pediatrics guidelines, to lessen the risk of suffocation and Sudden
Infant Death Syndrome. (If a child rolls over on their own, the facility is not
required to reposition the child.) If there is a medical reason a child cannot
sleep on their back, a signed statement from the child's physician shall be in
the file stating the reason, the sleep position indicated, and the time frame
required.
8. Beds shall be
positioned to ensure all children can easily exit the room in case of
emergency.
9. No child under six
(6) years of age shall occupy a top bunk.
10. Bedding shall be changed at least weekly,
more often if needed.
11. Each
child shall have an area to store personal belongings.
12. Staff sleeping quarters shall be separate
from children's sleeping rooms.
13.
Room arrangements shall be based on characteristics of each resident to ensure
the safety of each child.
412
Safety1. The
facility shall have an operable telephone or comparable communication
system.
2. The facility shall have
a continuous supply of clean drinking water. If the water source is not a
municipal system, the source shall be approved by the Arkansas Department of
Health annually.
3. A private
sewage and septic system shall be approved initially and upon any increase in
capacity by the Arkansas Department of Health.
4. There shall be operational smoke detectors
near the cooking area, heating units, and within ten feet (10') of each
bedroom.
5. An operational chemical
fire extinguisher or other fire suppression system approved by local fire
inspection officials shall be in the cooking area of each building. Approval of
the fire suppression system shall be documented.
6. There shall be an emergency evacuation
plan diagramed and posted in each building used by children.
7. Fire drills shall be practiced with
children each month.
8. Severe
weather drills shall be practiced with children quarterly.
9. A record of drills shall be maintained,
showing date and time of day of the drill, number of participants, and length
of time required to reach safety.
10. Each child shall be instructed in
emergency procedures at admission.
11. The facility shall have proof of current
rabies vaccinations for all household pets as required by Arkansas
law.
12. No child shall be allowed
to operate dangerous machinery or equipment, including firearms without proper
adult supervision and following manufacturers' guidelines for age, safety
precautions, and safety gear.
13.
The agency shall have policy and procedure for carrying, storage and use of all
firearms located at the facility.
14. All firearms shall be maintained in a
secure, locked location or be secured by a trigger lock.
15. All ammunition shall be secured and
locked separately from firearms unless they are stored in a safe (for example,
a hand gun safe or a long gun safe).
413
Transportation
1. The facility shall have agency procured
transportation available at all times.
2. The facility vehicle(s) shall not be used
for personal use, unless other facility transportation is available.
3. Any vehicle used to transport children
shall be in safe working condition and maintained in compliance with motor
vehicle laws.
4. Any vehicle used
to transport children shall be insured.
5. Children shall be transported only by an
authorized person possessing a valid driver's license.
6. Children shall be transported according to
Arkansas law, including without limitation, use of safety belts, child safety
seats, and smoking restrictions.
414
Discharge
1. The discharge shall be planned by agency
staff.
2. The agency may discharge
a child on an emergency basis if failure to do so could result in harm to the
child, other persons, or significant property damage.
3. A child shall be discharged to the custody
of the child's parent or a person with authorization from the parent, guardian,
or a person authorized by court order to assume custody of the child.
4. The agency shall complete a discharge
statement on each child that includes a discharge date and reason for discharge
and provide a copy of it to the child's custodian.
5. Documentation of the discharge shall be
maintained in the child's record.
500
RESIDENTIAL FAMILY STYLE
CARE
In addition to all standards in Section 100, the
following standards shall be met: Facilities holding a Residential Family Style
Care license provide residential care on a long-term basis in a home-like
setting.
501
Admission1. The agency shall
establish written criteria for admitting and excluding children.
2. The facility shall not admit any child for
whom the facility cannot provide adequate care.
3. Each child shall have a medical exam no
more than one (1) year before admission or a documented appointment date for an
exam within one (1) week after admission.
4. Each child shall have proof of current
immunizations, a letter of exemption in accordance with the Arkansas Department
of Health, or a scheduled appointment within one (1) week after
admission.
5. The facility shall
obtain written verification of the placing agent's authority to place the child
at the time of admission.
6. The
facility shall obtain written authority for medical care for the child from the
placing agent at the time of admission.
7. The agency shall comply with the
Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children when admitting children from
outside Arkansas, if applicable.
8.
The facility shall establish that all persons referred for admission are under
eighteen (18) years of age at the time of admission.
9. Residents may remain in the program after
reaching eighteen (18) years of age with the reason for continued placement
documented. The resident shall be discharged no later than their twenty-first
birthday.
10. The facility may
admit a child(ren) under five (5) years of age only if that child is a part of
a sibling group of whom one child is five (5) years of age or older or if it is
the summer before the child is eligible to enter kindergarten. Exception is
made for the infant child or children of a parent who is admitted to the
facility.
11. At the time of an
admission, the following information shall be documented in the child's record:
a. Name, signature, and role or relationship
of the person who relinquished the child into care;
b. A brief description of the circumstances
requiring admission;
c. The date
and time of the admission;
d. A
brief description of the child's history (if known) including behavioral
history;
e. Any known medical
history and known current health conditions;
f. All medications currently prescribed for
the child (if known and available); and
g. The child's current behavior or known
emotional condition.
12.
Intake information shall be completed on each child in care within ten (10)
working days after admission.
13.
The intake shall include:
a. Demographic
information on the child and parent(s), including name, address, birth date,
gender, race, and religious preference;
b. A factual description of the circumstances
requiring placement;
c. A brief
social history of the family;
d.
The child's current legal status or custody; and
e. Any history of previous placements outside
the family.
14. The
facility shall obtain copies of legal documents within thirty (30) days of
admission or shall document their attempts to obtain the documents. The legal
documents shall include without limitation, birth certificates, social security
cards, and court orders.
15. A
dependent juvenile child of a parent who is in the custody of the Division of
Child and Family Services (DCFS) shall be subject to all rules regarding space,
ratio, health, and safety.
16.
Facilities that have an adult program shall provide sleeping and living
arrangements to ensure separation of adults from children.
502
Assessment & Case
Planning1. The agency shall assign a
caseworker to each child who is responsible for doing assessments, case
planning, and casework services.
2.
A plan of safe care shall be developed for all children with physical
limitations, medical conditions, or behaviors that are indicative of harm to
self or others; to include without limitation: arson, physical aggression,
sexual aggression, suicidal behaviors, or other selfharming tendencies. This
plan shall identify the behavior or problem and shall specify the safeguards
that are to be implemented. The agency shall document that the childcare staff
are informed of the provisions of the plan and place a copy of the plan in the
child's record.
3. An assessment of
services needed to ensure the health and welfare of the child, including
medical history and psychological history, shall be completed for each child
and included in the case plan.
4. A
case plan shall be developed for each resident received for care.
5. The case plan shall be developed within
thirty (30) days after placement.
6. The child's case plan shall contain, at
the minimum:
a. Specific needs of the
child;
b. Plan for meeting the
child's needs;
c. Special treatment
issues (for example, psychotropic medications, sexual misconduct, and
neurological disorders) shall be identified with a statement of how the special
needs shall be met;
d. A plan to
ensure that the child's educational needs are met according to applicable state
law; and
e. Date of next review of
the case plan.
7. A copy
of the case plan shall be made available to the parent(s), guardian(s), court,
or other agencies involved in case plan services delivery.
8. The case plan shall be reviewed at least
semi-annually and shall be updated to reflect the child's progress.
503
Children's
Records1. The agency shall keep a
confidential case record for each child that includes the following:
a. Demographic information;
b. Plan of safe care, if
applicable;
c. A complete
intake;
d. Consents, including
consent for medical care and authority to place the child;
e. Interstate Compact information, if
applicable;
f. Case plans and case
plan reviews;
g. Copies of legal
documents (for example, birth certificate, social security card, court orders)
or documentation of their attempts to obtain the documents;
h. Physical exams and immunization records or
documentation of their attempts to obtain the documents;
i. Psychological reports, if
applicable;
j. Educational reports,
if applicable;
k. Disciplinary and
incident reports, if applicable;
l.
Documentation of casework services and child contact; and
m. Discharge statement.
2. Records for each child shall be kept for
five (5) years from the date of discharge, unless otherwise specified by
Arkansas law.
504
Behavior Management1. The agency
shall have a written discipline policy that is consistently followed.
2. Discipline shall be directed toward
teaching the child acceptable behavior and selfcontrol.
3. Discipline shall be appropriate to the
child's age, development, and history.
4. The following disciplinary actions shall
not be used:
a. Denial of meals, sleep,
shelter, essential clothing, or case plan activities;
b. Denial of parental visits or regular phone
and mail contact with family. Non-disciplinary case planning issues are
accepted;
c. Lewd or obscene
language;
d. Derogatory comments
about the child, the child's family, race, or gender;
e. Restriction to a room for more than a
short period of time without periodic observation;
f. Restriction to a dark room or
area;
g. Locked
isolation;
h. Physical injury or
threat of bodily harm;
i.
Humiliating or degrading action;
j.
Extremely strenuous work or exercise; nor
k. Mechanical or chemical
restraints.
5. Physical
restraint shall be initiated only by trained staff; only to prevent injury to
the child, other people, or property; and shall not be initiated solely as a
form of discipline.
6. Physical
restraints shall be performed using minimal force and time necessary. Physical
restraint means the application of physical force without the use of any device
for the purposes of restraining the free movement of a resident's body. Briefly
holding a child without undue force in order to calm or comfort, or holding a
hand to safely escort a child from one area to another, is not considered a
physical restraint.
7.
Documentation of all restraints shall be maintained and include child's name,
date, time, reason, staff involved, and measures taken prior to
restraint.
8. A child shall not be
allowed to administer discipline, except teen parents may discipline their own
children under the supervision and guidance of staff.
9. Searches of a child or a child's personal
property shall be for reasons limited to safety and security of children and
staff, in cases of suspected theft, or suspicion of possession of items which
are not permitted by agency policy.
10. Any searches requiring
505
Ratio &
Supervision1. The facility shall use a
house parent staffing model.
2. The
facility shall not exceed its total licensed capacity.
3. The facility shall have no more than eight
(8) children in each unit, including the houseparent's children.
4. There shall be a staff to child ratio of
at least one to eight (1:8) at all times. Staff members' children shall be
counted in the ratio.
5. Childcare
staff shall be responsible for providing the level of supervision, care, and
treatment necessary to ensure the safety and well-being of each child at the
facility, taking into account the child's age, individual differences and
abilities, surrounding circumstances, hazards, and risks.
6. The facility shall maintain a daily census
report to include the child's name and room or building assignment. removal of
clothing shall be done in privacy.
506
Health & Medical Care
1. Each child shall have a medical exam at
least annually. Health exams need not be repeated during the year if a child
moves from one facility or agency to another, provided the results of the exam
are available to the receiving facility or agency.
2. All medications shall be administered to
children by staff according to medical instructions.
3. The administering of all medications,
including over-the-counter, shall be logged by the person administering the
medication at the time the medication is given.
4. The medication log shall include:
a. The child's name;
b. Time and date;
c. Medication dosage; and
d. Initials of the person administering the
medication.
5. All
medications excluding Epi-pens, inhalers, and Glucagon kits shall be kept
securely locked and stored according to pharmaceutical recommendations. An
age-appropriate and developmentally capable child may be provided or have
access to non-narcotic prescriptions with an approved safety plan. Examples
include without limitation birth control, acne cream, and topical
creams.
6. Keys to medication
storage areas shall be on the premises and readily accessible by staff at all
times.
7. Currently prescribed
medications belonging to children shall be returned to the parent or custodian
upon discharge.
507
Program1. The facility shall
ensure each child receives education in accordance with the Arkansas Department
of Education.
2. The facility shall
teach each child the daily living tasks required as a part of living in a group
setting and shall assign only light chores that are age- appropriate.
3. The agency shall have a policy regarding
each child's money received and shall ensure that each child's funds are
available to that child under staff supervision for personal use.
4. The facility shall not allow a child's
outside employment, chores, or extracurricular activities to interfere with the
child's time for school, sleep, family visits, or case plan
activities.
5. The facility shall
provide each child with adequate and nutritious food, routinely eaten in the
home, cottage, or unit.
6. The
facility shall ensure that each child has sufficient sleep for their age and
physical condition.
7. The facility
shall instruct each child in good grooming and personal hygiene
habits.
8. The facility shall
ensure each child is provided with their own clothing that is clean, well
fitting, seasonal, and appropriate to age and gender, unless otherwise directed
by a physician.
9. The facility
shall ensure each child in care is provided with opportunities for regular
recreational activities and exercise.
10. The facility shall provide activities and
equipment that are age appropriate to the children in their care.
11. The facility shall monitor and time limit
the use of television, videos, computer games, and other screen time
activities.
12. The agency shall
have policy and procedure to ensure children in care are allowed to participate
in age appropriate activities away from the facility.
508
Grounds
1. The grounds of the facility shall be kept
clean and free of safety hazards.
2. The facility shall provide sufficient
outdoor recreation space for age appropriate physical activities.
3. Swimming pools shall be inspected and
approved annually by the Arkansas Department of Health.
509
Buildings
1. The building shall be a single-style
dwelling, such as a house, cottage, or duplex, in which the facility occupies
both units. Multiple units may be located on campus.
2. The building(s) shall house only children
in Residential Family Style Care or Emergency Family Style Care.
3. No facility shall be located in a shopping
center, strip mall, or other buildings used for commercial activity.
4. Unused or vacant portions of a facility
shall not be rented, leased, loaned, or otherwise occupied by any commercial or
other business entity (or private individuals) not associated with the facility
or its management.
5. All buildings
used by children or staff shall be inspected and approved annually for fire
safety by fire department officials.
6. All buildings used by children or staff
shall be inspected and approved annually for health and sanitation as required
by the Arkansas Department of Health.
7. All buildings shall comply with local
zoning ordinances and land use requirements where those exist.
8. All buildings and furnishings shall be
safe, clean, and in good repair.
9.
Licensing shall be notified of any changes to buildings that affect usage,
size, capacity, or structural changes.
10. Building usage shall be approved by
licensing prior to resident occupancy, and all required inspections, permits,
and authorizations shall be provided.
11. Any modification to buildings used by
children or an increase in capacity shall require inspection and approval by
the Fire and Health Department, if applicable.
