Wash. Admin. Code § 170-300-0470 - Emergency preparedness plan
(1) An early learning provider must have and
follow a written emergency preparedness plan. The plan must be reviewed and
approved by the department prior to when changes are made. Emergency
preparedness plans must:
(a) Be designed to
respond to fire, natural disasters, and other emergencies that might affect the
early learning program;
(b) Be
specific to the early learning program and able to be implemented during hours
of operation;
(c) Address what the
provider would do if he or she has an emergency and children may be left
unsupervised;
(d) Address what the
early learning program must do if parents are not able to get to their children
for up to three days;
(e) Must
follow requirements in chapter 212-12 WAC, Fire marshal standards, as now or
hereafter amended and the state fire marshal's office requirements if a center
early learning program;
(f) Be
reviewed at program orientation, annually with all early learning program staff
with documented signatures, and when the plan is updated; and
(g) Be reviewed with parents or guardians
when a child is enrolled and when the plan is updated.
(2) The written emergency preparedness plan
must cover at a minimum:
(a) Disaster plans,
including fires that may require evacuation:
(i) An evacuation floor plan that identifies
room numbers or names of rooms, emergency exit pathways, emergency exit doors,
and for family home based programs, emergency exit windows if
applicable;
(ii) Methods to be used
for sounding an alarm and calling 911;
(iii) Actions to be taken by a person
discovering an emergency;
(iv) How
the early learning provider will evacuate children, especially those who cannot
walk independently. This may include infant evacuation cribs (for center early
learning programs), children with disabilities, functional needs requirements,
or other special needs;
(v) Where
the alternate evacuation location is;
(vi) What to take when evacuating children,
including:
(A) First-aid kit(s);
(B) Copies of emergency contact
information;
(C) Child medication
records; and
(D) Individual
children's medication, if applicable.
(vii) How the provider will maintain the
required staff-to-child ratio and account for all children;
(viii) How parents or guardians will be able
to contact the early learning program; and
(ix) How children will be reunited with their
parents or guardians after the event.
(b) Earthquake procedures including:
(i) What a provider will do during an
earthquake;
(ii) How a provider will
account for all children; and
(iii)
How a provider will coordinate with local or state officials to determine if
the licensed space is safe for children after an
earthquake.
(c) Public
safety related lockdown scenarios where an individual at or near an early
learning program is harming or attempting to harm others with or without a
weapon. This plan must include lockdown of the early learning program or
shelter-in-place steps including:
(i) How
doors and windows will be secured to prevent access, if needed; and
(ii) Where children will safely stay inside
the early learning program.
(d) How parents or guardians will be
contacted after the emergency ends.
(3) An early learning provider must keep on
the premises a three day supply of food, water, and life-sustaining medication
for the licensed capacity of children and current staff for use in case of an
emergency.
(4) An early learning
provider must practice and record emergency drills with staff and children as
follows:
(a) Fire and evacuation drill once
each calendar month;
(b)
Earthquake, lockdown, or shelter-in-place drill once every three calendar
months;
(c) Emergency drills must
be conducted with a variety of staff and at different times of the day,
including in the evening and during overnight hours for early learning programs
that care for children during those hours; and
(d) Drills must be recorded on a department
form and include:
(i) The date and time of
the drill;
(ii) The number of
children and staff who participated;
(iii) The length of the drill; and
(iv) Notes about how the drill went and how
it may be improved.
(5) In areas where local emergency plans are
already in place, such as school districts, an early learning program may adopt
or amend such procedures when developing their own plan.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.