Bill Text: MA H494 | 2009-2010 | 186th General Court | Introduced
Bill Title: Improve early education and care for chiildren by family child care providers
Sponsorship: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2010-07-22 - New draft substituted, see H4917 [H494 Detail]
Download: Massachusetts-2009-H494-Introduced.html
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts
_______________
PRESENTED BY:
Angelo M. Scaccia
_______________
To the
Honorable Senate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts in General
��������������� Court assembled:
��������������� The undersigned legislators and/or citizens respectfully petition for the passage of the accompanying bill:
An Act relating to improving quality in early education and care by family child care providers.
_______________
PETITION OF:
|
Name: |
District/Address: |
|
Angelo M. Scaccia |
14th Suffolk |
|
Joan M. Menard |
First Bristol and Plymouth |
|
Kevin G. Honan |
17th Suffolk |
|
Paul J. Donato |
35th Middlesex |
|
Denise Provost |
27th Middlesex |
|
Danielle W. Gregoire |
4th Middlesex |
|
David M. Nangle |
17th Middlesex |
|
James Arciero |
2nd Middlesex |
|
Christine E. Canavan |
10th Plymouth |
|
James J. O'Day |
14th Worcester District |
|
Alice K. Wolf |
25th Middlesex |
|
Thomas M. Stanley |
9th Middlesex |
|
Matthew C. Patrick |
3rd Barnstable |
|
Christopher J. Donelan |
2nd Franklin |
|
John W. Scibak |
2nd Hampshire |
|
Benjamin Swan |
11th Hampden |
|
Martha M. Walz |
8th Suffolk |
|
Martin J. Walsh |
13th Suffolk |
|
Cheryl A. Coakley-Rivera |
10th Hampden |
|
Paul Kujawski |
8th Worcester |
|
Michael Brady |
9th Plymouth |
|
Carl M. Sciortino, Jr. |
34th Middlesex |
|
Anne M. Gobi |
5th Worcester |
|
Timothy J. Toomey, Jr. |
26th Middlesex |
|
Kay Khan |
11th Middlesex |
|
Cleon H. Turner |
1st Barnstable |
|
Ellen Story |
3rd Hampshire |
|
Robert J. Nyman |
5th Plymouth |
|
Elizabeth A. Malia |
11th Suffolk |
|
Joyce A. Spiliotis |
12th Essex |
|
William Lantigua |
16th Essex |
|
David B. Sullivan |
6th Bristol |
|
John P. Fresolo |
16th Worcester |
|
Sean Garballey |
23rd Middlesex |
|
Peter v. Kocot |
1st Hampshire |
|
Pam Richardson |
6th Middlesex |
|
Kevin Aguiar |
7th Bristol |
|
Jay R. Kaufman |
15th Middlesex |
|
Brian P. Wallace |
4th Suffolk |
The Commonwealth of
Massachusetts
_______________
In the Year Two Thousand and Nine
_______________
An Act relating to improving quality
in early education and care by family child care providers.
Whereas, The deferred operation of this act would tend to defeat its
purpose, which is to establish forthwith a system for improving the quality of
family child care services in the commonwealth and to provide collective
bargaining rights for providers of such services, therefore it is hereby
declared to be an emergency law, necessary for the immediate preservation of
the public convenience.
��������������� Be
it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court
assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:
SECTION 1. Section 1 of Chapter 15D of the General Laws, amended by chapter 215 of the acts of 2008,� is hereby further amended by adding the following paragraph: -
Subject to appropriations and notwithstanding any general or special law to the contrary, it is the intention of the commonwealth to assure quality early education and care for children by family child care providers. It is also the intention of the commonwealth that family child care providers and the commonwealth work jointly to establish a quality early education and care program that serves eligible low income families through providers who have the requisite skills and training.
SECTION 2. Said chapter 15D is hereby further amended by adding the following 3 sections:
Section 17. As used in section 17 to 19, inclusive, the following terms shall have the following meanings:
�Division�, the division of labor relations established by section 9O of chapter 23.
�Employee organization�, an employee organization as defined in section 1 of chapter 150E.
�Family child care services�, child care services provided for less than 24 hours per day in a private residence, including the residence of the provider or the home of the child, on behalf of low-income and other at risk children, for which payment from the commonwealth is made pursuant to a rate structure for voucher and contracted payments developed by the department.
�Family child care provider�, a person who provides family child care services on behalf of low-income and other at risk children and who receives payment from the commonwealth for such services pursuant to a rate structure for voucher and contracted payments developed by the department.
Section 18. (a) Family child care providers shall be considered public employees, as defined by and solely for the purposes of, chapter 150E and section 17J of chapter 180. Said chapter 150E shall apply to family child care providers except to the extent that chapter 150E is inconsistent with this section, in which case this section shall control. In addition, family child care providers shall be treated as state employees solely for the purposes of sections 17A and 17G of chapter 180. Family child care providers shall not be considered public employees or state employees for any purpose other than those set forth in this paragraph. The commonwealth, acting through the commissioner of administration, shall be the employer, as defined by and solely for the purposes of said chapter 150E and sections 17A, 17G and 17J of said chapter 180 and deductions under said sections 17A, 17G and 17J may be made by any entity authorized by the commonwealth to compensate family child care providers pursuant to a rate structure for voucher and contracted payments developed by the department. Family child care providers shall not be eligible for benefits through the group insurance commission, the state board of retirement or the state employee workers' compensation program.
(b) Family child care providers who are employees of the commonwealth under this section are not, for that reason, public employees or employees of the commonwealth for any other purpose. Nothing in this chapter shall alter the obligations of the commonwealth or the parent or legal guardian of the child receiving family child care services to provide their share of social security, federal and state unemployment taxes, Medicare and workers� compensation insurance under the Federal Insurance Contributions Act, federal and state unemployment law, the Massachusetts Workers� Compensation Act, or vicarious liability in tort.
(c)� Consistent with section 9A of chapter 150E, no family child care provider shall engage in a strike and no family child care provider shall induce, encourage or condone any strike, work stoppage, slowdown or withholding of services by any family child care provider.
(d)� The only appropriate bargaining unit for family child care providers shall consist of all family child care providers in the commonwealth who are on the most current list provided by the commissioner of early education and care, regardless of the number of hours of care such family child care providers have worked.
(e)� An employee organization seeking to represent family child care providers shall file with the division either a representation petition accompanied by a showing of interest of 30 per cent or a petition for certification by written majority authorization
� ��������� (f) The mandatory subjects as to which the commonwealth and an employee organization certified by the division as the bargaining representative of family child care providers shall bargain shall include training for family child care providers, monitoring and evaluation criteria, improvement of recruitment and retention of qualified providers, the quality of early education provided, and payment procedures.� Nothing in this legislation shall inhibit the parties from discussing other permissive subjects of bargaining, including without limitation the rate structure for family child care providers.
(g)� In addition to the mandatory subjects set forth above in clause (f), the commonwealth and an employee organization certified by the division as the bargaining representative of family child care providers shall bargain about the rate structure for voucher and contracted payments for family child care services on behalf of low-income and other at risk children.
(h)� Nothing in this section shall modify any right of a parent or legal guardian to choose, terminate the services of, or otherwise supervise a family child care provider.
���������� Section 19.� Collective bargaining and related activity by providers, as authorized pursuant to this chapter, shall qualify for the state action exemption to the federal anti-trust laws.
�SECTION 3.� Clause (g) of section 18 of chapter 15D, as set forth in section 2 of this act, shall take effect on January 1, 2011.
