Connecticut 2024 2024 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB05002 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 05/05/2024

                     
Researcher: RP 	Page 1 	5/5/24 
 
 
 
 
OLR Bill Analysis 
sHB 5002 (as amended by House "A")*  
 
AN ACT CONCERNING EARLY CHILDHOOD CARE AND 
EDUCATION.  
 
TABLE OF CONTENTS: 
SUMMARY 
§§ 1-2 & 13 — EARLY CHILDHOOD CARE AND E DUCATION FUND 
Renames the Early Childhood Education Fund created in the FY 24-25 budget act the 
Early Childhood Care and Education Fund and establishes a framework for the fund’s 
deposits and investments and the state treasurer’s authority and powers on behalf of the 
fund; creates a 23-member advisory commission within the Legislative Department to, 
among other things, review and report on the fund’s financial health and status and 
prepare a five-year plan for its expenditures 
§ 3 — TRI-SHARE CHILD CARE MATCHING PROG RAM 
Requires OEC, within available appropriations, to establish a Tri-Share Child Care 
Matching Program serving New London County in which child care costs are shared 
equally between participating employers, employees, and the state 
§ 4 — WAGE SUPPLEMEN T PAYMENT PROGRAM 
Requires OEC, for FY 25, to set up and administer a wage supplement payment program 
that provides one-time payments of at least $1,800 to eligible early childhood education 
teachers and teacher assistants; requires OEC to use $9 million of its FY 25 General Fund 
appropriation for Early Care and Education used for school readiness and child day care 
purposes for the payments 
§ 5 — SURPLUS LAND FOR EARLY CHILDHOOD C ARE AND EARLY 
CHILDHOOD EDUCATION PROGRAMS 
Requires the OEC commissioner to notify the OPM secretary if certain surplus state 
property can be used to provide early childhood care and education programs 
§ 6 — OEC LIABILITY INSURANCE COVERAGE D OCUMENT FOR 
CHILD CARE CENTERS 
Requires the OEC commissioner to consult with a nonprofit organization to develop a 
document that explains the benefits of child care centers and homes maintaining liability 
insurance coverage and potential consequences of not having coverage; requires the 
document to be electronically distributed to child care facilities 
§ 7 — OEC DEVELOPMEN TAL MILESTONES DOCUM ENT 
Eliminates the requirement that child care centers and homes that exclusively serve 
school-age children post a copy of an OEC-developed developmental milestones document 
in the center or home  2024HB-05002-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 2 	5/5/24 
 
§§ 8-9, 11 & 12 — CARE 4 KIDS 
Adds children under the care of a caregiver who receives subsidies under the subsidized 
guardianship program to the Care 4 Kids protective service class; repeals the Care 4 Kids 
program regulations and instead requires the OEC commissioner to (1) administer the 
program by implementing the federal Child Care Development Fund program’s 
regulations and (2) develop policies and procedures necessary to do so; requires the 
secretary of the state to correspondingly update the online compilation of state regulations 
§ 10 — BIRTH-TO-THREE SERVICES 
Requires child care centers to allow a child with an individualized family service plan who 
is eligible to receive Birth-to-Three services to receive them on-site at a child care center or 
home 
 
 
SUMMARY 
This bill makes various changes relating to early childhood care and 
education. A section-by-section analysis follows. 
*House Amendment “A”: 
1. changes the composition of the Early Childhood Care and 
Education Fund advisory commission’s membership by, among 
other things, adding the Finance, Revenue and Bonding 
Committee’s chairpersons and ranking members and two 
additional legislators appointed by the House speaker and 
Senate president pro tempore; 
2. increases the frequency with which the advisory commission 
must submit and update its plan on fund expenditures, from 
every 10 years to every five; 
3. makes additional commission members eligible for the bill’s 
stipend; 
4. eliminates a provision authorizing up to $50 million in state 
general obligation bonds for the Office of Early Childhood (OEC) 
to implement programs and initiatives supporting the state’s 
early childhood education and child care needs; 
5. eliminates a provision transferring $50 million from the General 
Fund to the Early Childhood Care and Education Fund in FY 25;  2024HB-05002-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 3 	5/5/24 
 
