2025 -- H 5281 | |
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LC000894 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2025 | |
____________ | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO HUMAN SERVICES -- RHODE ISLAND CHILDCARE IS ESSENTIAL ACT | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Diaz, Shallcross Smith, Donovan, Caldwell, Slater, | |
Date Introduced: January 31, 2025 | |
Referred To: House Finance | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Legislative findings. |
2 | The general assembly finds that: |
3 | (1) Access to affordable, high-quality childcare is essential to support labor force |
4 | participation of parents with children from infancy through age twelve (12) years and to maximize |
5 | the economic productivity of the state. |
6 | (2) Access to affordable, high-quality childcare is essential for all parents to achieve |
7 | economic security and independence, particularly for mothers who often have lower lifetime |
8 | earnings because they earn lower wages, work reduced hours, and take longer breaks from work in |
9 | order to care for children. |
10 | (3) High-quality childcare programs, staffed by qualified and effective educators, are |
11 | essential for children to promote healthy development and optimize learning during early childhood |
12 | and school-age years. |
13 | (4) A landmark report by the Institute of Medicine and National Research Council found |
14 | that children begin learning at birth and the adults that provide for the care and education of children |
15 | bear a great responsibility for their health, development, and learning -- setting the critical |
16 | foundation for lifelong progress. The report recommends that states work to increase the |
17 | qualifications and compensation of childcare educators, including those who care for infants and |
18 | toddlers. |
19 | (5) Childcare educators are among the lowest paid workers in Rhode Island. In 2023, the |
| |
1 | median wage of a childcare educator in Rhode Island was sixteen dollars and ninety-one cents |
2 | ($16.91) per hour. |
3 | (6) The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services provides significant funding to |
4 | Rhode Island through the Child Care and Development Block Grant and has established clear |
5 | guidelines for setting rates that provide low-income families with "equal access" to the childcare |
6 | market as required under federal law. The "equal access" guideline is to pay rates equal to or above |
7 | the seventy-fifth percentile of a recent market rate survey. |
8 | (7) The Rhode Island Governor’s Workforce Board recommends that Rhode Island pay |
9 | child care rates that meet or exceed the equal access standard as a first step to support program |
10 | quality and to improved wages and retention of child care educators. As of 2024, there were |
11 | seventeen (17) states that met or exceeded the equal access standard, including New York and |
12 | Vermont. Rhode Island’s base rate for infant care in a licensed child care center was at the 5th |
13 | percentile of the 2024 market rate survey, well below the 75th percentile equal access standard. |
14 | (8) The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has also established a clear |
15 | guideline for determining whether childcare is affordable. Currently, the federal guideline for |
16 | affordability is that families should pay no more than seven percent (7%) of family income for |
17 | childcare. Using that guideline, almost all families with young children in the State of Rhode Island |
18 | need a subsidy to afford the cost of high-quality childcare staffed by qualified, effective, and fairly- |
19 | compensated educators. |
20 | (9) The Federal Child Care and Development Block Grant focuses on helping lower income |
21 | families access child care, limiting the use of federal funds to families with incomes at or below |
22 | eighty-five percent (85%) of the state median income ($106,529) for a family of four in Rhode |
23 | Island in Federal Fiscal Year 2025), and allows states to waive this limit for children who are |
24 | members of a protected population such as children in foster care. As of 2024, there were sixteen |
25 | (16) states that set family income eligibility limits at or above eight-five percent (85%) of state |
26 | median income, including Maine, New Hampshire, New York and Vermont. |
27 | SECTION 2. Title 40 of the General Laws entitled "HUMAN SERVICES" is hereby |
28 | amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
29 | CHAPTER 6.7 |
30 | RHODE ISLAND CHILDCARE IS ESSENTIAL ACT |
31 | 40-6.7-1. Childcare assistance - Families or assistance units eligible. |
32 | (a) The department of human services shall provide appropriate childcare to every |
33 | participant who is eligible for cash assistance and who requires childcare in order to meet the work |
34 | requirements in accordance with this chapter. |