12. All parts of buildings used as living,
sleeping, or bath areas shall have a heating, ventilating, and air conditioning
source that keeps the temperature a minimum of sixty-five degrees (65°) and
a maximum of eighty-five degrees (85°).
13. The facility shall provide a living area
that has at least thirty-five square feet (35'²) of floor space per child.
The dining area and indoor recreation area may be included in this
space.
14. The facility shall
provide a dining area.
15. The
facility shall have a kitchen.
16.
Manufactured homes, used as residential facilities, shall be tied down and
underpinned as required by the Arkansas Manufactured Home Commission. The home
shall obtain an inspection and approval from the Arkansas Manufactured Home
Commission prior to being licensed.
510
Bathrooms
1. The facility shall provide bathrooms for
the children.
2. There shall be a
separate toilet, bathtub or shower, and sink for each six (6)
children.
3. There shall be an
adequate supply of hot and cold running water.
4. The bathroom shall be clean and
sanitary.
5. There shall be an
adequate supply of soap, towels, and tissue.
511
Sleeping Arrangements
1. The facility shall provide bedrooms for
the children.
2. There shall be no
more than four (4) children per bedroom.
3. There shall be at least fifty square
(50'²) feet of floor space per child in each bedroom.
4. No child four (4) years of age or over
shall share a bedroom with a child of the opposite gender, except teenaged
parents who participate in the care of their own children.
5. Each child shall have a separate bed with
a mattress, sheets, pillow, pillowcase, and adequate cover, all in good
condition.
6. All cribs used for
children shall have current certification of compliance with Consumer Product
Safety Commission (CPSC) standards.
7. Children twelve (12) months of age and
below shall be placed flat on their backs to sleep, in accordance with American
Academy of Pediatrics guidelines, to lessen the risk of suffocation and Sudden
Infant Death Syndrome. (If a child rolls over on their own, the facility is not
required to reposition the child.) If there is a medical reason a child cannot
sleep on their back, a signed statement from the child's physician shall be in
the file stating the reason, the sleep position indicated, and the time frame
required.
8. Beds shall be
positioned to ensure all children can easily exit the room in case of
emergency.
9. No child under six
(6) years of age shall occupy a top bunk.
10. Bedding shall be changed at least weekly,
more often if needed.
11. Each
child shall have an area to store personal belongings.
12. Staff sleeping quarters shall be separate
from children's sleeping rooms.
13.
Room arrangements shall be based on characteristics of each resident to ensure
the safety of each child.
512
Safety
1. The facility shall have an operable
telephone or comparable communication system.
2. The facility shall have a continuous
supply of clean drinking water. If the water source is not a municipal system,
the source shall be approved by the Arkansas Department of Health
annually.
3. A private sewage and
septic system shall be approved initially and upon any increase in capacity by
the Arkansas Department of Health.
4. There shall be operational smoke detectors
near the cooking area, heating units, and within ten feet (10') of each
bedroom.
5. An operational chemical
fire extinguisher or other fire suppression system approved by local fire
inspection officials shall be in the cooking area of each building. Approval of
the fire suppression system shall be documented.
6. There shall be an emergency evacuation
plan diagramed and posted in each building used by children.
7. Fire drills shall be practiced with
children each month.
8. Severe
weather drills shall be practiced with children quarterly.
9. A record of drills shall be maintained,
showing date and time of day of the drill, number of participants, and length
of time required to reach safety.
10. Each child shall be instructed in
emergency procedures at admission.
11. The facility shall have proof of current
rabies vaccinations for all household pets as required by Arkansas
law.
12. No child shall be allowed
to operate dangerous machinery or equipment, including firearms without proper
adult supervision and following manufacturers' guidelines for age, safety
precautions, and safety gear.
13.
The agency shall have policy and procedure for carrying, storage and use of all
firearms located at the facility.
14. All firearms shall be maintained in a
secure, locked location or be secured by a trigger lock.
15. All ammunition shall be secured and
locked separately from firearms unless they are stored in a safe (for example,
a hand gun safe or a long gun safe).
513
Transportation
1. The facility shall have agency procured
transportation available at all times.
2. The facility vehicle(s) shall not be used
for personal use, unless other facility transportation is available.
3. Any vehicle used to transport children
shall be in safe working condition and maintained in compliance with motor
vehicle laws.
4. Any vehicle used
to transport children shall be insured.
5. Children shall be transported only by an
authorized person possessing a valid driver's license.
6. Children shall be transported according to
Arkansas law, including without limitation, use of safety belts, child safety
seats, and smoking restrictions.
514
Discharge
1. The discharge shall be planned by agency
staff.
2. The agency may discharge
a child on an emergency basis if failure to do so could result in harm to the
child, other persons, or significant property damage.
3. A child shall be discharged to the custody
of the child's parent or a person with authorization from the parent, guardian,
or a person authorized by court order to assume custody of the child.
4. The agency shall complete a discharge
statement on each child that includes a discharge date and reason for discharge
and provide a copy of it to the child's custodian.
5. Documentation of the discharge shall be
maintained in the child's record.
600
INDEPENDENT LIVING
In addition to all standards in Section 100, the
following standards shall be met: Agencies holding an Independent Living
license provide residential care while preparing the residents, sixteen (16)
years of age and older, for living independently.
601
Agency Responsibilities
1. The agency shall have written policies and
procedures specific to the program, which shall include:
a. Written rules of conduct;
b. A plan for reduced supervision;
c. Transportation for residents;
d. Outside employment for
residents;
e. Medication
management; and
f. Social
activities off campus.
602
Admission1. The
agency shall establish written criteria for admitting and excluding
children.
2. The facility shall not
admit any child for whom the facility cannot provide adequate care.
3. Each child shall have a medical exam no
more than one (1) year before admission or a documented appointment date for an
exam within one (1) week after admission.
4. Each child shall have proof of current
immunizations, a letter of exemption in accordance with the Arkansas Department
of Health, or a scheduled appointment within one (1) week after
admission.
5. The facility shall
obtain written verification of the placing agent's authority to place the child
at the time of admission.
6. The
facility shall obtain written authority for medical care for the child from the
placing agent at the time of admission.
7. The agency shall comply with the
Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children when admitting children from
outside Arkansas, if applicable.
8.
The facility shall establish that all persons referred for admission are
between sixteen (16) and eighteen (18) years of age at the time of
admission.
9. Residents may remain
in the program after reaching eighteen (18) years of age with the reason for
continued placement documented. The resident shall be discharged no later than
their twenty-first birthday.
10. At
the time of an admission, the following information shall be documented in the
child's record:
a. Name, signature, and role
or relationship of the person who relinquished the child into care;
b. A brief description of the circumstances
requiring admission;
c. The date
and time of the admission;
d. A
brief description of the child's history (if known) including behavioral
history;
e. Any known medical
history and known current health conditions;
f. All medications currently prescribed for
the child (if known and available); and
g. The child's current behavior or known
emotional condition.
11.
Intake information shall be completed on each child in care within ten (10)
working days after admission.
12.
The intake shall include:
a. Demographic
information on the child and parent(s), including name, address, birth date,
gender, race, and religious preference;
b. A factual description of the circumstances
requiring placement;
c. A brief
social history of the family;
d.
The child's current legal status or custody; and
e. Any history of previous placements outside
the family.
13. The
facility shall obtain copies of legal documents within thirty (30) days of
admission or shall document their attempts to obtain the documents. The legal
documents shall include without limitation, birth certificates, social security
cards, and court orders.
14. A
dependent juvenile child of a parent who is in the custody of the Division of
Child and Family Services (DCFS) shall be subject to all rules regarding space,
ratio, health, and safety.
15.
Facilities that have an adult program shall provide sleeping and living
arrangements to ensure separation of adults from children.
603
Eligibility Requirements
1. For a child to be eligible for placement
into the Independent Living program, the agency shall document:
a. An evaluation by the caseworker to
determine that placement in the Independent Living program does not present a
health or safety risk to the children;
b. The resident is at least sixteen (16)
years of age;
c. The resident is
actively engaged in an educational program such as high school, GED, vocational
training, or post-secondary education (including college). If the child has
completed all educational requirements according to state law, they shall be
employed or actively involved in a supervised job search program; and
d. The resident is working towards
mastering basic life skills, including without limitation:
i. Money management;
ii. Food management;
iii. Personal appearance;
iv. Birth control and personal health and
hygiene;
v. Housekeeping;
vi. Transportation;
vii. Emergency and safety skills;
viii. Knowledge of community
resources;
ix. Interpersonal
skills;
x. Legal skills;
xi. Housing;
xii. Educational planning; and
xiii. Job seeking and job maintenance skills.
604
Assessment & Case Planning
1. The agency shall assign a caseworker to
each child who is responsible for doing assessments, case planning, and
casework services.
2. A plan of
safe care shall be developed for all children with physical limitations,
medical conditions, or behaviors that are indicative of harm to self or others;
to include without limitation: arson, physical aggression, sexual aggression,
suicidal behaviors, or other selfharming tendencies. This plan shall identify
the behavior or problem and shall specify the safeguards that are to be
implemented. The agency shall document that the childcare staff are informed of
the provisions of the plan and place a copy of the plan in the child's
record.
3. An assessment of
services needed to ensure the health and welfare of the child, including
medical history and psychological history, shall be completed and included in
the case plan.
4. A case plan shall
be developed for each child within thirty (30) days after placement.
5. A case plan shall be completed and entered
into the child's record showing a goal of independence and indicating all
persons responsible for services to be provided.
6. The case plan shall contain, at the
minimum:
a. Specific needs;
b. Plan for meeting needs;
c. Special treatment issues (for example,
psychotropic medications, sexual misconduct, and neurological disorders) shall
be identified with a statement of how the special needs shall be met;
d. A plan to ensure the educational needs are
met according to applicable state law; and
e. Date of next review of the case
plan.
7. A copy of the
case plan shall be made available to the parent(s), guardian(s), court, or
other agencies involved in case plan services delivery.
8. The case plan shall be reviewed at least
semi-annually, and shall be updated to reflect progress.
605
Children's Records
1. The agency shall keep a confidential case
record for each child that includes the following:
a. Demographic information;
b. Plan of safe care, if
applicable;
c. A complete
intake;
d. Consents, including
consent for medical care and authority to place the child;
e. Interstate Compact information, if
applicable;
f. Case plans and case
plan reviews;
g. Copies of legal
documents (for example, birth certificate, social security card, court orders)
or documentation of their attempts to obtain the documents;
h. Physical exams and immunization records or
documentation of their attempts to obtain the documents;
i. Psychological reports, if
applicable;
j. Educational reports,
if applicable;
k. Disciplinary and
incident reports, if applicable;
l.
Documentation of casework services and child contact; and
m. Discharge statement.
2. Records shall be kept for five (5) years
from the date of discharge, unless otherwise specified by Arkansas law.
606
Behavior
Management1. The agency shall have a
written discipline policy that is consistently followed.
2. Discipline shall be directed toward
teaching the child acceptable behavior and selfcontrol.
3. Discipline shall be appropriate to the
child's age, development, and history.
4. The following disciplinary actions shall
not be used:
a. Denial of meals, sleep,
shelter, essential clothing, or case plan activities;
b. Denial of parental visits or regular phone
and mail contact with family. Non-disciplinary case planning issues are
accepted;
c. Lewd or obscene
language;
d. Derogatory comments
about the child, the child's family, race, or gender;
e. Restriction to a room for more than a
short period of time without periodic observation;
f. Restriction to a dark room or
area;
g. Locked
isolation;
h. Physical injury or
threat of bodily harm;
i.
Humiliating or degrading action;
j.
Extremely strenuous work or exercise; nor
k. Mechanical or chemical
restraints.
5. Physical
restraint shall be initiated only by trained staff; only to prevent injury to
the child, other people, or property; and shall not be initiated solely as a
form of discipline.
6. Physical
restraints shall be performed using minimal force and time necessary. Physical
restraint means the application of physical force without the use of any device
for the purposes of restraining the free movement of a resident's body. Briefly
holding a child without undue force in order to calm or comfort or holding a
hand to safely escort a child from one area to another, is not considered a
physical restraint.
7.
Documentation of all restraints shall be maintained and include child's name,
date, time, reason, staff involved, and measures taken prior to
restraint.
8. A child shall not be
allowed to administer discipline, except teen parents may discipline their own
children under the supervision and guidance of staff.
9. Searches of a child or a child's personal
property shall be for reasons limited to safety and security of children and
staff, in cases of suspected theft, or suspicion of possession of items which
are not permitted by agency policy.
10. Any searches requiring removal of
clothing shall be done in privacy.
607
Ratio & Supervision
1. The facility shall not exceed its total
licensed capacity.
2. There shall
be a staff to child ratio of at least one to nine (1:9) during waking hours and
at least one to twelve (1:12) during sleeping hours. Staff members' child ren
shall be counted in the ratio.
3.
If any child is under six (6) years of age, the ratio shall be at least one to
seven (1:7) at all times.
4. Only
staff who directly supervises children shall be counted in this
ratio.
5. Childcare staff shall be
responsible for providing the level of supervision, care, and treatment
necessary to ensure the safety and well-being of each child at the facility,
taking into account the child's age, individual differences and abilities,
surrounding circumstances, hazards, and risks.
6. All childcare shift-staff counted in the
staff to child ratio shall remain awake at all times. House parents are
excluded from this requirement.
7.
The facility shall maintain a daily census report to include the child's name
and room or building assignment.
608
Health & Medical Care
1. Each child shall have a medical exam at
least annually. Health exams need not be repeated during the year if a child
moves from one (1) facility or agency to another, provided the results of the
exam are available to the receiving facility or agency.
2. Staff shall supervise the administering of
all medications.
3. The
administering of all medications, including over-the-counter, shall be logged
by the person administering the medication at the time the medication is
given.
4. The medication log shall
include:
a. The child's name;
b. Time and date;
c. Medication dosage; and
d. Initials of the person administering the
medication.
5. All
medications excluding Epi-pens, inhalers, and Glucagon kits shall be kept
securely locked and stored according to pharmaceutical recommendations. An
age-appropriate and developmentally capable child may be provided, or have
access to non-narcotic prescriptions, with an approved safety plan. Examples
include without limitation, birth control, acne cream, and topical
creams.
6. Keys to medication
storage areas shall be on the premises and readily accessible by staff at all
times.
7. Currently prescribed
medications belonging to children shall be returned to the parent or custodian
upon discharge.