6. makes various changes to the Tri -Share program’s 
administration, eligibility, and required reporting, including 
eliminating the requirement that employees have incomes below 
a specified threshold published by the United Way of 
Connecticut to qualify for the program; 
7. eliminates the requirement that OEC set up and administer, for 
FY 26, a wage supplement and child care program enhancement 
grant program for eligible early childhood education program 
operators and child care services providers and instead requires 
OEC to set up and administer a one-time wage supplement 
payment program for FY 25 for eligible early childhood teachers 
and teacher assistants; 
8. adds provisions that require the OEC commissioner to (a) add 
children under the care of a caregiver who receives subsidies 
under the subsidized guardianship program to the Care 4 Kids 
protective service class; (b) develop a document for child care 
centers and homes that explains the benefits of maintaining and 
potential consequences of not maintaining liability insurance 
coverage; and (c) notify the Office of Policy and Management 
(OPM) secretary if certain state property can be used to provide 
early childhood care and education programs; 
9. adds a provision that requires child care centers to allow a child 
with an individualized family service plan who is eligible to 
receive Birth-to-Three services to receive these services on-site at 
a child care center or home; and  
10. eliminates the requirement that child care centers and homes 
exclusively serving school-age children post a copy of an OEC-
developed developmental milestones document.  
EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024, unless otherwise noted below. 
§§ 1-2 & 13 — EARLY CHILDHOOD CARE AND E DUCATION FUND 
Renames the Early Childhood Education Fund created in the FY 24-25 budget act the 
Early Childhood Care and Education Fund and establishes a framework for the fund’s 
deposits and investments and the state treasurer’s authority and powers on behalf of the  2024HB-05002-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 4 	5/5/24 
 
fund; creates a 23-member advisory commission within the Legislative Department to, 
among other things, review and report on the fund’s financial health and status and 
prepare a five-year plan for its expenditures 
Fund Requirements (§ 1) 
The bill renames the Early Childhood Education Fund created in the 
FY 24-25 budget act the Early Childhood Care and Education Fund. As 
under current law, the bill requires the Early Childhood Care and 
Education Fund to contain any money required or allowed by law to be 
deposited in it, including funds received from public or private 
contributions, gifts, and grants. The bill explicitly allows it to contain 
federal, state, or local grants, and additionally allows it to contain any 
earnings until they are disbursed according to the bill. 
The bill requires the fund’s deposits to be used solely to support the 
state’s early childhood education and child care needs. They are not 
state property, cannot be combined with state funds, and the state has 
no claim on them. The fund is not a state department, institution, or 
agency. It must continue to exist as long as it has deposits or obligations 
and until terminated by law.  
Under the bill, any contract entered into by the fund, or any 
obligation of the fund, is not a state debt or obligation, and the state has 
no obligation on account of the fund. Amounts that must be paid from 
the fund are limited to the amount deposited there that is available for 
the payments.  
Treasurer’s Authority and Powers (§ 1) 
The bill eliminates the requirement that the comptroller establish the 
fund and instead authorizes the treasurer, on the fund’s behalf and to 
carry out its purposes, to do the following: 
1. receive and invest the fund’s money in any instruments, 
obligations, securities, or property as described below;  
2. enter into contractual agreements for services for the fund (e.g., 
legal, actuarial, administrative, and consulting) and pay for them 
with the fund’s assets;   2024HB-05002-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 5 	5/5/24 
 
3. obtain insurance for the fund’s property, assets, activities, or 
deposits;  
4. apply for and accept public or private donations to enable the 
fund to achieve its objectives;  
5. adopt regulations;  
6. sue and be sued;  
7. establish accounts within the fund; and  
8. take other necessary action to carry out the bill’s purposes and 
related to the treasurer’s duties under the bill. 
Investments (§ 1) 
The bill requires the state treasurer to (1) invest the fund’s deposits in 
a reasonable way to achieve its objectives; (2) exercise a prudent 
person’s care and discretion; and (3) consider such things as rate of 
return, risk, maturity, portfolio diversification, liquidity, projected 
disbursements and expenditures, and expected deposits and other gifts.  
Under the bill, the state treasurer need not require the fund to invest 
in state or municipal bonds or other funds he administers. The fund’s 
assets must be continuously invested and reinvested, consistent with 
the fund’s objectives, until they are disbursed by the comptroller as the 
bill allows. 
Advisory Commission (§§ 2 & 13) 
Membership and Administration. The bill creates a 23-member 
Early Childhood Care and Education Fund Advisory Commission 
within the Legislative Department to (1) review and report on the fund’s 
financial health and status, (2) submit and update a five-year plan to the 
legislature on fund expenditures that would best support the state’s 
early childhood education and child care needs, and (3) recommend 
legislative changes to further the fund’s purposes. Under the bill, the 
commission consists of the 14 appointed members shown in the table 
below; the chairpersons and ranking members of the Finance, Revenue  2024HB-05002-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 6 	5/5/24 
 
