Current through August 26, 2024
(1) ASSESSMENT OF CHILD CARE NEEDS.
(a)
Eligibility determination and
redeterminations. Following a parent's initial eligibility
determination and annual redeterminations, the child care administrative agency
shall do all of the following:
1. Assess the
assistance group's child care needs and determine the number of hours of child
care for which the parent may receive a subsidy.
2. Issue a new authorization based on the
assessment.
(b)
Duration of authorizations. When a child care administrative
agency issues a new authorization or the agency extends an existing
authorization, the end date of the authorization shall be the earlier of the
following:
1. The date of an expected change
that may affect the assistance group's child care needs during the parent's
12-month eligibility period.
2. The
parent's next annual eligibility redetermination under s.
DCF 201.036(4).
(c)
Required new assessment and
authorization during a parent's 12-month eligibility period. During a
parent's 12-month eligibility period, the child care administrative agency
shall assess an assistance group's child care needs and issue a new
authorization based on the assessment at all of the following times:
1. When a 2nd parent or a minor who is the
biological parent of the child becomes a member of the assistance
group.
2. When the parent requests
an authorization and one calendar month or more has passed since the parent's
previous authorization ended.
3.
When the assistance group's child care needs no longer align with the child
care provider's hours of operation.
4. When the parent changes child care
providers.
5. When the school year
begins for a school-aged child.
6.
When a parent has reached the 24th month of the education time limit under s.
49.155(1m) (a) 4 or 5., Stats.
(2) PARENT. A parent shall inform
the child care administrative agency of all of the following:
(a) The child care provider that will care
for the child.
(b) The specific
dates and times of the parent's schedule of approved activities under s.
49.155(1m) (a), Stats.
(c) Any other information requested by the
agency regarding the assistance group's child care needs.
(2g) CONTINUITY OF CARE.
(a) A child care administrative agency shall
take into consideration child learning and development and shall promote
continuity of care when authorizing hours of child care. The child care
administrative agency is not required to limit authorized hours based on a
parent's schedule of approved activities or the number of hours the parent
spends in those activities.
(b)
During a parent's 12-month eligibility period, the child care administrative
agency shall allow a parent to continue under the parent's most recent
authorization, extend the parent's most recent authorization, or offer the
parent an authorization for up to the same number of hours as the parent's
previous authorization when any of the following changes begin:
1. The parent is continuing to participate in
an approved activity, but the number of hours that the assistance group needs
child care is decreasing.
2. The
parent is beginning a temporary break.
3. The parent is beginning an approved
activity search period.
(c) A parent may not consecutively take a
temporary break of 3 months and continue eligibility for an approved activity
search period of 3 months.
(d) A
parent that ceases participation in any approved activity during a temporary
break may continue eligibility for the remainder of the 3-month temporary break
period.
(2r) EXCESSIVE
UNEXPLAINED ABSENCES.
(a) If a child care
provider notifies the child care administrative agency that a child has not
attended child care within the previous 30 calendar days and the child's parent
has not provided an explanation to the child care provider, the child care
administrative agency shall make multiple attempts to contact the parent to
determine if the assistance group's need for child care has changed.
(b) The child care administrative agency
shall terminate the parent's authorization if the agency's efforts at
contacting the parent are unsuccessful.
(3) LICENSED PROVIDER PRICES. A child care
administrative agency may refuse to authorize payment for child care services
by a child care provider licensed under s.
48.65,
Stats., if the provider refuses to submit documentation of the provider's child
care prices in response to an agency request.
(4) ASSISTANCE GROUP WITH MORE THAN ONE
PARENT.
(a) In an assistance group with more
than one parent, each parent shall meet the eligibility criteria in s.
49.155(1m),
Stats., and s.
DCF 201.036, unless
the child care administrative agency verifies that a parent has a disability or
health condition that makes that parent unable to participate in an approved
activity and unable to provide the child care necessary for another parent to
participate in an approved activity. The agency shall require the parent to
provide documentation of the disability or health condition from a doctor,
physician assistant, nurse practitioner, psychiatrist, or
psychologist.
(b) When assessing an
assistance group's child care needs, the child care administrative agency shall
also consider the availability of a minor in the assistance group who is the
biological parent of the child, unless the child care administrative agency
verifies that the minor is unable to provide the necessary child care under
par. (a) .
(5) CARE
PROVIDED IN A CHILD'S HOME. A child care administrative agency may authorize
payment for child care services in a child's home only if the child care
provider is certified under s.
48.651,
Stats., and any of the following apply:
(a)
Care is provided to 3 or more children from the same assistance
group.
(b) Other licensed or
certified care is not available within a reasonable geographic area.
(c) Other licensed or certified care is not
available during the hours when child care is needed, such as during second or
third shift or weekend hours.