609
Program1. The facility shall
ensure each child receives education in accordance with the Arkansas Department
of Education.
2. The facility shall
teach each child the daily living tasks required as a part of living in a group
setting and shall assign only light chores that are age-appropriate.
3. The agency shall have a policy regarding
each child's money received and shall ensure that each child's funds are
available to that child under staff supervision for personal use.
4. The facility shall not allow a child's
outside employment, chores, or extracurricular activities to interfere with the
child's time for school, sleep, family visits, or case plan
activities.
5. The facility shall
provide each child with adequate and nutritious food.
6. The facility shall ensure that each child
has sufficient sleep for their age and physical condition
7. The facility shall instruct each child in
good grooming and personal hygiene habits.
8. The facility shall ensure each child is
provided with their own clothing that is clean, well fitting, seasonal, and
appropriate to age and gender, unless otherwise directed by a
physician.
9. The facility shall
ensure each child in care is provided with opportunities for regular
recreational activities and exercise.
10. The facility shall provide activities and
equipment that are age appropriate to the children in their care.
11. The facility shall monitor and time limit
the use of television, videos, computer games, and other screen time
activities.
610
Grounds1. The grounds of the
facility shall be kept clean and free of safety hazards.
2. The facility shall provide sufficient
outdoor recreation space for age appropriate physical activities.
3. Swimming pools shall be inspected and
approved annually by the Arkansas Department of Health.
611
Buildings
1. No facility shall be located in a shopping
center, strip mall, or other buildings used for commercial activity.
2. Unused or vacant portions of a facility
shall not be rented, leased, loaned, or otherwise occupied by any commercial or
other business entity (or private individuals) not associated with the facility
or its management.
3. All buildings
used by children or staff shall be inspected and approved annually for fire
safety by fire department officials.
4. All buildings used by children or staff
shall be inspected and approved annually for health and sanitation as required
by the Arkansas Department of Health.
5. All buildings shall comply with local
zoning ordinances and land use requirements where those exist.
6. All buildings and furnishings shall be
safe, clean, and in good repair.
7.
There shall be no more than twelve (12) children in a sleeping unit. A sleeping
unit is considered to be a group of bedrooms.
8. Sleeping units sharing the same building
shall be separated (for example, into different corridors, wings, or floors).
Sleeping units modified or newly constructed after September 1, 2016, shall
comply with this standard.
9.
Licensing shall be notified of any changes to buildings that affect usage,
size, capacity, or structural changes.
10. Building usage shall be approved by
licensing prior to resident occupancy, and all required inspections, permits,
and authorizations shall be provided.
11. Any modification to buildings used by
children, or an increase in capacity shall require inspection and approval by
the Fire and Health Department, if applicable.
12. All parts of buildings used as living,
sleeping, or bath areas shall have a heating, ventilating, and air conditioning
source that keeps the temperature a minimum of sixty-five degrees (65°) and
a maximum of eighty-five degrees (85°).
13. The facility shall provide a living area
that has at least thirty-five square feet (35'²) of floor space per child.
The dining area and indoor recreation area may be included in this
space.
14. The facility shall
provide a dining room.
15. The
facility shall have a kitchen.
16.
Manufactured homes, used as residential facilities, shall be tied down and
underpinned as required by the Arkansas Manufactured Home Commission. The home
shall obtain an inspection and approval from the Arkansas Manufactured Home
Commission prior to being licensed.
612
Bathrooms
1. The facility shall provide bathrooms for
the children.
2. There shall be a
separate toilet, bathtub or shower, and sink for each six (6)
children.
3. There shall be an
adequate supply of hot and cold running water.
4. The bathroom shall be clean and
sanitary.
5. There shall be
separate bath and toilet facilities for males and females.
6. There shall be an adequate supply of soap,
towels, and tissue.
613
Sleeping Arrangements1. The
facility shall provide bedrooms for the children.
2. There shall be no more than four (4)
children per bedroom.
3. There
shall be at least fifty square feet (50'²) of floor space per child in
each bedroom.
4. No child shall
share a bedroom with a child of the opposite gender.
5. Each child shall have a separate bed with
a mattress, sheets, pillow, pillowcase, and adequate cover, all in good
condition.
6. Beds shall be
positioned to ensure all children can easily exit the room in case of
emergency.
7. Bedding shall be
changed at least weekly, more often if needed.
8. Each child shall have an area to store
personal belongings.
9. Staff
sleeping quarters shall be separate from children's sleeping rooms.
10. Room arrangements shall be based on
characteristics of the each resident to ensure the safety of each child.
614
Safety
1. The facility shall have an operable
telephone or comparable communication system.
2. The facility shall have a continuous
supply of clean drinking water. If the water source is not a municipal system,
the source shall be approved by the Arkansas Department of Health
annually.
3. A private sewage and
septic system shall be approved initially and upon any increase in capacity by
the Arkansas Department of Health.
4. There shall be operational smoke detectors
near the cooking area, heating units, and within ten feet (10') of each
bedroom.
5. An operational chemical
fire extinguisher or other fire suppression system approved by local fire
inspection officials shall be in the cooking area of each building. Approval of
the fire suppression system shall be documented.
6. There shall be an emergency evacuation
plan diagramed and posted in each building used by children.
7. Fire drills shall be practiced with
children each month.
8. Severe
weather drills shall be practiced with children quarterly.
9. A record of drills shall be maintained,
showing date and time of day of the drill, number of participants, and length
of time required to reach safety.
10. Each child shall be instructed in
emergency procedures at admission.
11. The facility shall have proof of current
rabies vaccinations for all household pets as required by Arkansas
law.
12. No child shall be allowed
to operate dangerous machinery or equipment, including firearms without proper
adult supervision and following manufacturers' guidelines for age, safety
precautions, and safety gear.
13.
The agency shall have policy and procedure for carrying, storage and use of all
firearms located at the facility.
14. All firearms shall be maintained in a
secure, locked location or be secured by a trigger lock.
15. All ammunition shall be secured and
locked separately from firearms unless they are stored in a safe (for example,
a hand gun safe or a long gun safe).
615
Transportation
1. The facility shall have agency procured
transportation available at all times.
2. The facility vehicle(s) shall not be used
for personal use, unless other facility transportation is available.
3. Any vehicle used to transport children
shall be in safe working condition and maintained in compliance with motor
vehicle laws.
4. Any vehicle used
to transport children shall be insured.
5. Children shall be transported only by an
authorized person possessing a valid driver's license.
6. Children shall be transported according to
Arkansas law, including without limitation, use of safety belts, child safety
seats, and smoking restrictions.
616
Discharge
1. The discharge shall be planned by agency
staff.
2. The agency may discharge
a child on an emergency basis if failure to do so could result in harm to the
child, other persons, or significant property damage.
3. A child shall be discharged to the custody
of the child's parent or a person with authorization from the parent, guardian
or a person authorized by court order to assume custody of the child.
4. The agency shall complete a discharge
statement on each child that includes a discharge date and reason for discharge
and provide a copy of it to the child's custodian.
5. Documentation of the discharge shall be
maintained in the child's record.
700
INDEPENDENT LIVING FAMILY STYLE
CARE
In addition to all standards in Section 100, the
following standards shall be met: Agencies holding an Independent Living Family
Style Care license provide residential care in a homelike setting while
preparing the residents, sixteen (16) years of age and older, for living
independently.
701
Agency Responsibilities
1. The
agency shall have written policies and procedures specific to the program,
which shall include:
a. Written rules of
conduct;
b. A plan for reduced
supervision;
c. Transportation for
residents;
d. Outside employment
for residents;
e. Medication
management; and
f. Social
activities off campus.
702
Admission
1. The agency shall establish written
criteria for admitting and excluding children.
2. The facility shall not admit any child for
whom the facility cannot provide adequate care.
3. Each child shall have a medical exam no
more than one (1) year before admission or a documented appointment date for an
exam within one (1) week after admission.
4. Each child shall have proof of current
immunizations, a letter of exemption in accordance with the Arkansas Department
of Health, or a scheduled appointment within one (1) week after
admission.
5. The facility shall
obtain written verification of the placing agent's authority to place the child
at the time of admission.
6. The
facility shall obtain written authority for medical care for the child from the
placing agent at the time of admission.
7. The agency shall comply with the
Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children when admitting children from
outside Arkansas, if applicable.
8.
The facility shall establish that all persons referred for admission are
between sixteen (16) and eighteen (18) years of age at the time of
admission.
9. Residents may remain
in the program after reaching eighteen (18) years of age with the reason for
continued placement documented. The resident shall be discharged no later than
their twenty-first birthday.
10. At
the time of an admission, the following information shall be documented in the
child's record:
a. Name, signature, and role
or relationship of the person who relinquished the child into care;
b. A brief description of the circumstances
requiring admission;
c. The date
and time of the admission;
d. A
brief description of the child's history (if known) including behavioral
history;
e. Any known medical
history and known current health conditions;
f. All medications currently prescribed for
the child (if known and available); and
g. The child's current behavior or known
emotional condition.
11.
Intake information shall be completed on each child in care within ten (10)
working days after admission.
12.
The intake shall include:
a. Demographic
information on the child and parent(s), including name, address, birth date,
gender, race, and religious preference;
b. A factual description of the circumstances
requiring placement;
c. A brief
social history of the family;
d.
The child's current legal status or custody; and
e. Any history of previous placements outside
the family.
13. The
facility shall obtain copies of legal documents within thirty (30) days of
admission or shall document their attempts to obtain the documents. The legal
documents shall include without limitation, birth certificates, social security
cards, and court orders.
14. A
dependent juvenile child of a parent who is in the custody of the Division of
Child and Family Services (DCFS) shall be subject to all rules regarding space,
ratio, health and safety.
15.
Facilities that have an adult program shall provide sleeping and living
arrangements to ensure separation of adults from children.
703
Eligibility Requirements
1. For a child to be eligible for placement
into the Independent Living program, the agency shall document:
a. An evaluation by the caseworker to
determine that placement in the Independent Living program does not present a
health or safety risk to the children;
b. The resident is at least sixteen (16)
years of age;
c. The resident is
actively engaged in an educational program such as high school, GED, vocational
training, or post-secondary education (including college). If the child has
completed all educational requirements according to state law, they shall be
employed or actively involved in a supervised job search program; and
d. The resident is working towards
mastering basic life skills, including without limitation:
i. Money management;
ii. Food management;
iii. Personal appearance;
iv. Birth control and personal health and
hygiene;
v. Housekeeping;
vi. Transportation;
vii. Emergency and safety skills;
viii. Knowledge of community
resources;
ix. Interpersonal
skills;
x. Legal skills;
xi. Housing;
xii. Educational planning; and
xiii. Job seeking and job maintenance skills.
704
Assessment & Case Planning1.
The agency shall assign a caseworker to each child who is responsible for doing
assessments, case planning, and casework services.
2. A plan of safe care shall be developed for
all children with physical limitations, medical conditions, or behaviors that
are indicative of harm to self or others; to include without limitation: arson,
physical aggression, sexual aggression, suicidal behaviors, or other
selfharming tendencies. This plan shall identify the behavior or problem and
shall specify the safeguards that are to be implemented. The agency shall
document that the childcare staff are informed of the provisions of the plan
and place a copy of the plan in the child's record.
3. An assessment of services needed to ensure
the health and welfare of the child, including medical history and
psychological history, shall be completed and included in the case
plan.
4. A case plan shall be
developed for each child within thirty (30) days after placement.
5. A case plan shall be completed and entered
into the child's record showing a goal of independence and indicating all
persons responsible for services to be provided.
6. The case plan shall contain, at the
minimum:
a. Specific needs;
b. Plan for meeting needs;
c. Special treatment issues (for example,
psychotropic medications, sexual misconduct, and neurological disorders) shall
be identified with a statement of how the special needs shall be met;
d. A plan to ensure the educational needs are
met according to applicable state law; and
e. Date of next review of the case
plan.
7. A copy of the
case plan shall be made available to the parent(s), guardian(s), court, or
other agencies involved in case plan services delivery.
8. The case plan shall be reviewed at least
semi-annually and shall be updated to reflect progress.
705
Children's Records
1. The agency shall keep a confidential case
record for each child that includes the following:
a. Demographic information;
b. Plan of safe care, if
applicable;
c. A complete
intake;
d. Consents, including
consent for medical care and authority to place the child;
e. Interstate Compact information, if
applicable;
f. Case plans and case
plan reviews;
g. Copies of legal
documents (for example, birth certificate, social security card, court orders)
or documentation of their attempts to obtain the documents;
h. Physical exams and immunization records or
documentation of their attempts to obtain the documents;
i. Psychological reports, if
applicable;
j. Educational reports,
if applicable;
k. Disciplinary and
incident reports, if applicable; and
l. Documentation of casework services and
child contact;
m. Discharge
statement.
2. Records
shall be kept for five (5) years from the date of discharge, unless otherwise
specified by Arkansas law.
706
Behavior Management
1. The agency shall have a written discipline
policy that is consistently followed.
2. Discipline shall be directed toward
teaching the child acceptable behavior and selfcontrol.
3. Discipline shall be appropriate to the
child's age, development, and history.
4. The following disciplinary actions shall
not be used:
a. Denial of meals, sleep,
shelter, essential clothing, or case plan activities;
b. Denial of parental visits or regular phone
and mail contact with family. Non-disciplinary case planning issues are
accepted;
c. Lewd or obscene
language;
d. Derogatory comments
about the child, the child's family, race, or gender;
e. Restriction to a room for more than a
short period of time without periodic observation;
f. Restriction to a dark room or
area;
g. Locked
isolation;
h. Physical injury or
threat of bodily harm;
i.
Humiliating or degrading action;
j.
Extremely strenuous work or exercise; nor
k. Mechanical or chemical
restraints.
5. Physical
restraint shall be initiated only by trained staff; only to prevent injury to
the child, other people, or property; and shall not be initiated solely as a
form of discipline.
6. Physical
restraints shall be performed using minimal force and time necessary. Physical
restraint means the application of physical force without the use of any device
for the purposes of restraining the free movement of a resident's body. Briefly
holding a child without undue force in order to calm or comfort, or holding a
hand to safely escort a child from one area to another, is not considered a
physical restraint.
7.
Documentation of all restraints shall be maintained and include child's name,
date, time, reason, staff involved, and measures taken prior to
restraint.
