Proposed Text
CHAPTER 51
BACKGROUND CHECKS FOR LICENSED CHILD DAY CENTERS (REPEALED)
22VAC15-51-10. Defining words and phrases. (Repealed)
The following words and terms have these meanings when used
in reference to this regulation:
"Agent" means a person who acts on behalf of, or is
an employee or volunteer with, a licensed child day center.
"Applicant" means the person or persons applying
for licensure as a child day center. In the case of a sole proprietorship, the
applicant is the individual owner. In the case of partnership, corporation,
limited liability company, public agency or similar entity, the applicant must
designate at least one individual who must comply with the applicant's
obligation on its behalf and must include all individuals who will be on site
exercising direction over the operation.
"Background checks" means a sworn statement or
affirmation, a criminal history record report, and a child protective services
central registry check.
"Barrier crime" means a conviction identified at
§ 63.2-1719 of the Code of Virginia. The convictions, and Code of Virginia
references, are murder or manslaughter as set out in Article 1 (§ 18.2-30 et
seq.), malicious wounding by mob as set out in § 18.2-41, abduction as set out
in subsection A of § 18.2-47, abduction for immoral purposes as set out in §
18.2-48, assault and bodily woundings as set out in Article 4 (§ 18.2-51 et
seq.), robbery as set out in § 18.2-58, carjacking as set out in § 18.2-58.1,
threats of death or bodily injury as set out in § 18.2-60, felony stalking as set
out in § 18.2-60.3, sexual assault as set out in Article 7 (§ 18.2-61 et seq.)
of Chapter 4 of Title 18.2, arson as set out in Article 1 (§ 18.2-77 et seq.)
of Chapter 5 of Title 18.2, drive by shooting as set out in § 18.2-286.1, use
of a machine gun in a crime of violence as set out in § 18.2-289, aggressive
use of a machine gun as set out in § 18.2-290, use of a sawed-off shotgun in a
crime of violence as set out in subsection A of § 18.2-300, pandering as set
out in § 18.2-355, crimes against nature involving children as set out in §
18.2-361, incest as set out in § 18.2-366, taking indecent liberties with
children as set out in § 18.2-370 or § 18.2-370.1, abuse and neglect of
children as set out in § 18.2-371.1, failure to secure medical attention for an
injured child as set out in § 18.2-314, obscenity offenses as set out in §
18.2-374.1, possession of child pornography as set out in § 18.2-374.1:1,
electronic facilitation of pornography as set out in § 18.2-374.3, abuse and
neglect of incapacitated adults as set out in § 18.2-369, employing or
permitting a minor to assist in an act constituting an offense under Article 5
(§ 18.2-372 et seq.) of Chapter 8 of Title 18.2 as set out in § 18.2-379,
delivery of drugs to prisoners as set out in § 18.2-474.1, escape from jail as
set out in § 18.2-477, felonies by prisoners as set out in § 53.1-203, burglary
as set out in Article 2 (§ 18.2-89 et seq.) of Chapter 5 of Title 18.2, any
felony violation relating to possession or distribution of drugs as set out in Article
1 (§ 18.2-247 et seq.) of Chapter 7 of Title 18.2, drive by shooting as set out
in § 18.2-286.1, or an equivalent offense in another state.
"Center" means licensed child day center.
"Central Criminal Records Exchange" means the
information system containing conviction data of crimes committed in Virginia.
The system is maintained by the Department of State Police.
"Central registry" means the record of founded
complaints of child abuse and neglect maintained by the Department of Social
Services.
"Central registry finding" means the record of
founded complaints of child abuse and neglect for an individual.
"Commissioner" means the Commissioner of the
Virginia Department of Social Services or his designee.
"Contract agency" means an entity with which the
center or a parent has an agreement to provide services to a child or children
while attending the center.
"Contract employee" means a person with whom the
center or a parent has an agreement to provide services to a child or children
while attending the center.
"Criminal history record check" means the process
the Department of State Police uses to generate a criminal record report on a
person.
"Criminal history record report" means either the
criminal record clearance or the criminal history record issued by the Central
Criminal Records Exchange, Department of State Police. The report identifies
convictions within the Commonwealth.