(d)
The child has a special need and child care is best provided in the child's
home.
(6) NO PARENTS OR
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS. A child care administrative agency may not authorize payment
for child care services by a provider who is a parent of the child or who
resides with the child.
(7)
AUTHORIZATION CRITERIA FOR A CHILD CARE PROVIDER'S CHILD.
(a) The department or a child care
administrative agency may authorize payment for the care of a child whose
parent is a child care provider only if the care will be provided by another
child care provider and any of the following apply:
1. The care will allow the parent to
participate in an approved activity under s.
49.155(1m) (a), Stats., other than an activity related
to child care.
2. The department or
agency determines that assistance is appropriate because the child has a
special need.
3. The parent is the
child's foster parent.
4. The
parent is the child's guardian or interim caretaker and is receiving subsidized
guardianship payments under s.
48.623,
Stats., for the care and maintenance of the child.
5. The parent is a kinship care relative
receiving payments under s.
48.57(3m) or (3n), Stats., and the child has been
placed with the kinship care relative under a court order.
6. Both of the following apply:
a. The child's biological parent is a
dependent minor child under the age of 19 who attends high school or
participates in a course of study meeting the standards established by the
state superintendent of public instruction for the granting of a declaration of
equivalency of high school graduation.
b. The dependent minor parent and the child
reside with a person who is considered the child's parent for the purposes of
this chapter and who may be the dependent minor parent's custodial parent,
kinship care relative, foster parent, or guardian or interim caretaker
receiving a payment under s.
48.623,
Stats., for the care and maintenance of the dependent minor parent.
(b) If a parent who is
a child care provider submits documentation of circumstances that meet the
conditions of this subsection, the child care administrative agency shall
consider the documentation to be an application for a waiver under s.
49.155(3m) (d) 3, Stats.
(8) EMPLOYEE OF CERTIFIED PROVIDER. A child
care administrative agency may not authorize payment for child care services by
a provider certified under s.
48.651,
Stats., if the child's parent or a person who resides with the child is
employed by the provider at the same location.
(8m) AUTHORIZATIONS FOR A PARENT WHO IS
SELF-EMPLOYED.
(a)
New
business.1. For purposes of this
subsection, a child care administrative agency shall consider a parent's
self-employment to be a new business for the 24 months following the date that
the parent reports beginning the business, except as provided in subd. 4. The
child care administrative agency may consider a parent's self-employment to be
a new business until the parent's eligibility redetermination following the end
of this 24-month period.
2.
Notwithstanding subd. 1., if a parent switches to a different type of
self-employment during the time period specified in subd. 1., the child care
administrative agency shall consider the parent's subsequent type of
self-employment to be a new business only until the end of the time period for
the initial business.
3. While a
parent's self-employment is a new business for purposes of this subsection, the
child care administrative agency may authorize payment for the number of hours
of child care that the parent states is needed, up to a maximum of 50 hours per
week.
4. After the end of the time
period specified in subd. 1. or 2., the child care administrative agency shall
determine the maximum number of hours of child care that may be authorized for
a parent who begins a new type of self-employment under par. (b).
(b)
Ongoing
business.1. If a parent's
self-employment is not considered a new business under par. (a), the child care
administrative agency shall determine the maximum number of hours of child care
that may be authorized for the parent per week as follows:
a. Calculate the parent's average monthly
gross income from self-employment based on the parent's annual gross business
income as reported to the internal revenue service.
b. Divide the parent's average monthly gross
income from self-employment by the higher of the hourly minimum wage under
state or federal law and divide that amount by 4.3 weeks.
2. After determining the maximum number of
the hours that may be authorized, the child care administrative agency shall
assess the assistance group's child care needs under sub. (1).
(9) MAXIMUM HOURS PER
DAY.
(a) A child care administrative agency
shall authorize no more than 12 hours of child care per day per child, unless
the child's parent provides written documentation of work or transportation
requirements that exceed 12 hours in a day.
(b) A child care administrative agency may
authorize more than 12 hours, but not more than 16 hours, of child care per day
for a child whose parent has provided written documentation of work or
transportation requirements that exceed 12 hours in a day.
(10) AUTHORIZATION NOTICE.
(a) After a parent has provided all of the
information required under sub. (2) and the child care administrative agency
has completed the assessment of the assistance group's child care needs, the
agency shall issue a written authorization notice to the parent approving
payment for child care through the subsidy program based on the specific
provisions in the notice.
(b) An
authorization notice shall specify the child who will receive the care, the
child care provider, the location where the child care will be provided, the
time period in which the child care will be provided, the number of hours of
child care authorized per month, and the maximum subsidy payment amount per
month.