8. A child shall not be
allowed to administer discipline, except teen parents may discipline their own
children under the supervision and guidance.
9. Searches of a child or a child's personal
property shall be for reasons limited to safety and security of children and
staff, in cases of suspected theft, or suspicion of possession of items which
are not permitted by agency policy.
10. Any searches requiring removal of
clothing shall be done in privacy.
707
Ratio & Supervision
1. The facility shall use a house parent
staffing model.
2. The facility
shall not exceed its total licensed capacity.
3. The facility shall have no more than eight
(8) children in each unit, including the houseparent's children.
4. There shall be a staff to child ratio of
at least one to eight (1:8) at all times. Staff members' children shall be
counted in the ratio.
5. Childcare
staff shall be responsible for providing the level of supervision, care, and
treatment necessary to ensure the safety and well-being of each child at the
facility, taking into account the child's age, individual differences and
abilities, surrounding circumstances, hazards, and risks.
6. The facility shall maintain a daily census
report to include the child's name and room or building assignment.
708
Health &
Medical Care1. Each child shall have a
medical exam at least annually. Health exams need not be repeated during the
year if a child moves from one (1) facility or agency to another, provided the
results of the exam are available to the receiving facility or
agency.
2. Staff shall supervise
the administering of all medications.
3. The administering of all medications,
including over-the-counter, shall be logged by the person administering the
medication at the time the medication is given.
4. The medication log shall include:
a. The child's name;
b. Time and date;
c. Medication dosage; and
d. Initials of the person administering the
medication.
5. All
medications excluding Epi-pens, inhalers, and Glucagon kits shall be kept
securely locked and stored according to pharmaceutical recommendations. An
age-appropriate and developmentally capable child may be provided or have
access to non-narcotic prescriptions with an approved safety plan. Examples
include without limitation, birth control, acne cream, and topical
creams.
6. Keys to medication
storage areas shall be on the premises and readily accessible by staff at all
times.
7. Currently prescribed
medications belonging to children shall be returned to the parent or custodian
upon discharge.
709
Program1. The facility shall
ensure each child receives education in accordance with the Arkansas Department
of Education.
2. The facility shall
teach each child the daily living tasks required as a part of living in a group
setting and shall assign only light chores that are age-appropriate.
3. The agency shall have a policy regarding
each child's money received and shall ensure that each child's funds are
available to that child under staff supervision for personal use.
4. The facility shall not allow a child's
outside employment, chores, or extracurricular activities to interfere with the
child's time for school, sleep, family visits, or case plan
activities.
5. The facility shall
provide each child with adequate and nutritious food, routinely eaten in the
home, cottage, or unit.
6. The
facility shall ensure that each child has sufficient sleep for their age and
physical condition.
7. The facility
shall instruct each child in good grooming and personal hygiene
habits.
8. The facility shall
ensure each child is provided with their own clothing that is clean, well
fitting, seasonal, and appropriate to age and gender, unless otherwise directed
by a physician.
9. The facility
shall ensure each child in care is provided with opportunities for regular
recreational activities and exercise.
10. The facility shall provide activities and
equipment that are age appropriate to the children in their care.
11. The facility shall monitor and time limit
the use of television, videos, computer games, and other screen time.
710
Grounds
1. The grounds of the facility shall be kept
clean and free of safety hazards.
2. The facility shall provide sufficient
outdoor recreation space for age appropriate physical activities.
3. Swimming pools shall be inspected and
approved annually by the Arkansas Department of Health.
711
Buildings
1. The building shall be a single-style
dwelling, such as a house, cottage, or duplex, in which the facility occupies
both units. Multiple units may be located on campus.
2. The building shall house only the
Independent Living Family Style Care license type.
3. No facility shall be located in a shopping
center, strip mall, or other buildings used for commercial activity.
4. Unused or vacant portions of a facility
shall not be rented, leased, loaned, or otherwise occupied by any commercial or
other business entity (or private individuals) not associated with the facility
or its management.
5. All buildings
used by children or staff shall be inspected and approved annually for fire
safety by fire department officials.
6. All buildings used by children or staff
shall be inspected and approved annually for health and sanitation as required
by the Arkansas Department of Health.
7. All buildings shall comply with local
zoning ordinances and land use requirements where those exist.
8. All buildings and furnishings shall be
safe, clean, and in good repair.
9.
Licensing shall be notified of any changes to buildings that affect usage,
size, capacity, or structural changes.
10. Building usage shall be approved by
licensing prior to resident occupancy, and all required inspections, permits,
and authorizations shall be provided.
11. Any modification to buildings used by
children or an increase in capacity shall require inspection and approval by
the Fire and Health Department, if applicable.
12. All parts of buildings used as living,
sleeping, or bath areas shall have a heating, ventilating, and air conditioning
source that keeps the temperature a minimum of sixty-five degrees (65°) and
a maximum of eighty-five degrees (85°).
13. The facility shall provide a living area
that has at least thirty-five square feet (35'²) of floor space per child.
The dining area and indoor recreation area may be included in this
space.
14. The facility shall
provide a dining area.
15. The
facility shall have a kitchen.
16.
Manufactured homes, used as residential facilities, shall be tied down and
underpinned as required by the Arkansas Manufactured Home Commission. The home
shall obtain an inspection and approval from the Arkansas Manufactured Home
Commission prior to being licensed.
712
Bathrooms
1. The facility shall provide bathrooms for
the children.
2. There shall be a
separate toilet, bathtub or shower, and sink for each six (6)
children.
3. There shall be an
adequate supply of hot and cold running water.
4. The bathroom shall be clean and
sanitary.
5. There shall be an
adequate supply of soap, towels, and tissue.
713
Sleeping Arrangements
1. The facility shall provide bedrooms for
the children.
2. There shall be no
more than four (4) children per bedroom.
3. There shall be at least fifty square feet
(50'²) of floor space per child in each bedroom.
4. No child shall share a bedroom with a
child of the opposite gender.
5.
Each child shall have a separate bed with a mattress, sheets, pillow,
pillowcase, and adequate cover, all in good condition.
6. Bedding shall be changed at least weekly,
more often if needed.
7. Each child
shall have an area to store personal belongings.
8. Staff sleeping quarters shall be separate
from children's sleeping rooms.
9.
Room arrangements shall be based on characteristics of each resident to ensure
the safety of each child.
714
Safety
1. The facility shall have an operable
telephone or comparable communication system.
2. The facility shall have a continuous
supply of clean drinking water. If the water source is not a municipal system,
the source shall be approved by the Arkansas Department of Health
annually.
3. A private sewage and
septic system shall be approved initially and upon any increase in capacity by
the Arkansas Department of Health.
4. There shall be operational smoke detectors
near the cooking area, heating units, and within ten feet (10') of each
bedroom.
5. An operational chemical
fire extinguisher or other fire suppression system approved by local fire
inspection officials shall be in the cooking area of each building. Approval of
the fire suppression system shall be documented.
6. There shall be an emergency evacuation
plan diagramed and posted in each building used by children.
7. Fire drills shall be practiced with
children each month.
8. Severe
weather drills shall be practiced with children quarterly.
9. A record of drills shall be maintained,
showing date and time of day of the drill, number of participants, and length
of time required to reach safety.
10. Each child shall be instructed in
emergency procedures at admission.
11. The facility shall have proof of current
rabies vaccinations for all household pets as required by Arkansas
law.
12. No child shall be allowed
to operate dangerous machinery or equipment, including firearms without proper
adult supervision and following manufacturers' guidelines for age, safety
precautions, and safety gear.
13.
The agency shall have policy and procedure for carrying, storage and use of all
firearms located at the facility.
14. All firearms shall be maintained in a
secure, locked location or be secured by a trigger lock.
15. All ammunition shall be secured and
locked separately from firearms unless they are stored in a safe (for example,
a handgun safe or a long gun safe).
715
Transportation
1. The facility shall have agency procured
transportation available at all times.
2. The facility vehicle(s) shall not be used
for personal use, unless other facility transportation is available.
3. Any vehicle used to transport children
shall be in safe working condition and maintained in compliance with motor
vehicle laws.
4. Any vehicle used
to transport children shall be insured.
5. Children shall be transported only by an
authorized person possessing a valid driver's license.
6. Children shall be transported according to
Arkansas law, including without limitation, use of safety belts, child safety
seats, and smoking restrictions.
716
Discharge
1. The discharge shall be planned by agency
staff.
2. The agency may discharge
a child on an emergency basis if failure to do so could result in harm to the
child, other persons, or significant property damage.
3. A child shall be discharged to the custody
of the child's parent or a person with authorization from the parent, guardian,
or a person authorized by court order to assume custody of the child.
4. The agency shall complete a discharge
statement on each child that includes a discharge date and reason for discharge
and provide a copy of it to the child's custodian.
5. Documentation of the discharge shall be
maintained in the child's record.
800
TRANSITIONAL LIVING
In addition to all standards in Section 100, the
following standards shall be met: Agencies holding a Transitional Living
license will provide a continuum of care for youth that have turned eighteen
(18) years of age while in a licensed or exempt program.
801
Agency Responsibilities
1. The agency's written policies and
procedures specific to the Transitional Living program shall include:
a. Written rules of conduct and potential
consequences for rule violations;
b. Transportation for residents; and c.
Medication management.
2.
Each youth in the Transitional Living program will be assigned a specific
caseworker to complete casework services according to the case plan.
3. The case plan shall be updated to reflect
current goals.
4. The case plan
shall include a budget that is developed jointly by the youth and the
caseworker.
5. The case plan shall
include written rules of conduct for the youth that include without limitation,
an agreement to abide by all federal, state, and local laws including curfew
ordinances.
6. Written policies
shall include emergency and crisis intervention procedures, including the
youth's twenty-four-hour ability to contact the agency.
7. The assigned caseworker shall visit the
youth's residence at least once per month and shall document the visit and
observations in the case record.
802
Eligibility Requirements
1. Eligibility for placement into the
Transitional Living program include:
a. An
evaluation by the caseworker or administrative staff to determine that
placement in the Transitional Living program does not present a health or
safety risk to the youth or the community;
b. The youth is at least eighteen (18) years
of age and is being transferred from a licensed or exempt program
into the Transitional Living program;
c. The resident is actively engaged in an
educational program such as high school, GED, vocational training, or
post-secondary education, (including college). When the youth has completed all
educational requirements according to state law, they shall be employed or
actively involved in a supervised job search program;
d. The resident is knowledgeable in basic
life skills, including without limitation:
i.
Money management;
ii. Food
management;
iii. Personal
appearance;
iv. Birth control and
personal health and hygiene;
v.
Housekeeping;
vi.
Transportation;
vii. Emergency and
safety skills;
viii. Knowledge of
community resources;
ix.
Interpersonal skills;
x. Legal
skills;
xi. Housing;
xii. Educational planning; and
xiii. Job seeking and job maintenance skills.
803
Living Unit - Health & Safety
1. Each living unit shall have a bathroom,
kitchen, and other standard features for living independently. Any exceptions
(for example, laundry arrangements) shall be noted in the case plan or
accompanying documentation.
2. The
living unit shall be accessible to community resources, including public
transportation, if necessary.
3.
Living units shall not be shared by different license types.
4. There shall be no more than four (4)
residents in a living unit.
5. The
living unit shall be clean, safe, and in good repair.
6. There shall be operational smoke alarms
within ten feet (10') of the kitchen and each bedroom.
7. There shall be an operational chemical
fire extinguisher readily accessible near the cooking area of the living unit
and the youth shall be instructed in its use.
8. The living unit shall have an operable
telephone, or the youth shall be provided with an alternative means of
emergency communication (for example, cell phone).
9. Any pets shall be approved by the
caseworker and shall have rabies vaccinations as required by law.
10. No firearms, dangerous weapons, or
illegal substances shall be permitted in any living unit.
11. If the participating youth is the parent
of a child living in their care, the parent shall have current CPR and First
Aid certification and an approved childcare plan.
12. Each living unit shall be occupied by
members of the same gender.
13.
Overnight guests shall have prior approval of the caseworker and cannot include
unrelated members of the opposite gender.
900
PSYCHIATRIC RESIDENTIAL TREATMENT
FACILITIES
In addition to all standards in Section 100, the
following standards shall be met: Agencies holding a Psychiatric Residential
Treatment Facilities license shall provide treatment in a non-hospital setting
to children not requiring acute care.
901
Licensing Approval &
Monitoring1. The agency shall have a
written program description that is available to residents and parents or
guardians. The following information shall be included:
a. Program philosophy and mission;
b. Services and treatment
modalities;
c. Treatment planning
procedures;
d. Behavior management
program and expectations of each child;
e. Levels and privileges (if
applicable);
f. Admission,
exclusion, and discharge criteria; and
g. Aftercare services.
2. The agency shall have written policies and
procedures for family therapy, family visitation, and therapeutic passes
subject to progress, treatment, and physician's orders.
3. The agency shall establish and post a
written list of children's rights.
4. The agency shall establish a procedure for
hearing children's grievances.
5.
At the discretion of the Licensing Unit, a multi-disciplinary team may be asked
to assist the Licensing Specialist in the initial study or during an
investigation of a licensing complaint. This team may include a licensed mental
health professional (as recognized by Arkansas Medicaid) or a person with
professional expertise in the appropriate field.
6. At the discretion of the Licensing Unit, a
multi-disciplinary team may be asked to assist the Licensing Specialist during
inspections for advisory purposes.
7. All applicants for a Psychiatric
Residential Treatment Facility licensed after March 1, 2003, shall obtain a
Permit of Approval (POA) from the Arkansas Health Services Agency prior to
submitting an application or change of status request to the Child Welfare
Agency Review Board.
8. If a
licensee is operating at less than or at the capacity licensed by the board as
of March 1, 2021, the licensee shall obtain a permit from the Health Services
Permit Agency of the Health Services Permit Commission for any increase in
capacity.
9. Any new license or
expansion of capacity by an existing licensee of the board shall require a
license and permit from the office of Long-Term Care or the Health Services
Permit Agency.
10. In addition to
any other basis provided by law or rule, the board shall terminate the license
that has not been in operation for a consecutive twelve-month period.
11. The Department of Human Services may
recommend to the board the revocation, suspension, or termination of a license
for any basis provided by law or rule, including without limitation, the
failure to be in operation or in substantial compliance for a consecutive
six-month period.