| LC000894 - Page 2 of 13 |
1 | (b) Low-income childcare. The department shall provide childcare to all other families with |
2 | incomes at or below eighty-five percent (85%) of the state median income, the low-income family |
3 | eligibility benchmark in the federal Childcare and Development Block Grant if, and to the extent, |
4 | these other families require childcare in order to work at paid employment and/or to participate in |
5 | training, apprenticeship, internship, on-the-job training, work experience, work immersion, or other |
6 | job-readiness/job- attachment programs sponsored or funded by the human resource investment |
7 | council (governor's workforce board) or state agencies that are part of the coordinated program |
8 | system pursuant to § 42-102-11. The department shall also provide childcare assistance to families |
9 | with incomes below eighty-five percent (85%) of the state median income when such assistance is |
10 | necessary for a member of these families to enroll or maintain enrollment in a Rhode Island public |
11 | institution of higher education. |
12 | (c) No family/assistance unit shall be eligible for childcare assistance under this chapter if |
13 | the combined value of its liquid resources exceeds one million dollars ($1,000,000), which |
14 | corresponds to the amount permitted by the federal government under the state plan and set forth |
15 | in the administrative rulemaking process by the department. As used in this section "liquid |
16 | resources" means any interest(s) in property in the form of cash or other financial instruments or |
17 | accounts that are readily convertible to cash or cash equivalents. These resources include, but are |
18 | not limited to: cash, bank, credit union, or other financial institution savings, checking, and money |
19 | market accounts; certificates of deposit or other time deposits; stocks; bonds; mutual funds; and |
20 | other similar financial instruments or accounts. These resources do not include educational savings |
21 | accounts, plans, or programs; retirement accounts, plans, or programs; or accounts held jointly with |
22 | another adult, not including a spouse. The department is authorized to promulgate rules and |
23 | regulations to determine the ownership and source of the funds in the joint account. |
24 | (d) The parent or caretaker relative of any family applying for childcare assistance may |
25 | voluntarily access the state’s office of child support services for assistance in locating the non- |
26 | custodial parent, establishing parentage, establishing a child support and/or medical order, and |
27 | enforcement of the order, but this shall not be a requirement to qualify for or access childcare |
28 | assistance. |
29 | (e) For purposes of this section, "appropriate childcare" means childcare, including infant, |
30 | toddler, preschool, nursery school, and school age, that is provided by a person or organization |
31 | qualified, approved, and authorized to provide the care by the state agency or agencies designated |
32 | to make the determinations in accordance with the provisions set forth in this section. |
33 | (f)(1) Families with incomes at or below one hundred percent (100%) of the applicable |
34 | federal poverty level guidelines shall be provided with free childcare. Families with incomes |
| LC000894 - Page 3 of 13 |
1 | greater than one hundred percent (100%) of the applicable federal poverty guideline shall be |
2 | required to pay for some portion of the childcare they receive, according to a sliding-fee scale |
3 | adopted by the department in the department's rules, not to exceed seven percent (7%) of income |
4 | as defined in subsection (h) of this section. |
5 | (2) Families who are receiving childcare assistance and who become ineligible for |
6 | childcare assistance as a result of their incomes exceeding eighty-five percent (85%) of state |
7 | median income shall continue to be eligible for childcare assistance until their incomes exceeds |
8 | one hundred percent (100%) of the state median income. To be eligible, the families must continue |
9 | to pay for some portion of the childcare they receive, as indicated in a sliding-fee scale adopted in |
10 | the department's rules, not to exceed seven percent (7%) of income as defined in subsection (h) of |
11 | this section, and in accordance with other eligibility standards. |
12 | (g) In determining the type of childcare to be provided to a family, the department shall |
13 | take into account the cost of available childcare options, the suitability of the type of care available |
14 | for the child; and the parent's preference as to the type of childcare. |
15 | (h) For purposes of this section, “income” for families receiving cash assistance under §§ |
16 | 40-5.2-10(g)(2) and 40-5.2-10(g)(3), and income for other families shall mean gross, earned, and |