and Bonding Committee; and the following state officials or their 
designees: the OPM secretary, state treasurer, state comptroller, and 
early childhood and education commissioners. 
Table: Early Childhood Care and Education Fund Advisory Commission 
Appointing 
Authority 
Number of 
Appointments 
Appointee’s Qualifications 
House speaker 
3 
One must be a member of OEC’s parent cabinet who 
is a parent 
One must be an early childhood teacher 
One General Assembly member 
Senate 
president pro 
tempore 
3 
One must operate or represent a home-based child 
care services provider in Connecticut  
One must be the parent of a child receiving Birth-to-
Three services 
One General Assembly member 
House majority 
leader 
2 
One must represent an early childhood education 
program operator in Connecticut 
One must represent a family resource center and be 
an Early Childhood Cabinet member  
Senate 
majority leader 
2 
One must represent a philanthropic organization 
engaged in early childhood education or child care 
issues in Connecticut and be an Early Childhood 
Funder Collaborative member 
One must represent OEC’s Connecticut Head Start 
State Collaboration Office and be a member of the 
Early Childhood Cabinet 
House minority 
leader 
2 
One must represent a non-home-based child care 
services provider in Connecticut 
One must be an OEC representative who administers 
the Childhood Care and Development Fund and a 
member of the Early Childhood Cabinet 
Senate 
minority leader 
2 
One must represent a corporation with a significant 
physical presence in Connecticut that employs 
people who may benefit from early childhood 
education and state child care initiatives 
One must be an OEC representative who administers 
the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act 
(IDEA) Part C program (i.e., the early intervention 
program for infants and toddlers with disabilities and 
their families) 
 
Under the bill, appointed members serve at the pleasure of their 
appointing authority coterminous with their appointing authority. To  2024HB-05002-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 7 	5/5/24 
 
the extent practicable, appointing authorities must appoint members to 
ensure that the state’s geographic areas are represented. They must also 
fill any vacancies, and those occurring other than by term expiration 
must be filled for the remainder of the unexpired term.  
The commission is chaired by the (1) state comptroller and (2) two 
General Assembly members appointed by the House speaker and 
Senate president pro tempore. The chairpersons must schedule and hold 
the first meeting within 90 days after the bill’s passage. The commission 
must meet as often as the chairpersons or a majority of its members 
deem necessary, and a majority of members constitutes a quorum. 
Members are considered to have resigned from the commission if 
they miss three consecutive meetings or 50% of the meetings held 
during any calendar year. 
The bill requires the Finance, Revenue and Bonding Committee’s 
administrative staff to serve as the advisory commission’s 
administrative staff. 
Travel Expenses and Stipend. Members generally serve without 
compensation but must be reimbursed for necessary travel expenses, 
within available funds. The exception is for the following commission 
members who are eligible, within available funds, for a $25 per hour 
stipend for each hour (or part of an hour) that they attend a commission 
meeting: 
1. parent member of OEC’s parent cabinet, 
2. parent of a child receiving Birth-to-Three services, 
3. early childhood teacher, and 
4. representatives of an early childhood education program 
operator and home- and non-home-based child care services 
providers if they are employees of the respective operator or 
provider and (except for the home-based child care services 
provider representative) paid hourly.  2024HB-05002-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 8 	5/5/24 
 
