Texas Administrative Code
Title 26 - HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Part 1 - HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES COMMISSION
Chapter 746 - MINIMUM STANDARDS FOR CHILD-CARE CENTERS
Subchapter B - ADMINISTRATION AND COMMUNICATION
Division 4 - OPERATIONAL POLICIES
Section 746.501 - What written operational policies must I have?
Universal Citation: 26 TX Admin Code ยง 746.501
Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) You must develop written operational policies and procedures that at a minimum address each of the following:
(1) Hours, days, and months of
operation;
(2) Procedures for the
release of children;
(3) Illness
and exclusion criteria;
(4)
Procedures for dispensing medication or a statement that medication is not
dispensed;
(5) Procedures for
handling medical emergencies;
(6)
Procedures for parental notifications;
(7) Discipline and guidance that is
consistent with Subchapter L of this chapter (relating to Discipline and
Guidance). A copy of Subchapter L may be used for your discipline and guidance
policy;
(8) Suspension and
expulsion of children;
(9) Safe
sleep policy for infants from birth through 12 months old that is consistent
with the rules in Subchapter H of this chapter (relating to Basic Requirements
for Infants) that relate to sleep requirements and restrictions, including
sleep positioning, and crib requirements and restrictions, including
mattresses, bedding, blankets, toys, and restrictive devices;
(10) Meals and food service
practices;
(11) Immunization
requirements for children, including tuberculosis screening and testing if
required by your regional Texas Department of State Health Services or local
health authority;
(12) Hearing and
vision screening requirements;
(13)
Enrollment procedures, including how and when parents will be notified of
policy changes;
(14)
Transportation, if applicable;
(15)
Water activities, if applicable;
(16) Field trips, if applicable;
(17) Animals, if applicable;
(18) Promotion of indoor and outdoor physical
activity that is consistent with Subchapter F of this chapter (relating to
Developmental Activities and Activity Plan); your policies must include:
(A) The benefits of physical activity and
outdoor play;
(B) The duration of
physical activity at your operation, both indoor and outdoor;
(C) The type of physical activity (structured
and unstructured) that children may engage in at your operation;
(D) Each setting in which your physical
activity program will take place;
(E) The recommended clothing and footwear
that will allow a child to participate freely and safely in physical
activities;
(F) The criteria you
will use to determine when extreme weather conditions pose a significant health
risk that prohibits or limits outdoor play; and
(G) A plan to ensure physical activity occurs
on days when extreme weather conditions prohibit or limit outdoor
play.
(19) Procedures
for providing and applying, as needed, insect repellent and sunscreen,
including what types will be used, if applicable;
(20) Parent rights that are consistent with
the rules in Division 5 of this subchapter (relating to Parent
Rights);
(21) Procedures for
parents to review and discuss with the child-care center director any questions
or concerns about the policies and procedures of the child-care
center;
(22) Procedures for parents
to participate in the child-care center's operation and activities;
(23) Instructions on how a parent may access
the:
(A) Minimum standards online;
(B) Texas Abuse and Neglect Hotline;
and
(C) HHSC website.
(24) Your emergency preparedness
plan;
(25) Your provisions to
provide a comfortable place with an adult sized seat in your center or within a
classroom that enables a mother to breastfeed her child. In addition, your
policies must inform parents that they have the right to breastfeed or provide
breast milk for their child while in care;
(26) Preventing and responding to abuse and
neglect of children, including:
(A) Required
annual training for employees;
(B)
Methods for increasing employee and parent awareness of issues regarding child
abuse and neglect, including warning signs that a child may be a victim of
abuse or neglect and factors indicating a child is at risk for abuse or
neglect;
(C) Methods for increasing
employee and parent awareness of prevention techniques for child abuse and
neglect;
(D) Strategies for
coordination between the center and appropriate community organizations;
and
(E) Actions that the parent of
a child who is a victim of abuse or neglect should take to obtain assistance
and intervention, including procedures for reporting child abuse or
neglect;
(27) Procedures
for conducting health checks, if applicable;
(28) Information on vaccine-preventable
diseases for employees, unless your center is in the home of the permit holder.
The policy must address the requirements outlined in §
746.3611 of this chapter (relating
to What must a policy for protecting children from vaccine-preventable diseases
include?);
(29) If your operation
maintains and administers unassigned epinephrine auto-injectors to use when a
child in care has an emergency anaphylaxis reaction, policies for maintenance,
administration, and disposal of unassigned epinephrine auto-injectors that
comply with the unassigned epinephrine auto-injector requirements set by the
Texas Department of State Health Services, as specified in Texas Administrative
Code, Title 25, Chapter 40, Subchapter C (relating to Epinephrine Auto-Injector
Policies in Youth Facilities) and in Texas Health and Safety Code §
773.0145;
and
(30) Procedures for supporting
inclusive services to children with special care needs. The policy must address
the requirements outlined in §
746.2202 of this chapter (relating
to What are my responsibilities when planning activities for a child in care
with special care needs?).
(b) You must also inform the parents that any area within 1,000 feet of a child-care center is a gang-free zone, where criminal offenses related to organized criminal activity are subject to a harsher penalty under the Texas Penal Code. You may inform the parents by:
(1) Providing this information in the
operational policies;
(2)
Distributing the information in writing to the parents; or
(3) Informing the parents verbally as part of
an individual or group parent orientation.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Texas may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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