17 | unearned income as determined by departmental regulations. |
18 | (i) The caseload estimating conference established by chapter 17 of title 35 shall forecast |
19 | the expenditures for childcare in accordance with the provisions of § 35-17-1. |
20 | (j) In determining eligibility for childcare assistance for children of members of reserve |
21 | components called to active duty during a time of conflict, the department shall freeze the family |
22 | composition and the family income of the reserve component member as it was in the month prior |
23 | to the month of leaving for active duty. This freeze shall continue until the individual is officially |
24 | discharged from active duty. |
25 | 40-6.7-2. Childcare assistance - Rates established. |
26 | (a) Effective July 1, 2025, the rates to be paid by the department of human services and the |
27 | department of children, youth and families for licensed childcare centers and family childcare |
28 | homes shall be updated to reflect findings from the 2024 Rhode Island childcare market rate survey |
29 | and shall be implemented in a tiered manner, reflective of the quality rating the provider has |
30 | achieved within the state's quality rating system outlined in § 42-12-23.1. All rates shall meet or |
31 | exceed the federal equal access benchmark (seventy-fifth percentile of the most recent Rhode Island |
32 | childcare market rate survey) and programs that have achieved a high-quality rating shall be paid |
33 | rates at or above the ninetieth percentile of the most recent Rhode Island childcare market rate |
34 | survey. Weekly rates shall be paid as follows: |
| LC000894 - Page 4 of 13 |
1 | LICENSED CHILDCARE CENTERS & FAMILY CHILDCARE HOMES |
2 | Tier One Tier Two Tier Three Tier Four Tier Five |
3 | Infant/Toddler $356 $363 $371 $378 $385 |
4 | Preschool $312 $320 $329 $337 $345 |
5 | School-Age $280 $287 $295 $303 $310 |
6 | The rates for licensed family childcare providers paid by the department of human services, |
7 | and the department of children, youth and families are determined through collective bargaining. |
8 | The rates for infant/toddler and preschool age children paid to licensed family childcare providers |
9 | by both departments is implemented in a tiered manner that reflects the quality rating the provider |
10 | has achieved in accordance with § 42-12-23.1. |
11 | (b) Beginning July 1, 2025, childcare providers serving infants under age eighteen (18) |
12 | months who are receiving childcare assistance shall be paid an additional infant bonus rate equal |
13 | to fifty percent (50%) of the toddler rate by the department of human services and the department |
14 | of children, youth, and families to help stabilize and expand access to quality infant care and to |
15 | help cover the costs associated with the required staff: child ratio for infants under age eighteen |
16 | (18) months. |
17 | (c) By June 30, 2027, and triennially thereafter, the department of human services in |
18 | consultation with the department of labor and training shall conduct an independent survey or |
19 | certify an independent survey of the then-current weekly market rates for childcare in Rhode Island |
20 | and shall post the findings from the market rate survey on the department's public website. The |
21 | departments of human services and labor and training will jointly determine the survey criteria |
22 | including, but not limited to, rate categories and sub-categories. |
23 | (d) In order to expand the accessibility and availability of quality childcare, the department |
24 | of human services is authorized to establish, by regulation, alternative or incentive rates for quality |
25 | enhancements, innovative or specialized childcare, and alternative methodologies of childcare |
26 | delivery, including nontraditional delivery systems and collaborations. |
27 | (e) All childcare providers have the option to be paid every two (2) weeks and have the |
28 | option of automatic direct deposit and/or electronic funds transfer of payments. |
29 | (f) Effective July 1, 2025, full-time childcare assistance payment rates cover thirty (30) to |
30 | forty-five (45) hours of care per week. Any child needing forty-five (45) to sixty (60) hours of care |
31 | per week will be paid at a super full-time rate of at least ten dollars ($10) per hour. No child will |
32 | be enrolled in the Childcare Assistance Program for more than sixty (60) hours per week. |
33 | (g) Effective January 1, 2026, all childcare assistance payments to childcare providers shall |
34 | be paid prospectively, on or before the Friday preceding the beginning of the childcare service |
| LC000894 - Page 5 of 13 |
1 | period, based on children’s authorized enrollment. |
2 | (h) Effective January 1, 2026 and annually thereafter, the department of human services |
3 | shall pay a registration fee for each child enrolled in the childcare assistance program to the |