902
Admission1. The facility shall
not admit any child for whom the facility cannot provide adequate
care.
2. Each child shall have a
medical exam no more than one (1) year before admission or a documented
appointment date for an exam within one (1) week after admission.
3. Each child shall have proof of current
immunizations, a letter of exemption in accordance with the Arkansas Department
of Health, or a scheduled appointment within one (1) week after
admission.
4. The facility shall
obtain written verification of the placing agent's authority to place the child
at the time of admission.
5. The
facility shall obtain written authority for medical care for the child from the
placing agent at the time of admission.
6. The agency shall comply with the
Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children when admitting children from
outside Arkansas, if applicable.
7.
The facility shall establish that all persons referred for admission are under
eighteen (18) years of age at the time of admission.
8. Residents may remain in the program after
reaching eighteen (18) years of age with the reason for continued placement
documented. The resident shall be discharged no later than their twenty-first
birthday.
9. The facility shall not
admit a child under five (5) years of age.
10. At the time of admission, the following
information shall be documented in the child's record:
a. Name, signature, and role or relationship
of the person who relinquished the child into care;
b. A brief description of the circumstances
requiring admission;
c. The date
and time of the admission;
d. A
brief description of the child's history (if known) including behavioral
history;
e. Any known medical
history and known current health conditions;
f. All medications currently prescribed for
the child (if known and available); and
g. The child's current behavior or known
emotional condition.
11.
Intake information shall be completed on each child in care within ten (10)
working days after admission.
12.
The intake shall include:
a. Demographic
information on the child and parent(s), including name, address, birth date,
gender, race, and religious preference;
b. A factual description of the circumstances
requiring placement;
c. A brief
social history of the family;
d.
The child's current legal status or custody; and
e. Any history of previous placements outside
the family.
13. The
facility shall obtain copies of legal documents within thirty (30) days of
admission, or shall document their attempts to obtain the documents. The legal
documents shall include without limitation, birth certificates, social security
cards, and court orders.
14.
Facilities that have an adult program shall provide sleeping and living
arrangements to ensure separation of adults from children.
903
Assessment & Treatment
Planning1. An assessment of services
needed to ensure the health and welfare of each child, including medical
history and psychological history, shall be completed for each child and be
included in the treatment plan.
2.
A plan of safe care shall be developed for all children with physical
limitations, medical conditions, or behaviors that are indicative of harm to
self or others; to include without limitation: arson, physical aggression,
sexual aggression, suicidal behaviors, or other selfharming tendencies. This
plan shall identify the behavior or problem and shall specify the safeguards
that are to be implemented. The agency shall document that the childcare staff
are informed of the provisions of the plan and place a copy of the plan in the
child's record.
3. A treatment plan
shall be developed for each resident received for care.
4. The treatment plan shall be developed
within thirty (30) days after placement.
5. The child's treatment plan shall contain,
at the minimum:
a. Specific needs of the
child;
b. Plan for meeting the
child's needs;
c. Special treatment
issues (for example, psychotropic medications, sexual misconduct, and
neurological disorders) shall be identified with a statement of how the special
needs shall be met;
d. A plan to
ensure that the child's educational needs are met according to applicable state
law; and
e. Date of next review of
the treatment plan.
6. A
copy of the treatment plan shall be made available to the parent(s),
guardian(s), court, or other agencies involved in treatment plan services
delivery.
7. The child's treatment
plan shall be reviewed monthly, and shall be updated to reflect the child's
progress.
8. The agency therapist
shall visit the child monthly to monitor the progress of the plan.
904
Children's
Records1. The agency shall keep a
confidential case record for each child that includes the following:
a. Demographic information;
b. Plan of safe care, if
applicable;
c. A complete
intake;
d. Assessments;
e. Consents, including consent for medical
care and authority to place the child;
f. Interstate Compact information, if
applicable;
g. Treatment plans and
treatment plan reviews;
h. Copies
of legal documents (for example, birth certificate, social security card, court
orders) or documentation of their attempts to obtain the documents;
i. Physical exams and immunization records or
documentation of their attempts to obtain the documents;
j. Psychological reports, if
applicable;
k. Educational reports,
if applicable;
l. Disciplinary and
incident reports, if applicable;
m.
Daily behavioral observations;
n.
Nightly visual observations;
o.
Medication and physician's orders;
p. Therapy progress notes;
q. Physician notes;
r. Documentation of casework services and
child contact; and
s. Discharge
statement.
2. Records for
each child shall be kept for five (5) years from the date of discharge, unless
otherwise specified by Arkansas law.
3. The agency shall establish safeguards to
limit access to records by authorized individuals only.
905
Behavior Management
1. The agency shall have a written discipline
policy that is consistently followed.
2. Discipline shall be directed toward
teaching the child acceptable behavior and selfcontrol.
3. Discipline shall be appropriate to the
child's age, development, and history.
4. The following disciplinary actions shall
not be used:
a. Denial of meals, sleep,
shelter, essential clothing, or treatment plan activities;
b. Denial of parental visits or regular phone
and mail contact with family. Non-disciplinary treatment planning issues are
accepted;
c. Lewd or obscene
language;
d. Derogatory comments
about the child, the child's family, race, or gender;
e. Restriction to a room for more than a
short period of time without periodic observation;
f. Restriction to a dark room or
area;
g. Physical injury or threat
of bodily harm;
h. Humiliating or
degrading action; nor
i. Extremely
strenuous work or exercise.
5. A child shall not be allowed to administer
discipline.
6. Searches of a child
or a child's personal property shall be for reasons limited to safety and
security of children and staff, in cases of suspected theft, or suspicion of
possession of items which are not permitted by agency policy.
7. Any searches requiring removal of clothing
shall be done in privacy and shall be witnessed by two (2) staff of the same
gender as the child.
8. The agency
shall have a written policy governing the use of behavior control measures with
children, including physical, mechanical, or chemical restraints and seclusion
rooms.
9. Physical restraints shall
be performed using minimal force and time necessary. Physical restraint means
the application of physical force without the use of any device for the
purposes of restraining the free movement of a resident's body. Briefly holding
a child without undue force in order to calm or comfort or holding a hand to
safely escort a child from one area to another, is not considered a physical
restraint.
10. Physical restraint
shall be initiated only by staff trained by a certified instructor in a
nationally recognized curriculum, and only to prevent injury to the child,
other people or property, and shall not be initiated solely as a form of
discipline. The agency shall maintain documentation that staff is deemed
competent in physical restraint.
11. Chemical restraints shall be used only if
ordered by a physician. A chemical restraint is an emergency behavioral
intervention that uses pharmaceuticals by topical application, oral
administration, injection, or other means to modify a child's behavior.
Prescribed treatment medications that have a secondary effect on the child's
behavior are not considered chemical restraint.
12. Seclusion, mechanical, or physical
restraints shall be used only if ordered by a physician.
13. Each written order for a physical
restraint or seclusion is limited to two (2) hours for children nine (9)
through seventeen (17) years of age, or one (1) hour for children under nine
(9) years of age. A physician, clinically qualified registered nurse or other
authorized licensed independent practitioner shall conduct a face-to-face
assessment of the child within one (1) hour after the initiation of the ordered
intervention.
14. The original
order may only be renewed in accordance with these limits for up to a total of
twenty-four (24) hours. After the original order expires, a physician,
clinically qualified registered nurse, or other authorized licensed independent
practitioner shall see and assess the child before issuing a new
order.
15. Staff shall search each
child before placement in seclusion, and all potentially hazardous items shall
be removed.
16. Staff shall
continually monitor each child in seclusion or restraints and shall
document.
17. Documentation of all
restraints shall be maintained and include the child's name, date, time,
reason, staff involved, and measures taken prior to restraint.
906
Personnel1. The agency shall
have:
a. A physician currently licensed by
the Arkansas State Medical Board who has experience in the practice of
psychiatry;
b. A Director of
Nursing or Nurse Manager currently licensed in Arkansas as a Registered
Nurse;
c. A Clinical Director who
has at least a master's degree in a human services field and is currently
licensed in Arkansas as a mental health professional (as recognized by Arkansas
Medicaid);
d. One (1) or more
therapists having at least a master's degree in a human services field and is
currently licensed as a mental health professional (as recognized by Arkansas
Medicaid); and
e. A therapist
assigned to each child who is responsible for assessments, treatment planning,
and casework services.
907
Ratio & Supervision
1. The facility shall not exceed its total
licensed capacity.
2. Childcare
staff shall be responsible for providing the level of supervision, care, and
treatment necessary to ensure the safety and well-being of each child at the
facility, taking into account the child's age, individual differences and
abilities, surrounding circumstances, hazards, and risks.
3. Staff to child ratio shall be at least one
to six (1:6) during waking hours and one to eight (1:8) during sleeping
hours.
4. Only staff who directly
supervise children shall be counted in this ratio.
5. All childcare shift staff counted in the
staff child ratio shall remain awake at all times.
6. Supervision during sleeping hours shall
include a visual check on each child at least every thirty (30)
minutes.
7. The visual checks shall
be documented.
8. The facility
shall maintain a daily census report to include the child's name and room or
building assignment.
908
Health & Medical Care
1. The
agency shall have a written policy for conducting health and related exams and
assessments upon admission.
2. Each
child shall have a medical exam at least annually. Health exams need not be
repeated during the year if a child moves from one (1) facility or agency to
another, provided the results of the exam are available to the receiving
facility or agency.
3. The agency
shall have a written plan for prescribing, receiving, storing, administering,
and accounting for all medications, including medications in the child's
possession at the time of admission.
4. All medications shall be kept securely
locked and stored according to pharmaceutical recommendations.
5. Keys to medication storage areas shall be
on the premises and readily accessible by staff at all times.
6. All controlled substances shall be kept
under double lock.
7. Medication
shall be administered in accordance with state and federal laws.
8. The administering of all medications,
including over-the-counter, shall be logged by the person administering the
medication at the time the medication is given.
9. The medication log shall include:
a. The child's name;
b. Time and date;
c. Medication dosage; and
d. Initials of the person administering the
medication.
10. Disposal
of unused medications and contaminated medical supplies shall follow
established medical procedures.
11.
Any stimulant or psychotropic medicine requiring intra-muscular injection shall
be administered only by a physician, registered nurse, or LPN.
12. The agency shall require medical
representation at major treatment staffing on each child.
13. When psychotropic medications are
prescribed by a physician, they shall be used in conjunction with other
treatment interventions.
909
Program
1. The facility shall ensure each child
receives education in accordance with applicable state law.
2. The facility shall teach each child the
daily living tasks required as a part of living in a group setting and shall
assign only light chores that are age appropriate.
3. The agency shall have a policy regarding
each child's money received and shall ensure that each child's funds are
available to that child under staff supervision for personal use.
4. The facility shall provide each child with
adequate and nutritious food.
5.
The facility shall ensure that each child has sufficient sleep for their age
and physical condition.
6. The
facility shall instruct each child in good grooming and personal hygiene
habits.
7. The facility shall
ensure each child is provided with their own clothing that is clean, well
fitting, seasonal, and appropriate to age and gender, unless otherwise directed
by a physician.
8. The facility
shall ensure each child in care is provided with opportunities for regular
recreational activities and exercise.
9. The facility shall provide activities and
equipment that are age appropriate to the children in their care.
10. The facility shall monitor and time limit
the use of television, videos, computer games, and other screen time
activities.
910
Grounds1. The grounds of the
facility shall be kept clean and free of safety hazards.
2. The facility shall provide sufficient
outdoor recreation space for age appropriate physical activities
3. Swimming pools shall be inspected and
approved annually by the Arkansas Department of Health.
911
Buildings
1. No facility shall be located in a shopping
center, strip mall, or other buildings used for commercial activity.
2. Unused or vacant portions of a facility
shall not be rented, leased, loaned, or otherwise occupied by any commercial or
other business entity (or private individuals) not associated with the facility
or its management.
3. All buildings
used by children or staff shall be inspected and approved annually for fire
safety by fire department officials.
4. All buildings used by children or staff
shall be inspected and approved annually for health and sanitation as required
by the Arkansas Department of Health.
5. All buildings shall comply with local
zoning ordinances and land use requirements where those exist.
6. All buildings and furnishings shall be
safe, clean, and in good repair.
7.
Licensing shall be notified of any changes to buildings that affect usage,
size, capacity, or structural changes.
8. Building usage shall be approved by
licensing prior to resident occupancy, and all required inspections, permits,
and authorizations shall be provided.
9. Any modification to buildings used by
children, or an increase in capacity shall require inspection and approval by
the Fire and Health Department, if applicable.
10. All parts of buildings used as living,
sleeping, or bath areas shall have a heating, ventilating, and air conditioning
source that keeps the temperature a minimum of sixty-five degrees (65°) and
a maximum of eighty-five degrees (85°).
11. The facility shall provide a living area
that has at least thirty-five square feet (35'²) of floor space per child.
The dining area and indoor recreation area may be included in this
space.
12. The facility shall
provide a dining room.
13. The
facility shall have a kitchen.
14.
Seclusion rooms shall meet the following criteria:
a. At least thirty-five square feet
(35'²) of floor space;
b.
Sufficient lighting with a shatterproof, recessed light fixture beyond reach of
the child;
c. A door able to be
opened from the outside at all times without use of a key or a removable
locking device;
d. A door with a
shatterproof observation window; and
e. Located reasonably near to the staff work
area.
15. Areas used by
children shall be designed, constructed, and furnished to reduce risk of
suicide and assault including without limitation:
a. Light fixtures that are recessed or abut
to the ceiling;
b. No wooden or
wire hangers;
c. Non-breakable
windows and mirrors;
d. No loose
wires, cords, chains, or ropes;
e.
Sturdy, well-constructed furniture that cannot be broken for use as a weapon or
means of self-inflicted injuries; and
f. Children's personal items that contain cords, pull-ties,
strings, or other parts that could be used to inflict self-injury shall not be
left in the child's room unless the dangerous component has been
removed.
16. Manufactured
homes, used as residential facilities, shall be tied down and underpinned as
required by the Arkansas Manufactured Home Commission. The home shall obtain an
inspection and approval from the Arkansas Manufactured Home Commission prior to
being licensed.
912
Bathrooms1. The facility shall
provide bathrooms for the children.
2. There shall be a separate toilet, bathtub
or shower, and sink for each six (6) children.
3. There shall be an adequate supply of hot
and cold running water.
