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Child Care Provider Background ChecksNearly 12 million children under age 5 are in some type of child care setting every week. On average, children of working mothers are spending 36 hours a week in the care of someone other than a parent. Parents want their children to be safe in child care. Most parents assume that states have conducted a background check on providers - particularly for providers of licensed and government subsidized care. However, background check requirements vary greatly by state and the reality is that most states do not conduct a complete background check on child care providers. 21 states do not conduct fingerprint checks and 43 states do not check the sex offender registry for child care center staff 24 states do not do fingerprint check for FCC providers. Parents simply can't know if a provider has a violent criminal history unless a thorough background check is completed. The best way to ensure the safety of children is for child care providers to undergo a thorough background check, including looking at the criminal history, child abuse and neglect registries, state and federal fingerprint checks and the sex offender registries. Whether children receive a subsidy or not, parents need to know that their children are safe in child care - that their child care provider does not have a history of sexual offenses or child abuse or other violent crimes. At a minimum, federal funds should not be used to pay for care provided by a convicted felon. The fix is easy. Federal and state policy should support safe child care for children. Recommendations
States need not wait for Congress to enact standards that will protect children. Governors and state legislators can initiate safe policies and add their state to the undersized list of four (DC, IL, MI and NV) that already conduct complete background checks, as well as enforce the rules already in place. Because only 4 states including the District of Columbia conduct complete background checks on providers, Congress should condition child care funding on a state's plan to ensure background checks are complete. |
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