The bill overhauls the Colorado child care assistance program
(CCCAP). The bill simplifies the application process by:
Creating a universal application;
Limiting the application information to only what is necessary to determine eligibility;
Prohibiting counties from adding additional eligibility requirements; and
When applying for redetermination, requiring the recipients to provide only information that has changed.
The bill creates presumptive eligibility for 90 days when basic
federal requirements are met that are verified through self-attestation. Income qualifications are changed to correspond with universal preschool program requirements. A county may exclude state and federal assistance program income eligibility guidelines in eligibility determinations.
An employee of a child care provider may apply to the CCCAP
and be granted full benefits for children from 6 weeks of age to 13 years of age, regardless of the employee's income.
The bill directs that child care providers be paid based on
enrollment and not on attendance and be paid a weekly rate in advance. Employers are permitted to cover copayments, and copayments are limited to 7% of a family's income. The bill authorizes grants and contracts for underserved populations.
The bill lists the crimes that disqualify a child care provider from
becoming qualified as license-exempt. Family child care home providers are included as eligible providers.
A CCCAP recipient is required to engage in an eligible activity to
receive benefits. The bill includes substance use disorder treatment programs, job training, and education activities as eligible activities.
The department of early childhood education (department) is
directed to evaluate the costs and benefits of a statewide reimbursement process.
The bill directs the department to administer the child and adult
care food program (CACFP). A participant's eligibility for CACFP must not be based on being qualified as exempt in CCCAP. The department shall develop, implement, and oversee an alternative eligibility process for participation in CACFP that is specifically tailored for license-exempt family, friend, or neighbor providers.