(10m) DECLARATION
OF DISASTER. An authorization issued for child care for a specific provider at
a specific location may remain effective at another provider that meets the
conditions under s.
DCF 201.038(1) if the location identified
in the authorization is within an area covered by a declaration of a state of
emergency by the governor under s.
323.10,
Stats., and is temporarily closed due to the state of emergency.
(11) BACKDATED START DATE.
(a)
Authorization within 30 days
after request for assistance or redetermination.
1. If an agency determines that a parent is
eligible for the child care subsidy program and the parent submits the
information required under sub. (2) to the agency within 30 days after the date
that the parent submitted a request for assistance or the date of the parent's
eligibility redetermination, the agency may authorize payment beginning on the
date that all of the following conditions are met:
a. The parent has submitted a request for
assistance or has completed the annual redetermination of eligibility for the
child care subsidy program.
b. The
child is receiving child care services from a child care provider.
c. The provider is in compliance with the
requirements of s.
DCF 201.038(1).
2. Notwithstanding subd. 1., if an agency
determines that a parent is eligible for the subsidy program under s.
49.155(1m),
Stats., and the parent submits the information required under sub. (2) to the
agency within 30 days after the date that the parent submitted a request for
assistance or the date the parent completed the eligibility redetermination,
the agency may authorize payment beginning on the later of the date of child
placement or the first day of the month in which the parent submitted the
request for assistance or the first day of the month of the parent's
eligibility redetermination if all of the following conditions are met:
a. The parent is a kinship care relative
receiving payments under s.
48.57(3m),
Stats., and is providing care and maintenance for the child who is placed in
the kinship care relative's home pursuant to a court order.
b. The requirements in subd. 1. a. to c. are
met on or before the last day of the month.
(b)
Authorization more than 30 days
after request for assistance or redetermination. If an agency
determines that a parent is eligible for the subsidy program under s.
49.155(1m),
Stats., and the parent submits the information required under sub. (2) to the
agency more than 30 days after the date that the parent submitted a request for
assistance or the date the parent completed the eligibility redetermination,
the agency may authorize payment for child care services beginning the first
day of the month in which the parent submits the information required under
sub. (2) if all of the conditions in par. (a) 1. a. to c. are met.
(12) NEW CHILD CARE
PROVIDER EFFECTIVE FOLLOWING MONTH. If a parent receiving assistance under the
child care subsidy program notifies the child care administrative agency of the
parent's intent to obtain child care services from a different child care
provider, the agency may authorize payment for child care by the new provider
that is effective the first day of the following month if the parent notifies
the agency prior to the end of business hours on the last business day of a
month.
(13) NEW PROVIDER EFFECTIVE
IN CURRENT MONTH DUE TO HARDSHIP. If a parent receiving assistance under the
child care subsidy program notifies the child care administrative agency of the
parent's intent to obtain child care services from a different child care
provider, the agency may authorize payment for child care by the new provider
that is effective in the current month if the conditions in pars. (a) and (b)
are met, as follows:
(a) The assistance group
is experiencing circumstances that create an unforeseen hardship for the child
to continue to attend the authorized provider for the remainder of the month
due to any of the following:
1. Travel to the
authorized provider has become unreasonable due to any of the following:
a. The assistance group relocated to escape
domestic abuse.
b. The assistance
group was evicted from their home.
c. The assistance group was formerly homeless
and has moved into stable housing.
d. The location of the parent's approved
activity suddenly changed.
2. The authorized provider is unable to meet
the assistance group's need for child care after any of the following:
a. The schedule of the parent's approved
activity suddenly changed.
b. The
death or unexpected departure of a parent.
c. The child is expelled due to behavior
issues.
d. The child has a special
need that is no longer met by the provider.
e. The child has a medical need that cannot
be met by the provider.
3. The authorized provider is no longer
available to provide child care services due to any of the following:
a. The provider suddenly stops providing
child care services.
b. The
provider's regulatory approval has been suspended or revoked.
c. Damage to the provider's facility has
created an unsafe environment for children.
d. Regulatory restrictions on the number of
children, hours of operation, or provider-to-child ratios.
4. There is alleged abuse or neglect of the
child by the provider, and a complaint has been made to the appropriate
certification or licensing agency.
5. Continuing to receive child care from the
authorized provider threatens the safety of the parent or child.
6. Other circumstances outside the parent's
control as approved by the department.
(b) The parent notifies the agency of the
applicable circumstances in par. (a) within 10 days after the circumstances
begin.
(14) NEW
PROVIDER EFFECTIVE IN CURRENT MONTH FOR SIBLING. A child care administrative
agency may authorize payment for child care by a new provider effective in the
current month for the sibling of a child whose circumstances qualify for a
hardship authorization under sub. (13) if the sibling attends the same child
care provider.