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Thousands of children in unregulated child care

Exempt from oversight

The Post and Courier
Sunday, January 6, 2008


Thousands of children in unregulated child care

Thousands of children in South Carolina attend day care centers that are not regulated by the state.

That's because the long list of rules imposed on most mom-and-pop and chain child care centers don't apply to kindergarten or nursery programs that operate four hours or less per day. Shopping center child care, school vacation and holiday camps, and summer resident camps also are exempt from laws designed to protect the health and safety of children.

While church-affiliated centers and small home-based centers must be registered with the state, they are not required to have a license, and the state can't inspect these facilities unless it receives a complaint.

Home centers caring for fewer than six children are not regulated by the state and do not require licenses.

Nancy Murray, owner and director of Miss Nancy's Happy Hours Day Care in Dorchester County, said every business with responsibility for children should be subject to the same scrutiny. "None of these people are licensed in the way I have to be licensed," she said. "The cost that's put on me isn't what's being put on them. If they're going to change laws for day care, then they need to look into people who are running school care."

This lack of state oversight offers parents little assurance about the quality of the people watching their children, said Shannon Erickson, who owns Hobbit Hill day care centers in Beaufort County and recently won election to the Legislature. "Families are not aware that these places are not checked out by anyone," she said.

The state runs the names of people applying to work in licensed child care centers through a state database that tracks cases of child abuse and neglect. Since the state Department of Social Services began tracking "hits" in July, it already has flagged five applicants listed in the database.

The state moved to close two home care centers this year after officials learned that people living in those homes were listed in the child abuse and neglect database.

Marie Darstein, director of government relations for the Sunshine House chain of day care centers, said people barred from working in licensed child care because of convictions for child abuse or other crimes could still gain access to children by applying to an unregulated business.

"When we first started doing criminal background checks and child abuse registry checks, we would get a lot of hits with people with blemishes on their record," she said. "Now, we don't get as many. Where are these people going?"

Home-based centers caring for fewer than six children can voluntarily become licensed, but of nearly 1,500 home-based facilities in South Carolina, only 16 have opted to become licensed and subject to state regulations and inspections.

A state task force that studied child care in 2004 recommended that home care providers receive more scrutiny, including unannounced site visits from state inspectors.

Child care experts say home-based care fills a critical need in rural areas that can't support larger centers. Some fear that imposing stricter standards on these smaller centers would force many to close their doors because they would need to make costly improvements.

Children under 2 years of age might actually be better off in a home setting rather than in larger centers, some research shows.

But when child care providers operate with little state oversight, warning signs that children are at risk may go unnoticed.

Andrea Person, who cared for several unrelated children at her Richland County home, faces criminal charges stemming from the deaths of three children, the most recent occurring in April. Person continued to care for children in her home after her state registration lapsed in 2005.

Leigh Bolick, who oversees child care services for the state Department of Social Services, said that talk of licensing home-based care providers is "a reoccurring issue," but that changing the law would require the state to hire many more inspectors.




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Comments

This article has  5 comment(s)

Posted by Hey_U_Guys on January 6, 2008 at 6:01 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Miss Nancy's Happy Hour is a HORRIBLE day care. My son went there when we lived in St.George. They were feeding my lactose intolerant 8 month old unrefridgerated VITAMIN D milk. How many things are wrong with that sentence?! He got a BAD bacterial intestinal virus from that. Thanks a lot! When I confronted Miss Nancy, she told me I was making it up and that my son's feeding instructions were TOO COMPLICATED for her caregivers and he wasn't allowed to go there anymore. At 8 months he was eating organic jarred foods, which I provided, and taking soy milk bottles with lots of cereal in them. He was also drinking some juice at this time. Yep, seems way too complicated. But for $55 a week, you get what you pay for. Her outdoor facilities are all orange from rust ad has exterior exposed wires. Trust me, complaints HAVE been filed in the past on this lady. When I called DSS they told me they had more than enough complaints to shut this lady down. Yeah, looks like it. That was over a year ago, and she's still open. But I guess Being one of the 3 day cares in St.George, people need the piss poor service rather than none!



Posted by madamvoter on January 6, 2008 at 7:26 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Before leaving a child in someone else's care, the parent has the responsibility to check it out. Ask to see the license...When they can't produce it or says they don't have to have a license - RED FLAG. When you are not allowed all through the house and must pick up at the door -RED FLAG. Ask for a list of employee (care givers) and look them up on the internet. If their name appears on court records - RED FLAG. If it is all about the cost, check with DSS about ABC vouchers to assist low income with day care while they work or attend school.



Posted by guitarbuddy on January 6, 2008 at 8:15 p.m. (Suggest removal)

In the six million years of human history it's only been the last twenty to thirty years that the majority of parents in so-called "developed" countries have abdicated the responsibility of raising their own toddlers and - even more disturbing - infants. The most important years of these children's lives are in the hands of strangers who are overworked, underpaid, and can never love these children the way their own parents should.

Why is this done? One simple reason: people value stuff more than they value their children. Without two jobs married couples can't buy the stuff that's so important - SUVs, plasma TVs, big houses in the suburbs, and of course the mounds of toys and gadgets that all children "need" to be happy.

You'll all tell me I'm wrong - kids "need" socialization, and they learn so much at these schools! Sure they do. They learn to hit and bite each other, there's never enough of anything to go around, and their parents don't care about them.



Posted by walleyedwoman1215 on January 6, 2008 at 11:17 p.m. (Suggest removal)

I'm going to remonstrate gently, guitarbuddy, because you seem like quite a sensible person. Some--not all, certainly--but some children are in daycare because their single parents have no other options and must work like mules to support them. I know two women who are emotionally torn by this tradeoff: They hate that other people are raising their children, but someone has to pay the bills. Thanks and have a great evening!



Posted by Hey_U_Guys on January 7, 2008 at 7:21 a.m. (Suggest removal)

I agree with walleyedwoman.

To guitarbuddy: I stayed at home with my son as long as I could before bills started piling up. When my son was 8 months old, I HAD to go to work to pay all necessary bills like water, RENT, electricity, car payment. Oh and that stuff we value way too much, FOOD. Not to pay for my SUV or Plasma TV, which I don't have.




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