"Department" means the Department of Social
Services.
"Department representative" means an employee of
the department who carries out regulatory duties.
"Disqualifying background" means (i) having been
the subject of a founded complaint of child abuse or neglect even if his record
has been purged from the Child Abuse and Neglect Central Registry system, (ii)
a barrier crime conviction, or (iii) any other felony not included in the
definition of "barrier crime," unless five years have elapsed since
the conviction. For the purpose of this regulation, no person is considered to
be the subject of a founded complaint of child abuse or neglect until a
decision upholding the finding has been rendered by the hearing officer after
the administrative hearing, provided the person complies with the requirements
for requesting an administrative hearing. No person is considered to be the
subject of a founded complaint of child abuse or neglect if the child abuse or
neglect finding is overturned by an administrative hearing or a subsequent
court decision.
"Employee" means a person hired by a center or
with whom the center has an employment agreement.
"Involved in the day-to-day operations" means (i)
in a supervisory or management position, making daily decisions regarding the
operation of the center, (ii) counted by the center for purposes of
staff-to-children ratios, or (iii) has or will have access to child and family
records except those individuals who are operating under authority of a court
order.
"Licensed" means having met the requirements of
and obtained licensure through the Department of Social Services as required in
General Procedures and Information for Licensure (22VAC40-80).
"Licensee" means any individual, partnership,
association, public agency, or corporation to whom the license is issued.
"Local agency" means local department of social
services.
"May" means has permission.
"Must" means the action is a requirement.
"Must not" means the action is prohibited.
"Other felony" means conviction for any felony in
the last five years that is not a barrier crime felony.
"Parent volunteer" means someone supervising, without
pay, a group of children that includes the parent volunteer's own child in a
program that operates no more than four hours per day, provided that the parent
volunteer works under the direct supervision of a person who has received a
clearance pursuant to § 63.2-1720 or § 63.2-1724 of the Code of Virginia.
"Search of central registry" means the process
the Virginia Department of Social Services' Child Protective Services Unit uses
to generate a central registry report on a person.
"Sworn statement or affirmation" means a
statement completed by a person attesting to whether he has ever been (i)
convicted of or the subject of pending charges of any crime within or outside
the Commonwealth or equivalent offense outside the Commonwealth or (ii) the
subject of a founded complaint of child abuse or neglect within or outside the
Commonwealth.
"Volunteer" means a person who provides services
without pay and who is alone with a child or children in performance of his
duties.
22VAC15-51-20. Describing background checks. (Repealed)
The background checks covered by this regulation are:
1. Sworn statement or affirmation;
2. Criminal history record check; and
3. Central registry search.
22VAC15-51-30. Identifying who is not covered by this
regulation. (Repealed)
All child welfare agencies that are not licensed child day
centers are not covered by this regulation. Requirements for these facilities
are at 22VAC40-191.
22VAC15-51-40. Identifying who is covered by this regulation.
(Repealed)
A. This regulation applies to centers.
B. Background checks are required at the time of initial
application. These background checks are required at the time of application
for licensure:
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2. Exception: Persons who have had background checks by the
center are not required to obtain new checks when the initial application is
due to:
(a) A change in site location; or
(b) The entity opening a new site location.
C. Background checks are required after the initial
licensure.
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6. Persons with most recent checks before 1990 must have
repeat checks by the end of December of the year in which the regulation
becomes effective. It is the end of December of the following year for those
with most recent checks from 1991 through 1995. It is at the end of December of
the third year for those with most recent checks from 1996 through 2002.
D. Background checks are required for independent contract
employees and employees hired by a contract agency. If a center uses
independent contract employees or contract employees hired by a contract agency
who will be involved in the day-to-day operations of the center or who will be
alone with, in control of, or supervising one or more children, the center
must:
1. Obtain background checks according to the above
requirements for employees or view the original required background checks
maintained by the contract employee or contract agency;
2. Accept all satisfactory background checks dated less than
six months before independent contract employees or contract employees hired by
contract agencies begin providing services at the center; and
3. Make copies, and keep them at the center. Staff must
write on the copies of the criminal record reports that they are photocopies of
originals that center staff verified.