4. The
bathroom shall be clean and sanitary.
5. There shall be separate bath and toilet
facilities for males and females.
6. There shall be an adequate supply of soap,
towels, and tissue.
913
Sleeping Arrangements1. The
facility shall provide bedrooms for the children
2. There shall be no more than four (4)
children per bedroom.
3. There
shall be at least fifty square feet (50'²) of floor space per child in
each bedroom.
4. No child shall
share a bedroom with a child of the opposite gender.
5. Each child shall have a separate bed with
a mattress, sheets, pillow, pillowcase, and adequate cover, all in good
condition.
6. No child under six
(6) years of age shall occupy a top bunk.
7. Bedding shall be changed at least weekly,
more often if needed.
8. Each child
shall have an area to store personal belongings.
9. Room arrangements shall be based on
characteristics of each resident to ensure the safety of each child.
10. Beds shall be positioned to ensure all
children can easily exit the room in case of emergency.
11. Beds shall be positioned to minimize
opportunity for physical contact between children.
914
Safety
1. The facility shall have an operable
telephone or comparable communication system.
2. The facility shall have a continuous
supply of clean drinking water. If the water source is not a municipal system,
the source shall be approved by the Arkansas Department of Health
annually.
3. A private sewage and
septic system shall be approved initially and upon any increase in capacity by
the Arkansas Department of Health.
4. There shall be operational smoke detectors
near the cooking area, heating units, and within ten feet (10') of each
bedroom.
5. An operational chemical
fire extinguisher or other fire suppression system approved by local fire
inspection officials shall be in the cooking area of each building. Approval of
the fire suppression system shall be documented.
6. There shall be an emergency evacuation
plan diagramed and posted in each building used by children.
7. Fire drills shall be practiced with
children each month.
8. Severe
weather drills shall be practiced with children quarterly.
9. A record of drills shall be maintained,
showing date and time of day of the drill, number of participants, and length
of time required to reach safety.
10. Each child shall be instructed in
emergency procedures at admission.
11. The facility shall have proof of current
rabies vaccinations for all household pets as required by Arkansas
law.
12. No child shall be allowed
to operate dangerous machinery or equipment, including firearms without proper
adult supervision and following manufacturers' guidelines for age, safety
precautions, and safety gear.
13.
The agency shall have policy and procedure for carrying, storage and use of all
firearms located at the facility,
14. All firearms shall be maintained in a
secure, locked location or be secured by a trigger lock.
15. All ammunition shall be secured and
locked separately from firearms unless they are stored in a safe (for example,
a handgun safe or a long gun safe).
915
Transportation
1. The facility shall have agency procured
transportation available at all times.
2. The facility vehicle(s) shall not be used
for personal use, unless other facility transportation is available.
3. Any vehicle used to transport children
shall be in safe working condition and maintained in compliance with motor
vehicle laws.
4. Any vehicle used
to transport children shall be insured.
5. Children shall be transported only by an
authorized person possessing a valid driver's license.
6. Children shall be transported according to
Arkansas law, including without limitation, use of safety belts, child safety
seats, and smoking restrictions.
916
Discharge
1. The discharge shall be planned by agency
staff.
2. The agency may discharge
a child on an emergency basis if failure to do so could result in harm to the
child, other persons, or significant property damage.
3. A child shall be discharged to the custody
of the child's parent or a person with authorization from the parent, guardian,
or a person authorized by court order to assume custody of the child.
4. The agency shall complete a discharge
statement on each child that includes a discharge date and reason for discharge
and provide a copy of it to the child's custodian.
5. Documentation of the discharge shall be
maintained in the child's record.
1000
SEXUAL REHABILITATIVE
PROGRAMS
In addition to all standards in Section 100, the
following standards shall be met:
1001
Licensing Approval &
Monitoring
1. At the discretion of the
Licensing Unit, a multi-disciplinary team may be asked to assist the Licensing
Specialist in the initial study or during an investigation of a licensing
complaint. This team may include a licensed mental health professional (as
recognized by Arkansas Medicaid) or a person with professional expertise in the
appropriate field.
2. At the
discretion of the Licensing Unit, a multi-disciplinary team may be asked to
assist the Licensing Specialist during inspections for advisory purposes.
1002
Admission
1. The agency shall
have written policies regarding description of the target population and
admission, exclusion, and discharge criteria.
2. The facility shall not admit any child for
whom the facility cannot provide adequate care.
3. In order to be admitted to the program,
one of the following shall be met:
a. The
child has committed a sexual offense that has been found true or exempt by an
official investigation conducted by the Department of Human Services or the
Arkansas State Police;
b. The child
has committed an offense involving the use of power, control, threat, coercion,
or intimidation;
c. The child has
committed an offense in which there was at least a three-year age difference
between the offender and the victim; or
d. The child has a documented pattern of
deviant sexualized behavior, sexual misconduct, or sexually maladaptive
behaviors as indicated by the psychosexual assessment.
4. Children admitted to the program shall
have the cognitive ability to benefit from the treatment program.
5. Each child shall have a medical exam no
more than one (1) year before admission, or a documented appointment date for
an exam within one (1) week after admission.
6. Each child shall have proof of current
immunizations, a letter of exemption in accordance with the Arkansas Department
of Health, or a scheduled appointment within one (1) week after
admission.
7. The facility shall
obtain written verification of the placing agent's authority to place the child
at the time of admission.
8. The
facility shall obtain written authority for medical care for the child from the
placing agent at the time of admission.
9. The agency shall comply with the
Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children when admitting children from
outside Arkansas, if applicable.
10. The facility shall establish that all
persons referred for admission are under eighteen (18) years of age at the time
of admission.
11. Residents may
remain in the program after reaching eighteen (18) years of age with the reason
for continued placement documented. The resident shall be discharged no later
than their twenty-first birthday.
12. The facility shall not admit a child
under five (5) years of age.
13. At
the time of admission, the following information shall be documented in the
child's record:
a. Name, signature, and role
or relationship of the person who relinquished the child into care;
b. A brief description of the circumstances
requiring admission;
c. The date
and time of the admission;
d. A
brief description of the child's history (if known) including behavioral
history;
e. Any known medical
history and known current health conditions;
f. All medications currently prescribed for
the child (if known and available); and
g. The child's current behavior or known
emotional condition.
14.
The agency shall obtain copies of legal documents within thirty (30) days of
admission. The legal documents shall include without limitation, birth
certificates, social security cards, and court orders.
15. Facilities that have an adult program
shall provide sleeping and living arrangements to ensure separation of adults
from children.
1003
Assessment & Treatment Planning
1. A plan of safe care shall be developed for
all children with physical limitations, medical conditions, or behaviors that
are indicative of harm to self or others; to include without limitation: arson,
physical aggression, sexual aggression, suicidal behaviors, or other
selfharming tendencies. This plan shall identify the behavior or problem and
shall specify the safeguards that are to be implemented. The agency shall
document that the childcare staff are informed of the provisions of the plan
and place a copy of the plan in the child's record.
2. The agency shall have a written policy
describing the risk levels it will accept in children with sexually maladaptive
behaviors who are being considered for admission. The written policy shall also
describe the therapeutic interventions it will utilize for each risk
level.
3. The agency shall assign a
caseworker to each child who is responsible for doing assessments, treatment
planning, and casework services.
4.
Intake information shall be completed on each child in care within ten (10)
working days after admission.
5.
The intake shall include:
a. Demographic
information on the child and parent(s), including name, address, birth date,
gender, race, and religious preference;
b. A factual description of the circumstances
requiring placement;
c. A brief
social history of the family;
d.
The child's current legal status or custody;
e. Any history of previous placements outside
the family;
f. Description of the
offense or sexually maladaptive behavior, including police reports and victim
statements (if available);
g.
Psychosexual assessment (if available); and
h. Discharge summary from previous sexual
rehabilitative-specific treatment (if applicable and
available).
6. A
psychosexual evaluation shall be conducted by a licensed mental health
professional (as recognized by Arkansas Medicaid) that is a member of the
Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers or has forty (40) hours of
sexual rehabilitative treatment training. The evaluation shall be completed
within the past twelve (12) months or within seven (7) days following admission
of the child.
7. Each child shall
be evaluated for learning disabilities and language disorders within the past
eighteen (18) months. If a child is admitted without an evaluation, the
evaluation shall be completed within thirty (30) days of admission.
8. An assessment of services needed to ensure
the health and welfare of the child, including medical history and
psychological history, shall be completed for each child and included in the
treatment plan.
9. The agency shall
develop a treatment plan for each child that includes tasks appropriate to the
needs of the child as identified in the intake, psychosexual assessment and (if
applicable) the psychological evaluation.
10. The treatment plan shall be developed
within thirty (30) days after placement.
11. The child's treatment plan shall contain,
at the minimum:
a. A diagnosis related to
their sexually maladaptive behavior;
b. Specific needs of the child;
c. Plan for meeting child's needs;
d. Special treatment issues (for example,
psychotropic medications, sexual misconduct, and neurological disorders) shall
be identified with a statement of how the special needs shall be met;
e. A plan to ensure that the child's
educational needs are met according to applicable state law; and
f. Date of next review of the treatment
plan.
12. If treatment
services are contracted, there shall be evidence of participation by the
contracted therapist in treatment planning reviews and individualized program
implementation.
13. The child's
treatment plan shall be reviewed quarterly and shall be updated to reflect the
child's progress.
14. A copy of the
treatment plan shall be made available to the parent(s), guardian(s), court, or
other agencies involved in treatment plan services delivery.
15. An agency caseworker shall visit the
child monthly to monitor the progress of the treatment plan.
1004
Children's
Records1. The agency shall keep a
confidential case record for each child that includes the following:
a. Demographic information;
b. Plan of safe care, if
applicable;
c. A complete
intake;
d. Consents, including
consent for medical care and authority to place the child;
e. Interstate Compact information, if
applicable;
f. Treatment plans and
treatment plan reviews;
g. Copies
of legal documents (for example, birth certificate, social security card, court
orders) or documentation of their attempts to obtain the documents;
h. Physical exams and immunization records or
documentation of their attempts to obtain the documents;
i. Psychological reports, if
applicable;
j. Educational reports,
if applicable;
k. Disciplinary and
incident reports, if applicable;
l.
Documentation of casework services and child contact; and
m. Discharge statement.
2. Records for each child shall be kept for
five (5) years from the date of discharge, unless otherwise specified by
Arkansas law.
1005
Behavior Management
1. The
agency shall have a written discipline policy that is consistently
followed.
2. Discipline shall be
directed toward teaching the child acceptable behavior and
selfcontrol.
3. Discipline shall be
appropriate to the child's age, development, and history.
4. The following disciplinary actions shall
not be used:
a. Denial of meals, sleep,
shelter, essential clothing, or treatment plan activities;
b. Denial of parental visits or regular phone
and mail contact with family. Non-disciplinary treatment planning issues are
accepted;
c. Lewd or obscene
language;
d. Derogatory comments
about the child, the child's family, race, or gender;
e. Restriction to a room for more than a
short period of time without periodic observation;
f. Restriction to a dark room or
area;
g. Locked isolation
(psychiatric facilities excepted);
h. Physical injury or threat of bodily
harm;
i. Humiliating or degrading
action;
j. Extremely strenuous work
or exercise; nor
k. Mechanical or
chemical restraints (psychiatric facilities excepted).
5. Physical restraint shall be initiated only
by trained staff; only to prevent injury to the child, other people, or
property; and shall not be initiated solely as a form of discipline.
6. Physical restraints shall be performed
using minimal force and time necessary. Physical restraint means the
application of physical force without the use of any device for the purposes of
restraining the free movement of a resident's body. Briefly holding a child
without undue force in order to calm or comfort or holding a hand to safely
escort a child from one area to another, is not considered a physical
restraint.
7. Documentation of all
restraints shall be maintained and include child's name, date, time, reason,
staff involved, and measures taken prior to restraint.
8. A child shall not be allowed to administer
discipline.
9. Searches of a child
or a child's personal property shall be for reasons limited to safety and
security of children and staff, in cases of suspected theft, or suspicion of
possession of items which are not permitted by agency policy.
10. Any searches requiring removal of
clothing shall be done in privacy and shall be witnessed by two (2) staff of
the same gender as the child.
1006
Personnel
1. The agency shall have:
a. A Clinical Director who has:
i. At least a master's degree in a human
services field;
ii. A current
license in Arkansas as a mental health professional (as recognized by Arkansas
Medicaid);
iii. No less than forty
(40) hours of sexual rehabilitative treatment training; and
iv. A minimum of two (2) years of sexual
rehabilitative treatment experience. Certification as a sexual rehabilitative
treatment trainer may be substituted for the required experience.
b. A Therapist who is a licensed
mental health professional (as recognized by Arkansas Medicaid) and has at
least one (1) of the following:
i. At least
two (2) years of experience in a sexual rehabilitative treatment program and at
least forty (40) hours of sexual rehabilitative treatment training;
ii. At least three (3) years of experience in
sexual rehabilitative specific treatment;
iii. A current membership in or is actively
working toward fulfilling the requirements for membership in the Association
for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers.
1007
Ratio & Supervision
1. The facility shall not exceed its total
licensed capacity.
2. Childcare
staff shall be responsible for providing the level of supervision, care, and
treatment necessary to ensure the safety and well-being of each child at the
facility, taking into account the child's age, individual differences and
abilities, surrounding circumstances, hazards, and risks.
3. The agency shall have a written plan
providing for appropriate supervision of children during activities away from
the facility.
4. The staff to child
ratio shall be at least one to six (1:6) during waking hours and at least one
to eight (1:8) during sleeping hours.
5. Twenty-four-hour awake supervision is
required
6. Only staff who directly
supervise children shall be counted in this ratio.
7. The facility shall maintain a daily census
report to include the child's name and room or building assignment.
8. The agency shall have written policies
governing the supervision and monitoring of children in the buildings, on the
grounds, and in the community, including direct visual or auditory monitoring
of moderate or high-risk children (based on 1003.2). Policy shall include
appropriate grouping of children according to chronological age or cognitive
development.
9. If cameras, heat
sensors, or motion detectors are used as part of the safety plan, they shall be
operational and placed for effective monitoring according to the
plan.
10. The agency shall have a
written safety plan to protect children in the program and to ensure public
safety.
