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Chapter 119B

Section 119B.09

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119B.09 FINANCIAL ELIGIBILITY.
    Subdivision 1. General eligibility requirements for all applicants for child care
assistance. (a) Child care services must be available to families who need child care to find or
keep employment or to obtain the training or education necessary to find employment and who:
(1) have household income less than or equal to 250 percent of the federal poverty guidelines,
adjusted for family size, and meet the requirements of section 119B.05; receive MFIP assistance;
and are participating in employment and training services under chapter 256J or 256K; or
(2) have household income less than or equal to 175 percent of the federal poverty guidelines,
adjusted for family size, at program entry and less than 250 percent of the federal poverty
guidelines, adjusted for family size, at program exit.
(b) Child care services must be made available as in-kind services.
(c) All applicants for child care assistance and families currently receiving child care
assistance must be assisted and required to cooperate in establishment of paternity and
enforcement of child support obligations for all children in the family as a condition of program
eligibility. For purposes of this section, a family is considered to meet the requirement for
cooperation when the family complies with the requirements of section 256.741.
    Subd. 2. Sliding fee. Child care services to families must be made available on a sliding
fee basis.
    Subd. 3. Priorities; allocations. If a county projects that its child care allocation is
insufficient to meet the needs of all eligible families, it may prioritize among the families that
remain to be served after the county has complied with the priority requirements of section
119B.03. Counties that have established a priority for families who are not MFIP participants
beyond those established under section 119B.03 must submit the policy in the annual child care
fund plan.
    Subd. 4. Eligibility; annual income; calculation. Annual income of the applicant family
is the current monthly income of the family multiplied by 12 or the income for the 12-month
period immediately preceding the date of application, or income calculated by the method which
provides the most accurate assessment of income available to the family. Self-employment
income must be calculated based on gross receipts less operating expenses. Income must be
recalculated when the family's income changes, but no less often than every six months. Income
must be verified with documentary evidence. If the applicant does not have sufficient evidence of
income, verification must be obtained from the source of the income.
    Subd. 4a. Temporary ineligibility of military personnel. Counties must reserve a family's
position under the child care assistance fund if a family has been receiving child care assistance
but is temporarily ineligible for assistance due to increased income from active military service.
Activated military personnel may be temporarily ineligible until deactivation. A county must
reserve a military family's position on the basic sliding fee waiting list under the child care
assistance fund if a family is approved to receive child care assistance and reaches the top of the
waiting list but is temporarily ineligible for assistance.
    Subd. 5. Provider choice. Parents may choose child care providers as defined under section
119B.011, subdivision 19, that best meet the needs of their family. Counties shall make resources
available to parents in choosing quality child care services. Counties may require a parent to sign
a release stating their knowledge and responsibilities in choosing a legal provider described under
section 119B.011, subdivision 19. When a county knows that a particular provider is unsafe, or
that the circumstances of the child care arrangement chosen by the parent are unsafe, the county
may deny a child care subsidy. A county may not restrict access to a general category of provider
allowed under section 119B.011, subdivision 19.
    Subd. 6. Maximum child care assistance. The maximum amount of child care assistance a
local agency may authorize in a two-week period is 120 hours per child.
    Subd. 7. Date of eligibility for assistance. (a) The date of eligibility for child care assistance
under this chapter is the later of the date the application was signed; the beginning date of
employment, education, or training; the date the infant is born for applicants to the at-home infant
care program; or the date a determination has been made that the applicant is a participant in
employment and training services under Minnesota Rules, part 3400.0080, or chapter 256J.
    (b) Payment ceases for a family under the at-home infant child care program when a family
has used a total of 12 months of assistance as specified under section 119B.035. Payment of
child care assistance for employed persons on MFIP is effective the date of employment or
the date of MFIP eligibility, whichever is later. Payment of child care assistance for MFIP or
DWP participants in employment and training services is effective the date of commencement of
the services or the date of MFIP or DWP eligibility, whichever is later. Payment of child care
assistance for transition year child care must be made retroactive to the date of eligibility for
transition year child care.
    Subd. 8. No employee-employer relationships. Receipt of federal, state, or local funds by
a child care provider either directly or through a parent who is a child care assistance recipient
does not establish an employee-employer relationship between the child care provider and the
county or state.
    Subd. 9. Licensed and legal nonlicensed family child care providers; assistance. Licensed
and legal nonlicensed family child care providers are not eligible to receive child care assistance
subsidies under this chapter for their own children or children in their family during the hours they
are providing child care or being paid to provide child care. Child care providers are eligible to
receive child care assistance subsidies for their children when they are engaged in other activities
that meet the requirements of this chapter and for which child care assistance can be paid. The
hours for which the provider receives a child care subsidy for their own children must not overlap
with the hours the provider provides child care services.
    Subd. 10. Payment of funds. All federal, state, and local child care funds must be paid
directly to the parent when a provider cares for children in the children's own home. In all other
cases, all federal, state, and local child care funds must be paid directly to the child care provider,
either licensed or legal nonlicensed, on behalf of the eligible family.
    Subd. 11. Payment of other child care expenses. Payment by a source other than the
family, of part or all of a family's child care expenses not payable under this chapter, does not
affect the family's eligibility for child care assistance, and the amount paid is excluded from the
family's income, if the funds are paid directly to the family's child care provider on behalf of the
family. Child care providers who accept third-party payments must maintain family-specific
documentation of payment source, amount, type of expenses, and time period covered by the
payment.
    Subd. 12. Sliding fee. Child care services to families must be made available on a sliding fee
basis. The commissioner shall convert eligibility requirements in section 119B.09 and parent fee
schedules in section 119B.12 to state median income, based on a family size of three, adjusted
for family size, by July 1, 2008. The commissioner shall report to the 2008 legislature with the
necessary statutory changes to codify this conversion to state median income.
History: 1Sp1985 c 14 art 9 s 72; 1987 c 403 art 3 s 68; 1988 c 689 art 2 s 228; 1989 c 282
art 2 s 147,148; 1990 c 568 art 4 s 48-50; 1992 c 513 art 8 s 32; 1997 c 162 art 4 s 28-32; 1999 c
159 s 20-22; 1999 c 205 art 1 s 28-30,69; art 5 s 21; 1Sp2003 c 14 art 9 s 14-18; 2004 c 256 art 1
s 1; 2004 c 288 art 4 s 14; 2005 c 98 art 1 s 7; 2005 c 159 art 3 s 3,4; 2007 c 147 art 2 s 6-8

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Revisor of Statutes