4. Provide a sworn statement or affirmation, central
registry finding and criminal history record check report before three years
since the dates of the last sworn statement or affirmation, most recent central
registry finding and most recent criminal history record check report.
E. A center must not accept a required criminal history
record report or a central registry finding from an applicant, licensee, or
other person required to obtain background checks that is dated more than 90
days prior to the date of application, employment, or volunteering.
1. A center must not accept a copy of sworn statement or
affirmation.
2. Exception: See provisions for contracting agencies at
22VAC15-51-40 D 3.
F. The department must not accept a required criminal
history record report or a central registry finding from an applicant or
licensee that is dated more than 90 days prior to the date of licensure, or
from the date when the person who is designated as the applicant or licensee
changes.
22VAC15-51-50. Explaining requirements for satisfactory
background checks. (Repealed)
A. The department must require documentation of
satisfactory background checks for applicants, agents, employees, and volunteers.
Background checks information must be made available to department
representatives upon request. A satisfactory sworn statement or affirmation is
a fully completed original that states that:
1. The person does not have a criminal conviction that is a
barrier crime or is any felony conviction within the last five years;
2. The person is not the subject of a founded complaint of
child abuse or neglect within or outside the Commonwealth; and
3. There is no other knowledge that the individual has an
unsatisfactory background.
Criminal convictions include prior adult convictions and
juvenile convictions or adjudications of delinquency based on a crime that
would be a felony if committed by an adult within or outside the Commonwealth.
Convictions also include convictions in other states that are equivalent to the
barrier crimes set out in this regulation.
A satisfactory central registry finding is one in which:
1. A copy of the department's child protective services
check form is returned to the center indicating that, as of the date on the
reply, the individual whose name was searched is not identified in the Central
Registry of Founded Child Abuse/Neglect Investigations as an involved caregiver
with a founded disposition of child abuse/neglect, and
2. There is no other knowledge that the individual has a
founded disposition in Virginia or elsewhere.
A satisfactory criminal history record check report is one
in which:
1. An original hard copy or Internet inquiry reply from the
Department of State Police is returned to the center with no convictions
indicated or convictions indicated, but no barrier crimes or other felony
convictions in the last five years; and
2. There is no other knowledge that the individual has a
barrier crime, or other felony conviction in the past five years, in Virginia
or elsewhere.
A child day center may hire for compensated employment a
person who has been convicted of not more than one misdemeanor of assault and
battery, as defined in § 18.2-57 of the Code of Virginia, if 10 years have
elapsed following the conviction unless the person committed the offense while
employed in a day care center or the object of the offense was a minor.
B. Background checks results are not open-ended.
1. If a person leaves a center and the criminal history
record report or central registry check finding is less than 91 days old, the
person must be permitted to take the report or reports with him.
2. The center must keep a copy of any report a person takes
and write on it that it is a copy, and that the original of any criminal
history record report was verified.
3. Unless there is a criminal conviction or a founded
complaint of child abuse and neglect during that period, a background check
remains valid at a center if no more than 12 consecutive months have passed
from when a person:
a. Began a leave of absence from that center;
b. Was terminated from employment at that center; or
c. Was transferred to a center owned and operated by the
same employer or entity.
4. If there is reason to suspect that a person who has
submitted acceptable background checks, as required by this regulation, has a
disqualifying background, the center or the department may require new
background checks relevant to this suspicion.
5. When the center or the department chooses to require a
new background check, the center or the department:
a. May allow the person to continue the same relationship
with the center until the center or the department receives the new Virginia
background check information or equivalent documentation from another state, or
b. Must require that the person not be alone with children,
even if the documentation is not Virginia background check information or
equivalent information from another state.
C. Waivers of some criminal convictions are possible. Refer
to 22VAC40-191-90 through 22VAC40-191-130 of Background Checks for Child
Welfare Agencies for an explanation of the waiver.
22VAC15-51-60. Explaining consequences of unsatisfactory
background checks results. (Repealed)
A. Applicants are denied licensure when there are
unsatisfactory background checks results for:
1. Applicants as a center; or
2. Agents at the time of application who are or will be
involved in the day-to-day operations of the center or who are or will be alone
with, in control of, or supervising one or more of the children.