4 | childcare centers where the children are enrolled. The per child registration fee for childcare centers |
5 | shall be equivalent to the per child annual registration fees paid to family childcare providers. |
6 | SECTION 3. Section 40-5.2-20 of the General Laws in Chapter 40-5.2 entitled "The Rhode |
7 | Island Works Program" is hereby repealed. |
8 | 40-5.2-20. Childcare assistance — Families or assistance units eligible. [Effective |
9 | January 1, 2025.] |
10 | (a) The department shall provide appropriate child care to every participant who is eligible |
11 | for cash assistance and who requires child care in order to meet the work requirements in |
12 | accordance with this chapter. |
13 | (b) Low-income child care. The department shall provide child care to all other working |
14 | families with incomes at or below two hundred sixty-one percent (261%) of the federal poverty |
15 | level if, and to the extent, these other families require child care in order to work at paid |
16 | employment as defined in the department’s rules and regulations. The department shall also provide |
17 | child care to families with incomes below two hundred sixty-one percent (261%) of the federal |
18 | poverty level if, and to the extent, these families require child care to participate on a short-term |
19 | basis, as defined in the department’s rules and regulations, in training, apprenticeship, internship, |
20 | on-the-job training, work experience, work immersion, or other job-readiness/job-attachment |
21 | program sponsored or funded by the human resource investment council (governor’s workforce |
22 | board) or state agencies that are part of the coordinated program system pursuant to § 42-102-11. |
23 | Effective from January 1, 2021, through June 30, 2022, the department shall also provide childcare |
24 | assistance to families with incomes below one hundred eighty percent (180%) of the federal poverty |
25 | level when such assistance is necessary for a member of these families to enroll or maintain |
26 | enrollment in a Rhode Island public institution of higher education provided that eligibility to |
27 | receive funding is capped when expenditures reach $200,000 for this provision. Effective July 1, |
28 | 2022 through December 31, 2024, the department shall also provide childcare assistance to families |
29 | with incomes below two hundred percent (200%) of the federal poverty level when such assistance |
30 | is necessary for a member of these families to enroll or maintain enrollment in a Rhode Island |
31 | public institution of higher education. Effective January 1, 2025, the department shall also provide |
32 | childcare assistance to families with incomes below two hundred sixty-one percent (261%) of the |
33 | federal poverty level when such assistance is necessary for a member of these families to enroll or |
34 | maintain enrollment in a Rhode Island public institution of higher education. |
| LC000894 - Page 6 of 13 |
1 | (c) No family/assistance unit shall be eligible for childcare assistance under this chapter if |
2 | the combined value of its liquid resources exceeds one million dollars ($1,000,000), which |
3 | corresponds to the amount permitted by the federal government under the state plan and set forth |
4 | in the administrative rulemaking process by the department. Liquid resources are defined as any |
5 | interest(s) in property in the form of cash or other financial instruments or accounts that are readily |
6 | convertible to cash or cash equivalents. These include, but are not limited to: cash, bank, credit |
7 | union, or other financial institution savings, checking, and money market accounts; certificates of |
8 | deposit or other time deposits; stocks; bonds; mutual funds; and other similar financial instruments |
9 | or accounts. These do not include educational savings accounts, plans, or programs; retirement |
10 | accounts, plans, or programs; or accounts held jointly with another adult, not including a spouse. |
11 | The department is authorized to promulgate rules and regulations to determine the ownership and |
12 | source of the funds in the joint account. |
13 | (d) As a condition of eligibility for childcare assistance under this chapter, the parent or |
14 | caretaker relative of the family must consent to, and must cooperate with, the department in |
15 | establishing paternity, and in establishing and/or enforcing child support and medical support |
16 | orders for any children in the family receiving appropriate child care under this section in |
17 | accordance with the applicable sections of title 15, as amended, unless the parent or caretaker |
18 | relative is found to have good cause for refusing to comply with the requirements of this subsection. |
19 | (e) For purposes of this section, “appropriate child care” means child care, including infant, |