1008
Health
& Medical Care1. Each child shall
have a medical exam at least annually. Health exams need not be repeated during
the year if a child moves from one (1) facility or agency to another, provided
the results of the exam are available to the receiving facility or
agency.
2. All medications shall be
administered to children by staff according to medical instructions.
3. The administering of all medications,
including over-the-counter, shall be logged by the person administering the
medication at the time the medication is given.
4. The medication log shall include:
a. The child's name;
b. Time and date;
c. Medication dosage; and
d. Initials of the person administering the
medication.
5. All
medications excluding Epi-pens, inhalers, and Glucagon kits shall be kept
securely locked and stored according to pharmaceutical recommendations. An
age-appropriate and developmentally capable child may be provided or have
access to non-narcotic prescriptions with an approved safety plan. Examples
include without limitation, birth control, acne cream, and topical
creams.
6. Keys to medication
storage areas shall be on the premises and readily accessible by staff at all
times.
7. Currently prescribed
medications belonging to children shall be returned to the parent or custodian
upon discharge.
1009
Program
1. The facility shall
ensure each child receives education in accordance with applicable state
law.
2. The facility shall teach
each child the daily living tasks required as a part of living in a group
setting and shall assign only light chores that are age-appropriate.
3. The agency shall have a policy regarding
each child's money received and shall ensure that each child's funds are
available to that child under staff supervision for personal use.
4. The facility shall not allow a child's
outside employment, chores, or extracurricular activities to interfere with the
child's time for school, sleep, family visits, or treatment plan
activities.
5. The facility shall
provide each child with adequate and nutritious food.
6. The facility shall ensure that each child
has sufficient sleep for their age and physical condition.
7. The facility shall instruct each child in
good grooming and personal hygiene habits.
8. The facility shall ensure each child is
provided with their own clothing that is clean, well fitting, seasonal, and
appropriate to age and gender, unless otherwise directed by a
physician.
9. The facility shall
ensure each child in care is provided with opportunities for regular
recreational activities and exercise.
10. The facility shall provide activities and
equipment that are age appropriate to the children in their care.
11. The facility shall monitor and time limit
the use of television, videos, computer games, and other screen time
activities.
1010
Grounds1. The grounds of the
facility shall be kept clean and free of safety hazards.
2. The facility shall provide sufficient
outdoor recreation space for age appropriate physical activities.
3. Swimming pools shall be inspected and
approved annually by the Arkansas Department of Health.
1011
Buildings
1. A sexual rehabilitative program shall not
be located within one thousand feet (1,000') of an elementary school, child
care center, or child care family home.
2. No facility shall be located in a shopping
center, strip mall, or other buildings used for commercial activity.
3. Unused or vacant portions of a facility
shall not be rented, leased, loaned, or otherwise occupied by any commercial or
other business entity (or private individuals) not associated with the facility
or its management.
4. All buildings
used by children or staff shall be inspected and approved annually for fire
safety by fire department officials.
5. All buildings used by children or staff
shall be inspected and approved annually for health and sanitation as required
by the Arkansas Department of Health.
6. All buildings shall comply with local
zoning ordinances and land use requirements where those exist.
7. All buildings and furnishings shall be
safe, clean, and in good repair.
8.
There shall be no more than twelve (12) children in a sleeping unit. A sleeping
unit is considered to be a group of bedrooms (psychiatric facilities
excepted).
9. Sleeping units
sharing the same building shall be separated (for example, into different
corridors, wings, or floors). Sleeping units modified or newly constructed
after September 1, 2016, shall comply with this standard.
10. Licensing shall be notified of any
changes to buildings that affect usage, size, capacity, or structural
changes.
11. Building usage shall
be approved by licensing prior to resident occupancy, and all required
inspections, permits, and authorizations shall be provided.
12. Any modification to buildings used by
children, or an increase in capacity shall require inspection and approval by
the Fire and Health Department, if applicable.
13. All parts of buildings used as living,
sleeping, or bath areas shall have a heating, ventilating, and air conditioning
source that keeps the temperature a minimum of sixty-five degrees (65°) and
a maximum of eighty-five degrees (85°).
14. The facility shall provide a living area
that has at least thirty-five square feet (35'²) of floor space per child.
The dining area and indoor recreation area may be included in this
space.
15. The facility shall
provide a dining room.
16. The
facility shall have a kitchen.
17.
Manufactured homes, used as residential facilities, shall be tied down and
underpinned as required by the Arkansas Manufactured Home Commission. The home
shall obtain an inspection and approval from the Arkansas Manufactured Home
Commission prior to being licensed.
1012
Bathrooms
1. The facility shall provide bathrooms for
the children.
2. There shall be a
separate toilet, bathtub or shower, and sink for each six (6)
children.
3. There shall be an
adequate supply of hot and cold running water.
4. The bathroom shall be clean and
sanitary.
5. There shall be
separate bath and toilet facilities for males and females.
6. There shall be an adequate supply of soap,
towels, and tissue.
1013
Sleeping Arrangements1. The
facility shall provide bedrooms for the children.
2. Children shall be placed in individual
bedrooms unless each child's treatment plan specifically approves sharing a
bedroom. If children are approved to share a bedroom, there shall be three (3)
or four (4) children in the room so as to limit the ability to keep secret any
improper physical contact. When three (3) or four (4) children share a bedroom,
the agency shall have a clearly defined supervision plan to ensure the safety
of each child.
3. There shall be no
more than four (4) children per bedroom.
4. There shall be at least fifty square feet
(50'²) of floor space per child in each bedroom.
5. Males and females shall not share a
bedroom
6. Each child shall have a
separate bed with a mattress, sheets, pillow, pillowcase, and adequate cover,
all in good condition.
7. No child
under six (6) years of age shall occupy a top bunk.
8. Bedding shall be changed at least weekly,
more often if needed.
9. Each child
shall have an area to store personal belongings.
10. Room arrangements shall be based on
characteristics of each resident to ensure the safety of each child.
11. Beds shall be positioned to minimize
opportunity for physical contact between children.
12. Beds shall be positioned to ensure all
children can easily exit the room in case of emergency.
13. Males and females shall not share an
unsupervised sleeping unit.
1014
Safety
1. The facility shall have an operable
telephone or comparable communication system.
2. The facility shall have a continuous
supply of clean drinking water. If the water source is not a municipal system,
the source shall be approved by the Arkansas Department of Health
annually.
3. A private sewage and
septic system shall be approved initially and upon any increase in capacity by
the Arkansas Department of Health.
4. There shall be operational smoke detectors
near the cooking area, heating units, and within ten feet (10') of each
bedroom.
5. An operational chemical
fire extinguisher or other fire suppression system approved by local fire
inspection officials shall be in the cooking area of each building. Approval of
the fire suppression system shall be documented.
6. There shall be an emergency evacuation
plan diagramed and posted in each building used by children.
7. Fire drills shall be practiced with
children each month.
8. Severe
weather drills shall be practiced with children quarterly.
9. A record of drills shall be maintained,
showing date and time of day of the drill, number of participants, and length
of time required to reach safety.
10. Each child shall be instructed in
emergency procedures at admission.
11. The facility shall have proof of current
rabies vaccinations for all household pets as required by Arkansas
law.
12. No child shall be allowed
to operate dangerous machinery or equipment, including firearms without proper
adult supervision and following manufacturers' guidelines for age, safety
precautions, and safety gear.
13.
The agency shall have policy and procedure for carrying, storage and use of all
firearms located at the facility,
14. All firearms shall be maintained in a
secure, locked location or be secured by a trigger lock.
15. All ammunition shall be secured and
locked separately from firearms unless they are stored in a safe (for example,
a hand gun safe or a long gun safe).
1015
Transportation
1. The facility shall have agency procured
transportation available at all times.
2. The facility vehicle(s) shall not be used
for personal use, unless other facility transportation is available.
3. Any vehicle used to transport children
shall be in safe working condition and maintained in compliance with motor
vehicle laws.
4. Any vehicle used
to transport children shall be insured.
5. Children shall be transported only by an
authorized person possessing a valid driver's license.
6. Children shall be transported according to
Arkansas law, including without limitation, use of safety belts, child safety
seats, and smoking restrictions.
1016
Discharge
1. The discharge shall be planned by agency
staff.
2. The agency may discharge
a child on an emergency basis if failure to do so could result in harm to the
child, other persons, or significant property damage.
3. A child shall be discharged to the custody
of the child's parent or a person with authorization from the parent, guardian,
or a person authorized by court order to assume custody of the child.
4. The agency shall complete a discharge
statement on each child that includes a discharge date and reason for discharge
and provide a copy of it to the child's custodian.
5. Documentation of the discharge shall be
maintained in the child's record.
Appendix A: DEFINITIONS
1. "Adoption agency" means a child placement
agency which places, plans for, or assists in the placement of an unrelated
minor in a household of one (1) or more persons which has been approved to
accept a child for adoption.
2. "Adoptive home" means a household of one (1) or
more persons that has been approved by a licensed child placement agency to
accept a child for adoption.
3. "Adverse action" means any petition by the
Department of Human Services before the Child Welfare Agency Review Board to
take any of the following actions against a licensee or applicant for a
license:
a. Revocation of license;
b. Suspension of license;
c. Conversion of license from regular or provisional status to
probationary status;
d. Imposition of a civil penalty;
e. Denial of application; or
f. Reduction of licensed capacity.
4. "Alternative compliance" means approval from
the Child Welfare Agency Review Board to allow a licensee to deviate from the
letter of a rule, provided that the licensee has demonstrated how an alternate
plan of compliance will meet or exceed the intent of the rule.
5. "Board" means the Child Welfare Agency Review
Board.
6. "Boarding school" means an institution that is
operated solely for educational purposes and that meets each of the following
criteria:
a. The institution is in operation for a period of time not to
exceed the minimum number of weeks of classroom instruction required of schools
accredited by the Department of Education;
b. The children in residence must customarily return to their
family homes or legal guardians during school breaks and must not be in
residence year round, except that this provision does not apply to students
from foreign countries; and
c. The parents of children placed in the institution retain
custody, planning, and financial responsibility for the children.
7. "Child" means a person who is:
a. From birth to eighteen (18) years of age; or
b. Adjudicated dependent-neglected, dependent, or a member of
a family in need of services before eighteen (18) years of age and for whom the
juvenile division of a circuit court retains jurisdiction under the Arkansas
Juvenile Code of 1989, § 9-27301 et seq.
8. "Child placement agency" means a child welfare
agency, not including any person licensed to practice medicine or law in the
State of Arkansas, that engages in any of the following activities:
a. Places a child in a foster home, adoptive home, or any type
of facility licensed or exempted by this subchapter;
b. Plans for the placement of a child into a foster home,
adoptive home, or any type of facility licensed or exempted by this
subchapter;
c. Assists the placement of a child in a foster home, adoptive
home, or any type of facility licensed or exempted by this subchapter;
or
d. Places, plans, or assists in the placement of a child victim
of human trafficking in a home or any type of shelter or facility.
9. "Child welfare agency" means any person,
corporation, partnership, voluntary association, or other entity or
identifiable group of entities having a coordinated ownership of controlling
interest, whether established for profit or otherwise, that engages in any of
the following activities:
a. Receives a total number of six (6) or more unrelated minors
for care on a twenty-four-hour basis for the purpose of ensuring the minors
receive care, training, education, custody, or supervision, whether or not
there are six (6) or more children cared for at any single physical
location;
b. Places any unrelated minor for care on a twenty-four-hour
basis with persons other than themselves;
c. Plans for or assists in the placements described in
subdivision (8)(B) of this section; or
d. Places, plans, or assists in the placement of a child victim
of human trafficking in a home or any type of shelter or facility.
10. "Church-related exemption" means:
a. Any church or group of churches exempt from the state income
tax levied by § 2651-101 et seq. when operating a child
welfare agency shall be exempt from obtaining a license to operate the facility
by the receipt by the Child Welfare Agency Review Board of written request
therefore, together with the written verifications;
b. A written request shall be made by those churches desiring
exemption to the board, which is mandated under the authority of this
subchapter to license all child welfare agencies;
c. In order to maintain an exempt status, the child welfare
agency shall state every two (2) years in written form signed by the persons in
charge that the agency has met the fire, safety, and health inspections and is
in substantial compliance with published standards that similar nonexempt child
welfare agencies are required to meet; and d. Visits to review and advise
exempt agencies shall be made as deemed necessary by the board to verify and
maintain substantial compliance with all published standards for nonexempt
agencies.
11. "Emergency childcare" means any residential
childcare facility that provides care to children on a time-limited basis, not
to exceed ninety (90) days.
12. "Emergency Family Style Care" means any child
welfare agency that provides twenty-four-hour custodial care, in a home-like
setting, for six (6) or more unrelated children or a child victim of human
trafficking on an emergency basis, not to exceed ninety (90) days.
13. "Emergency Residential Child Care Facility"
means any child welfare agency that provides twenty-four-hour custodial care
for six (6) or more unrelated children or a child victim of human trafficking
on an emergency basis, not to exceed ninety (90) days. Any child admitted as an
emergency placement shall be designated as such and shall be discharged within
ninety (90) days.
14. "Exempt child welfare agency" means any
person, corporation, partnership, voluntary association, or other entity,
whether established for profit or otherwise, that otherwise fits the definition
of a child welfare agency but that is specifically exempt from the requirement
of obtaining a license under this subchapter. Those agencies specifically
exempt from the license requirement are:
a. A facility or program owned or operated by an agency of the
United States Government;
b. Any agency of the State of Arkansas that is statutorily
authorized to administer or supervise child welfare activities. In order to
maintain exempt status, the state child welfare agency shall state every two
(2) years in written form signed by the persons in charge that their agency is
in substantial compliance with published state agency child welfare standards.
Visits to review and advise exempt state agencies shall be made as deemed
necessary by the Child Welfare Agency Review Board to verify and maintain
substantial compliance with the standards;
c. A facility or program owned or operated by or under contract
with the Department of Correction;
d. A hospital providing acute care licensed pursuant to §
20-9-201
et seq.;
e. Any facility governed by the Department of Human Services
State Institutional System Board or its successor;
f. Human development centers regulated by the Board of
Developmental Disabilities Services pursuant to §
20-48-201 et
seq.:
g. Any facility licensed as a family home pursuant to §
20-48-601 et
seq.;
h. Any boarding school as defined in this section;
i. Any temporary camp as defined in this section;
j. Any state-operated facility to house juvenile delinquents or
any serious offender program facility operated by a state designee to house
juvenile delinquents. Those facilities shall be subject to program requirements
modeled on nationally recognized correctional facility standards that shall be
developed, administered, and monitored by the Division of Youth Services of the
Department of Human Services;
k. Any child welfare agency operated solely by a religious
organization that elects to be exempt from licensing and that complies within
the conditions of the exemption for church-operated agencies as set forth in
this subchapter;
l. The Division of Developmental Disabilities Services of the
Department of Human Services; and
m. Any developmental disabilities services waiver provider
licensed under § 2048-208 or §
20-48-601 et
seq.
