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Chapter 119B

Section 119B.13

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119B.13 CHILD CARE RATES.
    Subdivision 1. Subsidy restrictions. (a) Beginning July 1, 2006, the maximum rate paid for
child care assistance in any county or multicounty region under the child care fund shall be the
rate for like-care arrangements in the county effective January 1, 2006, increased by six percent.
(b) Rate changes shall be implemented for services provided in September 2006 unless a
participant eligibility redetermination or a new provider agreement is completed between July 1,
2006, and August 31, 2006.
As necessary, appropriate notice of adverse action must be made according to Minnesota
Rules, part 3400.0185, subparts 3 and 4.
New cases approved on or after July 1, 2006, shall have the maximum rates under paragraph
(a), implemented immediately.
(c) Not less than once every two years, the commissioner shall survey rates charged by
child care providers in Minnesota to determine the 75th percentile for like-care arrangements in
counties. When the commissioner determines that, using the commissioner's established protocol,
the number of providers responding to the survey is too small to determine the 75th percentile rate
for like-care arrangements in a county or multicounty region, the commissioner may establish the
75th percentile maximum rate based on like-care arrangements in a county, region, or category
that the commissioner deems to be similar.
(d) A rate which includes a special needs rate paid under subdivision 3 may be in excess of
the maximum rate allowed under this subdivision.
(e) The department shall monitor the effect of this paragraph on provider rates. The county
shall pay the provider's full charges for every child in care up to the maximum established. The
commissioner shall determine the maximum rate for each type of care on an hourly, full-day, and
weekly basis, including special needs and disability care.
(f) When the provider charge is greater than the maximum provider rate allowed, the parent
is responsible for payment of the difference in the rates in addition to any family co-payment fee.
    Subd. 1a. Legal nonlicensed family child care provider rates. (a) Legal nonlicensed family
child care providers receiving reimbursement under this chapter must be paid on an hourly basis
for care provided to families receiving assistance.
(b) The maximum rate paid to legal nonlicensed family child care providers must be 80
percent of the county maximum hourly rate for licensed family child care providers. In counties
where the maximum hourly rate for licensed family child care providers is higher than the
maximum weekly rate for those providers divided by 50, the maximum hourly rate that may be
paid to legal nonlicensed family child care providers is the rate equal to the maximum weekly rate
for licensed family child care providers divided by 50 and then multiplied by 0.80.
(c) A rate which includes a special needs rate paid under subdivision 3 may be in excess of
the maximum rate allowed under this subdivision.
(d) Legal nonlicensed family child care providers receiving reimbursement under this chapter
may not be paid registration fees for families receiving assistance.
    Subd. 2.[Repealed, 1Sp2003 c 14 art 9 s 38]
    Subd. 3. Provider rate for care of children with disabilities or special needs. Counties
shall reimburse providers for the care of children with disabilities or special needs, at a special
rate to be approved by the county for care of these children, subject to the approval of the
commissioner.
    Subd. 3a. Provider rate differential for accreditation. A family child care provider or
child care center shall be paid a 15 percent differential above the maximum rate established
in subdivision 1, up to the actual provider rate, if the provider or center holds a current early
childhood development credential or is accredited. For a family child care provider, early
childhood development credential and accreditation includes an individual who has earned a
child development associate degree, a diploma in child development from a Minnesota state
technical college, or a bachelor's degree in early childhood education from an accredited college
or university, or who is accredited by the National Association for Family Child Care or the
Competency Based Training and Assessment Program. For a child care center, accreditation
includes accreditation by the National Association for the Education of Young Children, the
Council on Accreditation, the National Early Childhood Program Accreditation, the National
School-Age Care Association, or the National Head Start Association Program of Excellence. For
Montessori programs, accreditation includes the American Montessori Society, Association of
Montessori International-USA, or the National Center for Montessori Education.
    Subd. 4. Rates charged to publicly subsidized families. Child care providers receiving
reimbursement under this chapter may not charge a rate to clients receiving assistance under this
chapter that is higher than the private, full-paying client rate.