20 | toddler, preschool, nursery school, and school-age, that is provided by a person or organization |
21 | qualified, approved, and authorized to provide the care by the state agency or agencies designated |
22 | to make the determinations in accordance with the provisions set forth herein. |
23 | (f)(1) Families with incomes below one hundred percent (100%) of the applicable federal |
24 | poverty level guidelines shall be provided with free child care. Families with incomes greater than |
25 | one hundred percent (100%) and less than two hundred percent (200%) of the applicable federal |
26 | poverty guideline shall be required to pay for some portion of the child care they receive, according |
27 | to a sliding-fee scale adopted by the department in the department’s rules, not to exceed seven |
28 | percent (7%) of income as defined in subsection (h) of this section. |
29 | (2) Families who are receiving childcare assistance and who become ineligible for |
30 | childcare assistance as a result of their incomes exceeding two hundred sixty-one percent (261%) |
31 | of the applicable federal poverty guidelines shall continue to be eligible for childcare assistance |
32 | until their incomes exceed three hundred percent (300%) of the applicable federal poverty |
33 | guidelines. To be eligible, the families must continue to pay for some portion of the child care they |
34 | receive, as indicated in a sliding-fee scale adopted in the department’s rules, not to exceed seven |
| LC000894 - Page 7 of 13 |
1 | percent (7%) of income as defined in subsection (h) of this section, and in accordance with all other |
2 | eligibility standards. |
3 | (g) In determining the type of child care to be provided to a family, the department shall |
4 | take into account the cost of available childcare options; the suitability of the type of care available |
5 | for the child; and the parent’s preference as to the type of child care. |
6 | (h) For purposes of this section, “income” for families receiving cash assistance under § |
7 | 40-5.2-11 means gross, earned income and unearned income, subject to the income exclusions in |
8 | §§ 40-5.2-10(g)(2) and 40-5.2-10(g)(3), and income for other families shall mean gross, earned and |
9 | unearned income as determined by departmental regulations. |
10 | (i) The caseload estimating conference established by chapter 17 of title 35 shall forecast |
11 | the expenditures for child care in accordance with the provisions of § 35-17-1. |
12 | (j) In determining eligibility for childcare assistance for children of members of reserve |
13 | components called to active duty during a time of conflict, the department shall freeze the family |
14 | composition and the family income of the reserve component member as it was in the month prior |
15 | to the month of leaving for active duty. This shall continue until the individual is officially |
16 | discharged from active duty. |
17 | (k) Effective from August 1, 2023, through July 31, 2025, the department shall provide |
18 | funding for child care for eligible childcare educators, and childcare staff, who work at least twenty |
19 | (20) hours a week in licensed childcare centers and licensed family childcare homes as defined in |
20 | the department’s rules and regulations. Eligibility is limited to qualifying childcare educators and |
21 | childcare staff with family incomes up to three hundred percent (300%) of the applicable federal |
22 | poverty guidelines and will have no copayments. Qualifying participants may select the childcare |
23 | center or family childcare home for their children. The department shall promulgate regulations |
24 | necessary to implement this section, and will collect applicant and participant data to report |
25 | estimated demand for state-funded child care for eligible childcare educators and childcare staff. |
26 | The report shall be due to the governor and the general assembly by November 1, 2024. |
27 | SECTION 4. Section 40-6.2-1.1 of the General Laws in Chapter 40-6.2 entitled "Child |
28 | Care — State Subsidies" is hereby repealed. |
29 | 40-6.2-1.1. Rates established. |
30 | (a) Through June 30, 2015, subject to the payment limitations in subsection (c), the |
31 | maximum reimbursement rates to be paid by the departments of human services and children, youth |
32 | and families for licensed childcare centers and licensed family childcare providers shall be based |
33 | on the following schedule of the 75th percentile of the 2002 weekly market rates adjusted for the |
34 | average of the 75th percentile of the 2002 and the 2004 weekly market rates: |
| LC000894 - Page 8 of 13 |
1 | Licensed Childcare Centers 75th Percentile of Weekly Market Rate |
2 | Infant $182.00 |
3 | Preschool $150.00 |
4 | School-Age $135.00 |
5 | Licensed Family Childcare Providers 75th Percentile of Weekly Market Rate |
6 | Infant $150.00 |
7 | Preschool $150.00 |
8 | School-Age $135.00 |