B. An employee or volunteer of a center must not be employed
or provide staff volunteer service until the center has the person's completed
sworn statement or affirmation. Any person making a materially false statement
regarding any offense shall be guilty of a Class 1 misdemeanor pursuant to §§
63.2-1720 and 63.2-1721 of the Code of Virginia.
C. An employee or volunteer of a center must be denied
continued employment or staff volunteer service if:
1. The center does not have an original criminal history
record report within 30 days of employment or volunteer service; or
2. The center does not have a central registry finding
within 30 days of employment or volunteer service.
D. No violation shall occur and an employee may continue to
work or provide volunteer service in a center if the center has documentation
that the criminal history record request, or the request for search of the
central registry was submitted within seven calendar days of the person being
employed or being a volunteer, but the report is not returned within 30
calendar days.
1. If a requested report was sent within seven calendar days
but was not returned within 30 calendar days, the requestor must contact within
four working days:
a. The Central Criminal Records Exchange of the Department
of State Police; or
b. The Child Protective Services Unit of the department.
2. If the request was not received, the requestor must
submit another request within five working days after the contact.
E. If the department or a local agency becomes aware that a
person covered by this regulation has a disqualifying background, the
department or local agency may release this information to centers. Those
centers must not further disseminate this information.
F. Centers must inform compensated employees and volunteers
that the centers are requesting child protective services registry checks and
criminal history record reports for them.
G. A center may choose to request a national criminal
background check instead of the criminal history record check for employees and
volunteers. The center must adhere to Department of State Police requirements
for obtaining fingerprints in accordance with § 19.2-392.02 of the Code of
Virginia.
1. The department will accept a national criminal background
check result of "qualified" from the Department of State Police.
2. If the screening result is "disqualified," the
center must obtain a satisfactory criminal history record check from the
Central Criminal Record Exchange for the person if:
a. The center wishes to employ the person or approve the
person as a staff volunteer; or
b. The center wishes the department to issue a license.
H. The center may also require a background check from
another state per the provisions in 22VAC15-51-50 B 3.
I. A center that does not comply with this regulation may
have its license revoked or denied. If a center has knowledge that a person
required to have a background check has an offense, this person does not have a
waiver, and if the center refuses to separate the person from employment or
service, its license must be revoked or denied.
22VAC15-51-70. Keeping background checks records. (Repealed)
A. A center must keep background checks reports and
findings at the location where the person is an applicant, agent, employee, contract
employee, volunteer, or is any other adult who is involved in the day-to-day
operations of the center or who is alone with, in control of, or supervising
one or more children.
1. If a center is among two or more owned by the same
entity, the background checks reports and findings may be kept at corporate
headquarters or at the center, and must be made available to the department
representative upon request.
2. If a center is not the primary work place for a person,
the center may keep copies on site, if there:
a. Is documentation of the place where original background
check records are kept; and
b. Are copies of the sworn statement or affirmation,
criminal history record report with a statement that the facility designee has
viewed and verified the original, and the original or a copy of the child
protective services central registry finding.
B. Centers must keep all background check information for
two years after a person required to provide background checks terminates his
duties with a center.
C. Background checks information must be stored in locked
files. Applicants, agents, and their designees are the only center staff who
may have access to these documents.
D. If a center is denied licensure because of background
checks information, the center must provide a copy of the documentation to the
disqualified person.
E. If a person is denied employment or volunteer service
because of background checks information, the center must provide a copy of the
documentation to the person.
F. A center must also release a copy of the information
when the subject of the information requests it.
G. Further dissemination of the background check
information is prohibited other than to the commissioner's representative or a
federal or state authority or court in order to comply with an express
requirement in the law for that dissemination. Note - See the provisions at
22VAC15-51-60 E.
22VAC15-51-80. Describing the waiver of criminal conviction.
(Repealed)
The waiver of criminal conviction is the department's
canceling the consequences of an unsatisfactory criminal history record check only
for specific convictions. Waiver provisions are found in 22VAC40-191-90 through
22VAC40-191-150.