Under the bill, the travel time to and from the meeting does not count 
towards the stipend. Eligible members must submit a request to the 
Office of Legislative Management’s executive director, as he requires, to 
receive the travel expenses or stipend. They must provide any 
documentation the executive director requires to substantiate the 
requested amount. 
Powers and Duties. The bill authorizes the commission to do the 
following: 
1. review and monitor the Early Childhood Care and Education 
Fund to assess its financial sustainability; 
2. get the help and data it needs to carry out its purposes from any 
executive department, board, commission, or state agency; and 
3. do anything else necessary and appropriate to carry out its 
duties. 
Reporting Requirement. Annually, starting by January 1, 2026, the 
commission must report to the Appropriations; Finance, Revenue and 
Bonding; Education; and Children’s committees on the Early Childhood 
Care and Education Fund’s financial health and status. The report must 
include: 
1. the amount deposited in the fund and whether it is sufficient to 
achieve the fund’s purposes, 
2. actual or expected disbursements for the applicable fiscal year, 
3. the fund’s investments’ rates of return, and 
4. any recommendations for policy changes and statutory changes 
to further the fund’s purposes. 
By January 1, 2026, the commission must also submit to these same 
committees a five-year plan for the fund’s expenditures that would best 
support the state’s early childhood education and child care needs. In 
developing this plan, the commission must consider (1) reports on the  2024HB-05002-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 9 	5/5/24 
 
state of these needs in Connecticut and kindergarten readiness and (2) 
best practices in other states. It must update and submit this plan to 
these committees at least annually. 
The bill also eliminates the requirement that the OEC commissioner 
annually report to the legislature on the current Early Childhood 
Education Fund and the Blue -Ribbon Panel on Child Care’s 
recommendations (§ 13). 
Public Hearing. Beginning with FY 26, the commission must 
annually hold a public hearing on the state of the fund and of early 
childhood education and child care in the state. 
EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage  
§ 3 — TRI-SHARE CHILD CARE MATCHING PROG RAM 
Requires OEC, within available appropriations, to establish a Tri-Share Child Care 
Matching Program serving New London County in which child care costs are shared 
equally between participating employers, employees, and the state 
Program Duration and Administrator 
The bill requires OEC, within available appropriations, to create a 
Tri-Share Child Care Matching Program for New London County (1) in 
which child care costs are shared equally between participating 
employers, employees, and the state and (2) that runs for at least two 
years. Under the bill, OEC must choose a regional or statewide 
organization to administer the program. The administrator must: 
1. set the program’s eligibility criteria for employers and employees 
(although the bill sets specific criteria as described below) and 
recruit employers to participate; 
2. ensure that the child care facilities receiving program funds are 
state-licensed and disburse funds to the appropriate providers; 
3. collect and ensure timely payment from the state and 
participating employers and employees;  
4. coordinate adequate communication between all parties; and  2024HB-05002-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
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5. collect and submit data to OEC on participating employees (e.g., 
their annual household income), as long as this data is 
deidentified. 
OEC must enter into an agreement with its chosen administrator to 
perform these duties. This agreement must at least include: 
1. a provision that the administrator must receive, for its 
administrative costs, up to 10% of the funds the state allocates to 
the program; 
2. a requirement that the administrator not commingle program 
funds with any other funds it holds or controls, other than those 
it receives for administrative costs;  
3. any restrictions or prohibitions on disclosing data the 
administrator received or collected on participating employees; 
and 
4. penalties for violating any provision of the agreement or the bill’s 
Tri-Share program provisions. 
Eligibility Criteria 
To participate in the program, employers must have a physical 
facility in New London County that is its employees’ principal 
workplace. Employees must: 
1. be employed by a participating employer,  
2. live in Connecticut, 
3. have a principal workplace in New London County, and 
4. not be receiving other public assistance for child care costs. 
Reporting Requirement 
The bill requires the OEC commissioner, beginning with the fiscal 
year immediately following the program’s first year, to annually report 
on the program to the Appropriations; Finance, Revenue and Bonding;  2024HB-05002-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 11 	5/5/24 
 