9 | Effective July 1, 2015, subject to the payment limitations in subsection (c), the maximum |
10 | reimbursement rates to be paid by the departments of human services and children, youth and |
11 | families for licensed childcare centers and licensed family childcare providers shall be based on the |
12 | above schedule of the 75th percentile of the 2002 weekly market rates adjusted for the average of |
13 | the 75th percentile of the 2002 and the 2004 weekly market rates. These rates shall be increased by |
14 | ten dollars ($10.00) per week for infant/toddler care provided by licensed family childcare |
15 | providers and license-exempt providers and then the rates for all providers for all age groups shall |
16 | be increased by three percent (3%). For the fiscal year ending June 30, 2018, licensed childcare |
17 | centers shall be reimbursed a maximum weekly rate of one hundred ninety-three dollars and sixty- |
18 | four cents ($193.64) for infant/toddler care and one hundred sixty-one dollars and seventy-one |
19 | cents ($161.71) for preschool-age children. |
20 | (b) Effective July l, 2018, subject to the payment limitations in subsection (c), the |
21 | maximum infant/toddler and preschool-age reimbursement rates to be paid by the departments of |
22 | human services and children, youth and families for licensed childcare centers shall be |
23 | implemented in a tiered manner, reflective of the quality rating the provider has achieved within |
24 | the state’s quality rating system outlined in § 42-12-23.1. |
25 | (1) For infant/toddler child care, tier one shall be reimbursed two and one-half percent |
26 | (2.5%) above the FY 2018 weekly amount, tier two shall be reimbursed five percent (5%) above |
27 | the FY 2018 weekly amount, tier three shall be reimbursed thirteen percent (13%) above the FY |
28 | 2018 weekly amount, tier four shall be reimbursed twenty percent (20%) above the FY 2018 weekly |
29 | amount, and tier five shall be reimbursed thirty-three percent (33%) above the FY 2018 weekly |
30 | amount. |
31 | (2) For preschool reimbursement rates, tier one shall be reimbursed two and one-half |
32 | percent (2.5%) above the FY 2018 weekly amount, tier two shall be reimbursed five percent (5%) |
33 | above the FY 2018 weekly amount, tier three shall be reimbursed ten percent (10%) above the FY |
34 | 2018 weekly amount, tier four shall be reimbursed thirteen percent (13%) above the FY 2018 |
| LC000894 - Page 9 of 13 |
1 | weekly amount, and tier five shall be reimbursed twenty-one percent (21%) above the FY 2018 |
2 | weekly amount. |
3 | (c) [Deleted by P.L. 2019, ch. 88, art. 13, § 4.] |
4 | (d) By June 30, 2004, and biennially through June 30, 2014, the department of labor and |
5 | training shall conduct an independent survey or certify an independent survey of the then-current |
6 | weekly market rates for child care in Rhode Island and shall forward the weekly market rate survey |
7 | to the department of human services. The next survey shall be conducted by June 30, 2016, and |
8 | triennially thereafter. The departments of human services and labor and training will jointly |
9 | determine the survey criteria including, but not limited to, rate categories and sub-categories. |
10 | (e) In order to expand the accessibility and availability of quality child care, the department |
11 | of human services is authorized to establish, by regulation, alternative or incentive rates of |
12 | reimbursement for quality enhancements, innovative or specialized child care, and alternative |
13 | methodologies of childcare delivery, including nontraditional delivery systems and collaborations. |
14 | (f) Effective January 1, 2007, all childcare providers have the option to be paid every two |
15 | (2) weeks and have the option of automatic direct deposit and/or electronic funds transfer of |
16 | reimbursement payments. |
17 | (g) Effective July 1, 2019, the maximum infant/toddler reimbursement rates to be paid by |
18 | the departments of human services and children, youth and families for licensed family childcare |
19 | providers shall be implemented in a tiered manner, reflective of the quality rating the provider has |
20 | achieved within the state’s quality rating system outlined in § 42-12-23.1. Tier one shall be |
21 | reimbursed two percent (2%) above the prevailing base rate for step 1 and step 2 providers, three |
22 | percent (3%) above prevailing base rate for step 3 providers, and four percent (4%) above the |
23 | prevailing base rate for step 4 providers; tier two shall be reimbursed five percent (5%) above the |
24 | prevailing base rate; tier three shall be reimbursed eleven percent (11%) above the prevailing base |
25 | rate; tier four shall be reimbursed fourteen percent (14%) above the prevailing base rate; and tier |
26 | five shall be reimbursed twenty-three percent (23%) above the prevailing base rate. |
27 | (h) Through December 31, 2021, the maximum reimbursement rates paid by the |