15. "Foster Care Placement Agency" means a child
placement agency which places plans for or assists in the placement of an
unrelated minor in a private residence of one (1) or more family members for
care and supervision on a twenty-four-hour basis; or places, plans, or assists
in the placement of a child victim of human trafficking in a home.
16. "Foster home" means a private residence of one
(1) or more family members that receives from a child placement agency any
child who is unattended by a parent or guardian in order to provide care,
training, education, or supervision on a twenty-four-hour basis, not to include
adoptive homes. "Foster home" does not include a home suspended or
closed by a child placement agency.
17. "Transitional Living" means any child welfare
agency that provides specialized services in adult living preparation in a
structured setting for persons eighteen (18) years of age or older who have
been admitted into the agencies residential program prior to eighteen (18)
years of age.
18. "Independent Living" means a child welfare
agency that provides specialized services in adult living preparation in an
experiential home-like setting for persons sixteen (16) years of age or
older.
19. "Independent Living Family Style Care" means a
child welfare agency that provides specialized services in adult living
preparation in an experiential home-like setting for persons sixteen (16) years
of age or older.
20. "Minimum standards" means those rules as
established by the Child Welfare Agency Review Board that set forth the minimum
acceptable level of practice for the care of children by a child welfare
agency.
21. "Placement Residential" means a child
placement agency which places, plans for, or assists in the placement of an
unrelated minor into a residential child care facility or a child victim of
human trafficking in any type of shelter or facility. The agency may be
licensed for any or all types of licenses, depending on the types of services
it provides.
22. "Provisional foster home" means a foster home
opened for no more than six (6) months by the Division of Children and Family
Services of the Department of Human Services for a relative or fictive kin of a
child in the custody of the Division of Children and Family Services of the
Department of Human Services after it:
a. Conducts a health and safety check, including a central
registry check and a criminal background check (or a check with local law
enforcement) of the relative's home; and
b. Performs a visual inspection of the home of the relative to
verify that the relative and the home will meet the standards for opening a
regular foster home.
23. "Probationary" means a type of license issued
to an agency that has not maintained compliance with minimum licensing
standards, but the board believes that compliance can be restored and
subsequently maintained. This license may be issued for up to one (1) year, at
the discretion of the board.
24. "Psychiatric residential treatment facility"
means a residential child care facility in a nonhospital setting that provides
a structured, systematic, therapeutic program of treatment under the
supervision of a psychiatrist for children who are emotionally disturbed and in
need of daily nursing services, psychiatrist's supervision, and residential
care but who are not in an acute phase of illness requiring the services of an
inpatient psychiatric hospital;
25. "Relative" means a person within the fifth
degree of kinship by virtue of blood or adoption.
26. "Religious organization" means a church,
synagogue, mosque, or association of same whose purpose is to support and serve
the propagation of truly held religious beliefs.
27. "Residential child care facility" means any
child welfare agency that provides care, training, education, custody, or
supervision on a twenty-four-hour basis for six (6) or more unrelated children,
excluding foster homes that have six (6) or more children who are all related
to each other but who are not related to the foster parents; or receives a
child victim of human trafficking in any type of shelter or facility.
28. "Residential Family Style Care" means any
child welfare agency that provides care, training, education, custody or
supervision, in a home-like setting, on a twenty-four-hour basis for six (6) or
more unrelated minors or receives a child victim of human trafficking in any
type of shelter or facility.
29. "Sexual Rehabilitative Program" means a
treatment program that offers a specific and specialized therapeutic program
for children with sexually maladaptive behaviors. A licensed sexual
rehabilitative program may be in a residential childcare facility, a
therapeutic foster care home, or a psychiatric residential treatment
facility.
30. "Special consideration" means approval from
the Child Welfare Agency Review Board to allow a licensee to deviate from the
letter of a rule if the licensee has demonstrated that the deviation is in the
best interest of the children and does not pose a risk to persons served by the
licensee.
31. "Substantial compliance" means compliance with
all essential standards necessary to protect the health, safety, and welfare of
the children in the care of the child welfare agency. Essential standards
include without limitation, those relating to issues involving fire, health,
safety, nutrition, discipline, staff-to-child ratio, and space.
32. "Temporary camp" means any facility or program
providing twenty-four-hour care or supervision to children that meets the
following criteria:
a. The facility or program is operated for recreational,
educational, or religious purposes only;
b. No child attends the program more than forty (40) days in a
calendar year; and
c. The parents of children placed in the program retain
custody, planning, and financial responsibility for the children during
placement.
33. "Therapeutic Foster Care" means any child
placement agency that places, plans for, or assists in the placement of an
unrelated minor or a child victim of human trafficking in a therapeutic foster
home. Therapeutic foster care is intensive therapeutic care for children
provided in specially trained family homes supported by licensed mental health
professionals (as recognized by Arkansas Medicaid). A therapeutic foster care
program is a family-based services delivery approach providing individualized
treatment for children, youth, and their families. Treatment is delivered
through an integrated set of services with key interventions and supports
provided by therapeutic foster parents who are trained, supervised, and
supported by qualified program staff. Therapeutic foster care services shall be
provided in a separately identified program of a larger agency or be provided
by an independent agency.
34. "Therapeutic Foster Care - Sexual Rehabilitative
Program" means a treatment program that offers a specific and
specialized therapeutic program for children with sexually maladaptive
behaviors. A licensed sexual rehabilitative program may be in a residential
childcare facility, a therapeutic foster care home, or a psychiatric
residential treatment facility.
35. "Unrelated minor" means a child who is not
related by blood, marriage, or adoption to the owner or operator of the child
welfare agency and who is not a ward of the owner or operator of the child
welfare agency pursuant to a guardianship order issued by a court of competent
jurisdiction.
Appendix B: PROHIBITED OFFENSES
1. A person who is required to have a criminal records check
under the Child Welfare Agency Licensing Act shall be absolutely and
permanently prohibited from having direct and unsupervised contact with a child
in the care of a child welfare agency if that person has pleaded guilty or nolo
contendere to or been found guilty of any of the following offenses by any
court in the State of Arkansas, of a similar offense in a court of another
state, or of a similar offense by a federal court, unless the conviction is
vacated or reversed:
01. Abuse of an endangered or impaired person, if
felony |
§
5-28-103
|
02. Arson |
§
5-38-301
|
03. Capital Murder |
§
5-10-101
|
04. Endangering the welfare of an incompetent person in
the first degree |
§
5-27-201
|
05. Kidnapping |
§
5-11-102
|
06. Murder in the first degree |
§
5-10-102
|
07. Murder in the second degree |
§
5-10-103
|
08. Rape |
§
5-14-103
|
09. Sexual assault in the first degree |
§
5-14-124
|
10. Sexual assault in the second degree |
§
5-14-125
|
2. A person who is required to have a criminal records check
under the Child Welfare Agency Licensing Act shall not be eligible to have
direct and unsupervised contact with a child in the care of a child welfare
agency if that person has pleaded guilty or nolo contendere to or been found
guilty of any of the following offenses by a court in the State of Arkansas, of
a similar offense in a court of another state, or of a similar offense by a
federal court, unless the conviction is vacated or reversed:
01. Criminal attempt to commit any
offenses |
§
5-3-201
|
02. Criminal complicity to commit any
offenses |
§
5-3-202
|
03. Criminal conspiracy to commit any
offenses |
§
5-3-401
|
04. Criminal solicitation to commit any
offenses |
§
5-3-301
|
05. Assault in the first, second, or third
degree |
§§
5-13-205
to -207 |
06. Aggravated assault |
§
5-13-204
|
07. Aggravated assault on a family or household
member |
§
5-26-306
|
08. Battery in the first, second, or third
degree |
§§
5-13-201
to -203 |
09. Breaking or entering |
§
5-39-202
|
10. Burglary |
§
5-39-201
|
11. Coercion |
§
5-13-208
|
12. Computer crimes against minors |
§
5-27-601 et
seq.; |
13. Contributing to the delinquency of a
juvenile |
§
5-27-220
|
14. Contributing to the delinquency of a
minor |
§
5-27-209
|
15. Criminal impersonation |
§
5-37-208
|
16. Criminal use of a prohibited weapon |
§
5-73-104
|
17. Communicating a death threat concerning a school
employee or students |
§
5-17-101
|
18. Domestic battery in the first, second, or third
degree |
§§
5-26-303
to -305 |
19. Employing or consenting to the use of a child in a
sexual performance |
§
5-27-401
|
20. Endangering the welfare of a minor in the first or
second degree |
§§
5-27-205
to -206 |
21. Endangering the welfare of an incompetent person in
the second degree |
§
5-27-202
|
22. Engaging children in sexually explicit conduct for
use in visual or print media |
§
5-27-303
|
23. False imprisonment in the first or second
degree |
§§
5-11-103
to -104 |
24. Felony abuse of an endangered or impaired
person |
§
5-28-103
|
25. Felony interference with a law enforcement
officer |
§
5-54-104
|
26. Felony violation of the Uniform Controlled
Substance Act |
§
5-64-101 et
seq. |
27. Financial identity fraud |
§
5-37-227
|
28. Forgery |
§
5-37-201
|
29. Incest |
§
5-26-202
|
30. Interference with court-ordered
custody |
§
5-26-502
|
31. Interference with visitation |
§
5-26-501
|
32. Introduction of controlled substance into the body
of another person |
§
5-13-210
|
33. Manslaughter |
§
5-10-104
|
34. Negligent homicide |
§
5-10-105
|
35. Obscene performance at a live public
show |
§
5-68-305
|
36. Offense of cruelty to animals |
§
5-62-103
|
37. Offense of aggravated cruelty to dog, cat, or
horse |
§
5-62-104
|
38. Pandering or possessing visual or print medium
depicting sexually explicit conduct involving a child |
§
5-27-304
|
39. Sexual solicitation |
§
5-70-103
|
40. Permanent detention or restraint |
§
5-11-106
|
41. Permitting abuse of a minor, |
§
5-27-221
|
42. Producing, directing, or promoting a sexual
performance by a child |
§
5-27-403
|
43. Promoting obscene materials |
§
5-68-303
|
44. Promoting obscene performance |
§
5-68-304
|
45. Promoting prostitution in the first, second, or
third degree |
§§
5-70-104
to -106 |
46. Prostitution |
§
5-70-102
|
47. Public display of obscenity |
§
5-68-205
|
48. Resisting arrest |
§
5-54-103
|
49. Robbery |
§
5-12-102
|
50. Aggravated robbery |
§
5-12-103
|
51. Sexual offenses |
§
5-14-101 et
seq. |
52. Simultaneous possession of drugs and
firearms |
§
5-74-106
|
53. Soliciting money or property from
incompetents |
§
5-27-229
|
54. Stalking |
§
5-71-229
|
55. Terroristic act |
§
5-13-310
|
56. Terroristic threatening |
§
5-13-301
|
57. Theft of public benefits |
§
5-36-202
|
58. Theft by receiving |
§
5-36-106
|
59. Theft of property |
§
5-36-103
|
60. Theft of services |
§
5-36-104
|
61. Transportation of minors for prohibited sexual
conduct |
§
5-27-305
|
62. Unlawful discharge of a firearm from a
vehicle |
§
5-74-107
|
63. Voyeurism |
§
5-16-102
|
3. A former or future law of this or any other state or of the
federal government that is substantially equivalent to one (1) of the offenses
listed in the Child Welfare Licensing Act shall be considered as
prohibiting.
4. A person who is required to have a criminal records check
under the Child Welfare Agency Licensing Act who has pleaded guilty or nolo
contendere to or been found guilty of any of the offenses listed shall be
absolutely disqualified from being an owner, operator, volunteer, foster
parent, adoptive parent, member of a child welfare agency's board of directors,
or employee in a child welfare agency during the period of the person's
confinement, probation, or parole supervision (unless the conviction is vacated
or reversed).
5. Except as provided under the Child Welfare Agency Licensing
Act, a person who has pleaded guilty or nolo contendere to or been found guilty
of one (1) of the offenses listed shall not work in a child welfare agency
unless:
a. The date of a plea of guilty or nolo contendere or the
finding of guilt for a misdemeanor offense is at least five (5) years from the
date of the record check; and
b. There have been no criminal convictions or pleas of guilty
or nolo contendere of any type or nature during the five-year period preceding
the background check request.
6. Except as provided under the Child Welfare Licensing Act:
a. A person who is required to have a criminal records check
and who has pleaded guilty or nolo contendere to or been found guilty of any of
the offenses listed shall be presumed to be disqualified to be an owner,
operator, volunteer, foster parent, adoptive parent, member of a child welfare
agency's board of directors, or employee in a child welfare agency after the
completion of their term of confinement, probation, or parole supervision,
unless the conviction is vacated or reversed.
b. An owner, operator, volunteer, foster parent, adoptive
parent, household member of a foster parent or adoptive parent, member of any
child welfare agency's board of directors, or an employee in a child welfare
agency shall not petition the Child Welfare Agency Review Board unless the
agency supports the petition, which can be rebutted in the following manner:
i. The applicant shall petition the board to make a
determination that the applicant does not pose a risk of harm to any
person;
ii. The applicant shall bear the burden of making such a
showing; and iii. The board may permit an applicant to be an owner, operator,
volunteer, foster parent, adoptive parent, member of an agency's board of
directors, or an employee in a child welfare agency notwithstanding having
pleaded guilty or nolo contendere to or been found guilty of an offense listed
in this section upon making a determination that the applicant does not pose a
risk of harm to any person served by the facility.
7. The Child Welfare Agency Review Board's decision to
disqualify a person from being an owner, operator, volunteer, foster parent,
adoptive parent, member of a child welfare agency's board of directors, or an
employee in a child welfare agency under this section shall constitute the
final administrative agency action of the board and is not subject to
review.