    Subd. 5. Provider notice. The county shall inform both the family receiving assistance under
this chapter and the child care provider of the payment amount and how and when payment will
be received. If the county sends a family a notice that child care assistance will be terminated, the
county shall inform the provider that unless the family requests to continue to receive assistance
pending an appeal, child care payments will no longer be made. The notice to the provider must
not contain any private data on the family or information on why payment will no longer be made.
    Subd. 6. Provider payments. (a) Counties or the state shall make vendor payments to the
child care provider or pay the parent directly for eligible child care expenses.
(b) If payments for child care assistance are made to providers, the provider shall bill the
county for services provided within ten days of the end of the service period. If bills are submitted
within ten days of the end of the service period, a county or the state shall issue payment to
the provider of child care under the child care fund within 30 days of receiving a bill from the
provider. Counties or the state may establish policies that make payments on a more frequent basis.
(c) All bills must be submitted within 60 days of the last date of service on the bill. A county
may pay a bill submitted more than 60 days after the last date of service if the provider shows
good cause why the bill was not submitted within 60 days. Good cause must be defined in the
county's child care fund plan under section 119B.08, subdivision 3, and the definition of good
cause must include county error. A county may not pay any bill submitted more than a year after
the last date of service on the bill.
(d) A county may stop payment issued to a provider or may refuse to pay a bill submitted
by a provider if:
(1) the provider admits to intentionally giving the county materially false information on the
provider's billing forms; or
(2) a county finds by a preponderance of the evidence that the provider intentionally gave the
county materially false information on the provider's billing forms.
(e) A county's payment policies must be included in the county's child care plan under section
119B.08, subdivision 3. If payments are made by the state, in addition to being in compliance
with this subdivision, the payments must be made in compliance with section 16A.124.
    Subd. 7. Absent days. (a) Child care providers may not be reimbursed for more than
25 full-day absent days per child, excluding holidays, in a fiscal year, or for more than ten
consecutive full-day absent days, unless the child has a documented medical condition that
causes more frequent absences. Documentation of medical conditions must be on the forms and
submitted according to the timelines established by the commissioner. If a child attends for part of
the time authorized to be in care in a day, but is absent for part of the time authorized to be in
care in that same day, the absent time will be reimbursed but the time will not count toward the
ten consecutive or 25 cumulative absent day limits. If a child attends part of an authorized day,
payment to the provider must be for the full amount of care authorized for that day. Child care
providers may only be reimbursed for absent days if the provider has a written policy for child
absences and charges all other families in care for similar absences.
(b) Child care providers must be reimbursed for up to ten federal or state holidays or
designated holidays per year when the provider charges all families for these days and the holiday
or designated holiday falls on a day when the child is authorized to be in attendance. Parents may
substitute other cultural or religious holidays for the ten recognized state and federal holidays.
Holidays do not count toward the ten consecutive or 25 cumulative absent day limits.
(c) A family or child care provider may not be assessed an overpayment for an absent day
payment unless (1) there was an error in the amount of care authorized for the family, (2) all of
the allowed full-day absent payments for the child have been paid, or (3) the family or provider
did not timely report a change as required under law.
(d) The provider and family must receive notification of the number of absent days used
upon initial provider authorization for a family and when the family has used 15 cumulative
absent days. Upon statewide implementation of the Minnesota Electronic Child Care System, the
provider and family authorization for a family and ongoing notification of the number of absent
days used as of the date of the notification.
History: 1Sp1985 c 14 art 9 s 72; 1987 c 290 s 1; 1989 c 282 art 2 s 151; 1990 c 568 art 4 s
52,53; 1991 c 292 art 5 s 58-60; 1995 c 207 art 4 s 36; 1Sp1995 c 3 art 16 s 13; 1997 c 162 art 4
s 38-40; 1Sp1997 c 5 s 48; 1999 c 205 art 1 s 34; 1Sp2001 c 3 art 1 s 6; 1Sp2003 c 14 art 9 s
22-24; 2004 c 288 art 4 s 18,19; 2005 c 56 s 1; 1Sp2005 c 4 art 3 s 1,2; 2006 c 282 art 2 s 2-4

Official Publication of the State of Minnesota
Revisor of Statutes