Ill. Admin. Code tit. 89, § 404.12 - Administrative Coverage
a) The
institution shall not be left at any time, or under any circumstances, without
a properly designated, administratively responsible person on the premises. The
designated administratively responsible person may be the child care worker for
each unit, with the administrator, or someone designated by the administrator,
to be on call.
b) Program
Administrator
The administrator may delegate certain program responsibilities to a program administrator. These may include day-to-day management of the program for children, supervision of program staff, staff development and training, educational activities and other services to children. The program administrator shall have:
1) a Master's Degree from an accredited
school of social work and 3 years' work experience with children, at least 2 of
which were in institutional or other residential group care programs;
or
2) a Master's Degree in a human
services field from an accredited school and 3 years work experience with
children, at least 2 of which were in institutional or other residential group
care programs; or
3) a Bachelor's
Degree from an accredited college or university, 5 years' work experience with
children, at least 3 of which were in institutional or other residential group
care programs.
c) The
institution or maternity center, at all times, shall have on-site at least one
official who, with respect to any child placed at the child care institution or
maternity center, is designated to be the caregiver who is authorized to apply
the reasonable and prudent parent standard to decisions involving the
participation of the child in age or developmentally appropriate activities,
and who is provided with training in how to use and apply the reasonable and
prudent parent standard in the same manner as foster parents. This training
will include a detailed explanation of the reasonable and prudent parent
standard and examples of how caregivers can apply this standard in specific
situations. (See
42 USC
671(10) and (24).)
d) The institution or maternity center must
seek consent in other areas in which specific State or federal laws limit
consent authorization. Some examples of when normalcy parenting does not apply
include consent to medical and dental care and disclosure of mental health
information.
e) Each child shall be
given the opportunity and encouraged to participate in age, physical,
culturally and mentally appropriate activities that provide opportunities for
normal growth and development. This includes the opportunity to develop social
relationships and to pursue hobbies and personal interests through
participation in neighborhood, school and other community and group activities.
Except when the needs of the child and institution indicate otherwise, children
shall have the opportunity to exchange visits with friends in the community.
When participation of a child less than 18 years of age in an extracurricular,
enrichment, cultural, or social activity requires a caregiver's consent, the
institution shall use normalcy parenting and the reasonable and prudent parent
standard when determining whether to allow participation. Youth 18 years of age
and older do not require a guardian's consent to participate in these
activities.
f) The institution
shall use normalcy parenting and the reasonable and prudent parent standard
when determining whether to allow a foster child to visit overnight with
friends or relatives of the child.
g) If a child suffers an injury participating
in an activity approved by the institution and the designated institution staff
approving the activity acted in accordance with the reasonable and prudent
parent standard, the Department shall hold the institution harmless from
liability.
h) Travel
1) The child care institution or maternity
center is authorized to approve the child's travel within the State of
Illinois. When in-state travel will exceed 48 hours, the group home must notify
the permanency worker of the trip and provide the child's location and contact
information.
2) The institution or
center is authorized to approve the child's out-of-state travel of up to 29
days. Out-of-state travel of 30 days or more must be approved by the DCFS
Guardian. When out-of-state travel will exceed 48 hours, the group home must
notify the permanency worker of the trip and provide the child's location and
contact information.
3) The
institution or center shall ensure that planned travel for the child does not
interfere with school, court, medical and other important services/treatment
required in the child's service plan.
Notes
Amended at 29 Ill. Reg. 9976, effective July 1, 2005
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