Fla. Admin. Code Ann. R. 65C-29.002 - Reports of Child Abuse, Neglect or Abandonment
(1) The Department shall maintain an
automated master file for all calls received by the Florida Abuse Hotline for
screening. This file shall contain information on all calls received concerning
a child and be maintained in the Department's automated system of
record.
(2) The telephone number
from which a call to the Florida Abuse Hotline is placed (Caller ID) shall only
be used for subsequent contact in the following circumstances:
(a) If the telephone number provided by
Caller ID is the same as provided by the reporter.
(b) If the caller is a child who is
self-reporting abuse, neglect or abandonment and the child's immediate location
is unclear or not known, the Department employee or agent shall attempt to
verify the location.
(c) If all
means to locate any child victim and attempts to contact the reporter at the
telephone number provided by the reporter are unsuccessful. The purpose of this
is to obtain additional information that would allow the child and/or family to
be located and seen.
(3)
In instances where the alleged perpetrator's exact relationship to the child is
unknown or unclear, a report shall be accepted and an investigation commenced
until such time that the alleged perpetrator's role as a caregiver can be
determined.
(4) When a report is
being accepted, the Florida Abuse Hotline counselor shall ask all reporters to
provide the following information:
(a)
Information regarding subjects of the report including name, race, gender, date
of birth, social security number, ethnicity, school, employment, address, phone
number and/or other acceptable means to locate the victim if the address is not
known;
(b) The relationship between
the victim and the alleged perpetrator;
(c) Names and contact information for any
person who can provide assistance to the child or additional information about
the family's circumstances;
(d) The
type of maltreatment alleged and the nature and extent of harm suffered by the
victim, including when the incident occurred or whether it is a chronic,
ongoing situation;
(e) Any known
history of abuse, neglect or abandonment of persons named in the
report;
(f) Whether the alleged
perpetrator continues to have access to the victim and the possibility of
continued maltreatment;
(g) Current
condition of the child;
(h) Other
children in the environment; and,
(i) The name and occupation of the reporter,
relationship between the child and the reporter, contact information for the
reporter, and any other information the reporter believes will be of
assistance.
(5) The
Florida Abuse Hotline shall process and document all allegations reported.
(a) The Florida Abuse Hotline counselor shall
search for prior reports to determine if the current allegations have been
reported in the past.
(b) The
Florida Abuse Hotline counselor shall determine if the caller is reporting the
same incident as that contained in a prior closed report. If the current
allegations do not offer new information, additional subjects, new evidence, or
additional allegations or incidents, a new report shall not be
generated.
(c) The Florida Abuse
Hotline counselor shall search the statewide automated child welfare
information system to determine if the victim, alleged perpetrator, or other
subjects of the report have any active, open investigations or history of prior
reports or service provision. The Florida Abuse Hotline counselor shall provide
this information to child protective investigation staff at the time of report
notification.
(6)
Depending upon the timing and type of information received, reports shall be
entered into the statewide automated child welfare information system as
"Initial" investigations, "Additional" investigations, or "Supplemental"
reports.
(a) Initial Investigations: Initial
investigations are reports containing allegations of maltreatment that do not
concern an active, open investigation.
(b) Additional Investigations: Additional
investigations are reports containing new information about one or more
subjects of an active, open investigation.
1.
An additional investigation includes any of the following:
a. A new alleged perpetrator in the same
household,
b. A new victim,
c. A new subject in the same
household,
d. A new maltreatment,
e. A new incident of the same
maltreatment, or
f. New information
that requires an immediate response.
2. If any of the following apply, a new
investigation identified by a different report number shall be created:
a. Information involves a different household
from the existing report.
b. A
child dies due to maltreatment during an active investigation and the suspected
cause of death is not related to the initial allegations under investigation.
When new incidents of maltreatment are believed to be the cause of the child's
death, the child protective investigator shall immediately report the child's
death to the Florida Abuse Hotline and a new report shall be
generated.
c. An institutional
investigation can only be sequenced (i.e., added as an "Additional") to another
institutional investigation.
d.
Special Conditions Reports which do not contain maltreatment allegations cannot
be sequenced to any investigations.
(c) Supplemental Reports: Supplemental
reports provide clarifying but non-essential information to active
investigations. Child-on-child sexual abuse reports shall only be sequenced as
supplemental reports when the inappropriate sexual behavior or juvenile sexual
abuse involves the same victim, alleged abuser, and behaviors.
(d) Except for specific circumstances
surrounding child deaths, additional allegations of abuse, neglect or
abandonment discovered by the investigator during the course of an
investigation do not need to be called to the Florida Abuse Hotline as an
additional report. The investigator shall add these new maltreatments directly
to the investigation.
(e) The
following do not constitute reports of abuse, neglect or abandonment but
callers shall be given appropriate community referral information if available:
1. Complaints of withholding or misuse of
child support which do not allege child abuse, neglect or abandonment,
2. Disputes concerning custody of
a child in which there is no reasonable cause to suspect abuse, neglect or
abandonment,
3. Complaints
concerning infants or children in automobiles who are not in legally required
child restraint devices unless one or more of the following circumstances are
present:
a. The parent or legal guardian was
charged with driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol.
b. The parent or legal guardian received a
traffic citation(s) for reckless driving.
c. A child was seriously injured or killed
during an accident.
4.
Requests for service that may require action, such as:
a. Transportation needs,
b. Need for food assistance,
c. Need for housing,
d. Day care needs,
e. Need for employment or public assistance,
f. Need for job training or
education,
g. Need for help with
utilities or rent,
h. Need for
homemaker or housekeeper services, or
i. Adult family members in need of
services.
5. Complaints
concerning children running away from parents or legal custodians; persistently
disobeying reasonable and lawful demands of parents or legal custodians; and
being out of control,
6. Complaints
concerning licensing violations, such as overcrowding, poor sanitation,
inadequate staffing ratios, and lack of a fire sprinkler system,
7. Requests from a hospital to have a home
"checked" before a child is released,
8. Requests from a hospital for the
Department to grant permission to treat a child due to the hospital's inability
to contact the child's parent, custodian or legal guardian,
9. Complaints concerning head lice,
10. Complaints that a child is not attending
school. These complaints shall be directed to the local school
district,
11. Calls regarding the
placement disruption of a child in out-of-home care, whether the child is in a
licensed or non-licensed placement, shall be accepted by the Florida Abuse
Hotline as foster care referrals. However, if the placement disruption is as a
result of an incident of child abuse, neglect or abandonment by the placement
caregiver, a report of child maltreatment shall be accepted by the Florida
Abuse Hotline,
12. Calls regarding
a family's failure to comply with the conditions of the voluntary or
court-ordered case plan, unless such failure has resulted in a new incident of
abuse or neglect, shall be accepted by the Florida Abuse Hotline as foster care
referrals. This includes calls involving post-placement supervision case
management issues,
13. Calls
concerning a married minors,
14.
Calls concerning emancipated minors living on their
own.
Notes
Rulemaking Authority 39.012, 39.0121 FS. Law Implemented 39.201 FS.
New 5-4-06, Amended 12-31-14, 8-23-18.
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