Education; and Children’s committees. The report must at least include: 
1. for the immediately preceding fiscal year, the (a) number of 
participating employers and employees and (b) amounts the 
administrator disbursed for child care costs and retained for 
administrative costs;  
2. the percentage of participating employees whose household 
incomes are below the asset limited, income constrained, 
employed population threshold calculated in the United Way of 
Connecticut’s most recent ALICE report (see Background — 
ALICE Threshold); and 
3. the commissioner’s recommendations for programmatic or 
legislative changes to improve the program or further its 
purposes. 
Background — ALICE Threshold 
The United Way’s ALICE (i.e., asset limited, income constrained, and 
employed) threshold represents the minimum income level needed for 
a household to afford an estimated minimum budget (i.e., the ALICE 
household survival budget). The threshold is adjusted for household 
size and composition for each county.  
Based on the United Way’s 2023 ALICE report for Connecticut, to 
cover the household survival budget for 2021, a single adult had to earn 
$16.56 per hour and a family with two children had to earn a combined 
$45.71 per hour. 
§ 4 — WAGE SUPPLEMEN T PAYMENT PROGRAM 
Requires OEC, for FY 25, to set up and administer a wage supplement payment program 
that provides one-time payments of at least $1,800 to eligible early childhood education 
teachers and teacher assistants; requires OEC to use $9 million of its FY 25 General Fund 
appropriation for Early Care and Education used for school readiness and child day care 
purposes for the payments 
Wage Supplement Payments 
The bill requires OEC to set up and administer a wage supplement 
program for FY 25 that gives eligible early childhood teachers and 
teacher assistants a one-time wage supplement payment of at least  2024HB-05002-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 12 	5/5/24 
 
$1,800. Under the bill, OEC must provide these payments on a first-
come, first-served basis, up to the amount made available for the 
payments, and award all eligible applicants the same payment amount. 
The bill requires OEC to use $9 million of its FY 25 General Fund 
appropriation for Early Care and Education used for school readiness 
and child day care purposes for the payments.  
Eligible Applicants 
To qualify for the wage supplement payment, “early childhood 
teachers” and “teacher assistants” must be in a state-funded school 
readiness program or state-funded child care program. “Early 
childhood teachers” must have primary responsibility for a classroom 
of children for at least 50% of their assigned time, while “teacher 
assistants” must have a primary duty to assist an early childhood 
teacher in providing early childhood care or as part of a school readiness 
program. Both must be regularly scheduled and have been employed in 
these respective capacities for at least six months at the time of the 
application. 
Application Process 
The OEC commissioner must determine (1) the application period 
and process for eligible applicants to apply to register for a wage 
supplement payment and (2) how to disseminate information about the 
program to best achieve the bill’s purposes. OEC must review the 
submitted applications, confirm each applicant’s eligibility, and, within 
30 days of receiving an application, notify applicants of whether or not 
they were approved and the reason why if they were not approved. 
Income or Asset Disregard 
Under the bill, to the extent federal law allows, the wage supplement 
payments are not considered income or assets for determining eligibility 
for any state-administered public assistance program, including any 
HUSKY program. 
Legislative Report 
The OEC commissioner must report on the program by October 1, 
2025, to the Appropriations; Finance, Revenue and Bonding; Education;  2024HB-05002-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
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and Children’s committees. At a minimum, the report must include (1) 
the number of eligible early childhood teachers and teacher assistants 
that applied and were approved for a payment, (2) the payment 
amounts to each group and in total; and (3) a recommendation for 
whether the program should be expanded or extended. 
EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage 
§ 5 — SURPLUS LAND F OR EARLY CHILDHOOD CARE AND 
EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUC ATION PROGRAMS 
Requires the OEC commissioner to notify the OPM secretary if certain surplus state 
property can be used to provide early childhood care and education programs 
The bill requires the OEC commissioner to notify the OPM secretary 
if certain surplus state property can be used to provide early childhood 
care and early childhood education programs.  
By law, the secretary must notify all state agencies when an agency 
informs him it no longer needs a property it controls. The law requires 
nine specific commissioners to determine and notify the secretary if the 
property can be used for certain purposes related to their agency’s 
mission (e.g., commissioners of Economic and Community 
Development, Transportation, and Housing). Commissioners who 
determine they can use the property must submit a plan describing the 
proposed use for the secretary’s review (CGS § 4b-21). The bill adds the 
OEC commissioner to this group. 
§ 6 — OEC LIABILITY INSURANCE COVERAGE D OCUMENT FOR 
CHILD CARE CENTERS 
Requires the OEC commissioner to consult with a nonprofit organization to develop a 
document that explains the benefits of child care centers and homes maintaining liability 
insurance coverage and potential consequences of not having coverage; requires the 
document to be electronically distributed to child care facilities 
The bill requires the OEC commissioner, by December 1, 2024, to 
consult with a nonprofit organization that provides entrepreneurial and 
financial education services to women to develop a document that 
explains the (1) benefits of child care centers and homes maintaining 
liability insurance coverage and (2) potential consequences of not 
having this coverage. The OEC commissioner must electronically 
distribute the document to licensed child care centers, group child care  2024HB-05002-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 14 	5/5/24 
 