28 | departments of human services, and children, youth and families to licensed childcare centers shall |
29 | be consistent with the enhanced emergency rates provided as of June 1, 2021, as follows: |
30 | Tier 1 Tier 2 Tier 3 Tier 4 Tier 5 |
31 | Infant/Toddler $257.54 $257.54 $257.54 $257.54 $273.00 |
32 | Preschool Age $195.67 $195.67 $195.67 $195.67 $260.00 |
33 | School Age $200.00 $200.00 $200.00 $200.00 $245.00 |
34 | The maximum reimbursement rates paid by the departments of human services, and |
| LC000894 - Page 10 of 13 |
1 | children, youth and families to licensed family childcare providers shall be consistent with the |
2 | enhanced emergency rates provided as of June 1, 2021, as follows: |
3 | Tier 1 Tier 2 Tier 3 Tier 4 Tier 5 |
4 | Infant/Toddler $224.43 $224.43 $224.43 $224.43 $224.43 |
5 | Preschool Age $171.45 $171.45 $171.45 $171.45 $171.45 |
6 | School Age $162.30 $162.30 $162.30 $162.30 $162.30 |
7 | (i) Effective January 1, 2022, the maximum reimbursement rates to be paid by the |
8 | departments of human services and children, youth and families for licensed childcare centers shall |
9 | be implemented in a tiered manner, reflective of the quality rating the provider has achieved within |
10 | the state’s quality rating system outlined in § 42-12-23.1. Maximum weekly rates shall be |
11 | reimbursed as follows: |
12 | Licensed Childcare Centers |
13 | Tier One Tier Two Tier Three Tier Four Tier Five |
14 | Infant/Toddler $236.36 $244.88 $257.15 $268.74 $284.39 |
15 | Preschool $207.51 $212.27 $218.45 $223.50 $231.39 |
16 | School-Age $180.38 $182.77 $185.17 $187.57 $189.97 |
17 | The maximum reimbursement rates for licensed family childcare providers paid by the |
18 | departments of human services, and children, youth and families is determined through collective |
19 | bargaining. The maximum reimbursement rates for infant/toddler and preschool age children paid |
20 | to licensed family childcare providers by both departments is implemented in a tiered manner that |
21 | reflects the quality rating the provider has achieved in accordance with § 42-12-23.1. |
22 | (j) Effective July 1, 2022, the maximum reimbursement rates to be paid by the departments |
23 | of human services and children, youth and families for licensed childcare centers shall be |
24 | implemented in a tiered manner, reflective of the quality rating the provider has achieved within |
25 | the state’s quality rating system outlined in § 42-12-23.1. Maximum weekly rates shall be |
26 | reimbursed as follows: |
27 | Licensed Childcare Centers |
28 | Tier One Tier Two Tier Three Tier Four Tier Five |
29 | Infant/Toddler $265 $270 $282 $289 $300 |
30 | Preschool $225 $235 $243 $250 $260 |
31 | School-Age $200 $205 $220 $238 $250 |
32 | (k) Effective July 1, 2024, the maximum reimbursement rates to be paid by the departments |
33 | of human services and children, youth and families for licensed childcare centers shall be |
34 | implemented in a tiered manner, reflective of the quality rating the provider has achieved within |
| LC000894 - Page 11 of 13 |
1 | the state’s quality rating system outlined in § 42-12-23.1. Maximum weekly rates shall be |
2 | reimbursed as follows: |
3 | Licensed Childcare Centers |
4 | Tier One Tier Two Tier Three Tier Four Tier Five |
5 | Infant/Toddler $278 $284 $296 $303 $315 |
6 | Preschool $236 $247 $255 $263 $273 |
7 | School-Age $210 $215 $231 $250 $263 |
8 | SECTION 5. This act shall take effect on July 1, 2025. |
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| LC000894 - Page 12 of 13 |
EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO HUMAN SERVICES -- RHODE ISLAND CHILDCARE IS ESSENTIAL ACT | |
*** | |
1 | This act would create the Rhode Island Childcare Assistance Program that governs both |
2 | family eligibility for the state’s childcare subsidy program and the rates paid to childcare providers |
3 | serving families receiving a subsidy. The act would expand eligibility for the program to meet the |
4 | federal eligibility benchmark so that families with incomes at or below eighty-five percent (85%) |
5 | of the state median income would be eligible. The act would allow families to continue eligibility |
6 | until their income exceeds one hundred percent (100%) of the state median income and would make |
7 | participation in the state’s child support enforcement program voluntary for the childcare subsidy. |
8 | The act would also increase the tiered rates of paid for licensed childcare centers to meet or exceed |
9 | the federal equal access benchmark, implement a new differential bonus rate for infants under age |
10 | eighteen (18) months and adopt fair payment practices consistent with the federal rules for the Child |
11 | Care and Development Fund. |
12 | This act would take effect on July 1, 2025. |
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| LC000894 - Page 13 of 13 |