homes, and family child care homes each year, starting by January 1, 
2025. 
EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage 
Background — Related Bill 
sHB 5160 (File 23), favorably reported by the Children’s Committee, 
has an identical provision. 
§ 7 — OEC DEVELOPMEN TAL MILESTONES DOCUM ENT 
Eliminates the requirement that child care centers and homes that exclusively serve 
school-age children post a copy of an OEC-developed developmental milestones document 
in the center or home  
Current law requires each operator of a child care center or group or 
family child care home to post a copy of an OEC-developed document 
(1) listing key developmental milestones for children from birth to age 
five and (2) including information that parents or guardians concerned 
that their child has not met any developmental milestones may access 
the OEC Child Development Infoline for information on appropriate 
services.  
Under the bill, beginning on July 1, 2024, centers that exclusively 
serve school-age children are no longer required to post a copy of this 
document. 
Background — Related Bill 
SB 152 (File 94), favorably reported by the Children’s Committee, has 
a similar provision. 
§§ 8-9, 11 & 12 — CARE 4 KIDS 
Adds children under the care of a caregiver who receives subsidies under the subsidized 
guardianship program to the Care 4 Kids protective service class; repeals the Care 4 Kids 
program regulations and instead requires the OEC commissioner to (1) administer the 
program by implementing the federal Child Care Development Fund program’s 
regulations and (2) develop policies and procedures necessary to do so; requires the 
secretary of the state to correspondingly update the online compilation of state regulations 
Protective Service Class (§ 9) 
The bill adds children under the care of a caregiver who receives 
subsidies through the Department of Children and Families’s 
subsidized guardianship program to OEC’s protective service class and  2024HB-05002-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 15 	5/5/24 
 
extends eligibility to them for up to one year from the date their subsidy 
was approved. These children then become eligible for Care 4 Kids 
regardless of the program’s eligibility requirements.  
By law, the OEC commissioner may institute a protective service class 
in which she may waive current law’s Care 4 Kids e ligibility 
requirements for certain at-risk populations, instead applying 
guidelines that she prescribes and the Office of Policy and Management 
reviews. Under current law, these at-risk populations include (1) certain 
foster care children, (2) certain newly adopted children, and (3) 
homeless children. The bill also specifies that certain adopted children 
are eligible for a subsidy for up to one year from the date of adoption. 
Regulations, Policies, and Procedures (§§ 9 & 11-12) 
The bill repeals the Care 4 Kids program regulations and the 
commissioner’s authority to adopt them, and instead requires the OEC 
commissioner to administer the program by implementing the 
requirements of the federal Child Care Development Fund, which funds 
the Care 4 Kids program (45 C.F.R. § 98). Under the bill, the OEC 
commissioner must develop policies and procedures necessary to 
implement these federal requirements. 
The bill also requires the secretary of the state to correspondingly 
update the official online compilation of state regulations by October 1, 
2024. 
Background — Related Bill 
SB 152 (File 94), favorably reported by the Children’s Committee, has 
similar provisions. 
§ 10 — BIRTH-TO-THREE SERVICES 
Requires child care centers to allow a child with an individualized family service plan who 
is eligible to receive Birth-to-Three services to receive them on-site at a child care center or 
home 
The bill requires licensed child care centers and group or family child 
care homes to allow a child who is eligible for Birth-to-Three and who 
has an individualized family service plan to receive early intervention 
services at the center or home from the provider designated in the plan.   2024HB-05002-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 16 	5/5/24 
 
By law and under the bill, individualized family service plans are 
written plans for providing early intervention services to an eligible 
child and the child’s family. These services must, among other things, 
be (1) provided under public supervision, (2) selected in collaboration 
with the parents, and (3) designed to meet the infant’s or toddler’s 
developmental needs and the family’s needs in certain areas (34 C.F.R. 
§ 303.13(a)). 
Background — Related Bill 
SB 152 (File 94), favorably reported by the Children’s Committee, has 
a similar provision. 
COMMITTEE ACTION 
Finance, Revenue and Bonding Committee 
Joint Favorable Substitute 
Yea 47 Nay 4 (04/03/2024)