Part 1 Preliminary
1 Name of Regulation
This Regulation is the Children’s Services Regulation
2004.
2 Commencement
This Regulation commences on 30 September
2004.
3 Application
This Regulation applies to prescribed children’s services,
being:(a) centre based children’s services, or
(b) family day care children’s services, or
(c) home based children’s services, or
(d) mobile children’s services,
referred to in this Regulation simply as children’s
services.Note. See also sections 199, 200 and 213 of the
Act.
4 Definitions
(1) In this Regulation, words and expressions that are defined in the
dictionary at the end of this Regulation have the meanings set out in the
dictionary.
(2) Notes included in this Regulation do not form part of this
Regulation.
5 Meaning of “notifiable offence”
(1) For the purposes of this Regulation, all offences are notifiable offences
other than the following:(a) an offence (other than an offence referred to in subclause (2))
under the road transport legislation,
(b) an offence that relates to the parking of a motor
vehicle.
(2) The following offences under the road transport legislation are
also notifiable offences for the purposes of this Regulation:(a) an offence under section 9 of the Road Transport (Safety and Traffic Management) Act
1999 (which relates to presence of prescribed concentration of
alcohol in person’s blood),
(b) an offence under section 12 (1) of the Road Transport (Safety and Traffic Management) Act
1999 (which relates to driving while under the influence of
alcohol or any other drug),
(c) an offence under section 42 (1) of the Road Transport (Safety and Traffic Management) Act
1999 relating to driving a motor vehicle negligently if the
person found guilty is, by way of penalty, sentenced to imprisonment or fined
a sum of not less than $200,
(d) an offence under section 42 (2) of the Road Transport (Safety and Traffic Management) Act
1999 relating to driving a motor vehicle upon a road or
road-related area furiously or recklessly or at a speed or in a manner which
is dangerous to the public,
(e) an offence under section 43 of the Road Transport (Safety and Traffic Management) Act
1999 (which relates to menacing driving),
(f) an offence under section 70 of the Road Transport (Safety and Traffic Management) Act
1999 (which relates to failing to stop after an
accident),
(g) an offence under section 19 (2) of the Road Transport (General) Act 1999
(which relates to refusing to produce a driver licence when required, refusing
to state a name or home address, or stating a false name or home
address),
(h) an offence under section 25A (1), (2) or (3) of the Road Transport (Driver Licensing) Act
1998 (which relates to driving while
unlicensed),
(i) any other offence under the road transport legislation if the
court orders the disqualification of the person found guilty from holding a
driver licence.
(3) In this clause, road transport
legislation has the same meaning as it has in the Road Transport (General) Act
1999.Note. Road transport
legislation is defined in section 5 of the Road Transport (General) Act 1999
as:(a) that Act,
(b) the Road Transport (Driver
Licensing) Act 1998,
(c) the Road Transport (Heavy
Vehicles Registration Charges) Act 1995,
(d) the Road Transport (Safety and
Traffic Management) Act 1999,
(e) the Road Transport (Vehicle
Registration) Act 1997,
(f) any other Act or regulation (or any provision of such an Act or
regulation) prescribed by the regulations under the Road Transport (General) Act
1999,
(g) any regulation made under any Act referred to in paragraphs
(a)–(f) above.
6 Meaning of “required abilities to care for
children”
For the purposes of this Regulation, a person has the required abilities to
care for children if the person:(a) is sympathetic to the welfare of children, and
(b) has adequate knowledge and understanding of children and families
so as to be capable of meeting their needs, and
(c) is able adequately to care for and supervise children,
and
(d) is of suitable maturity, health and personality to care for
children.
Part 2 Licensing procedures
Division 1 Applications for licences
7 Who may apply for a licence?
(1) Subject to this clause, an application for a licence may be made
by any person or body:(a) who is the owner (or one of the owners) of the premises at which
the children’s service is proposed to be provided,
or
(b) who is the lessee (or one of the lessees) of those premises under
a lease that has a period of not less than 3 years to run (including the
period of any option to renew the lease) at the time of the making of the
application and who is entitled to immediate possession of the premises,
or
(c) who, not being an owner or lessee referred to in paragraph (a) or
(b), has obtained the consent of the Director-General to the making of the
application.
(2) An application for a licence may not be made by a natural person
unless he or she is of or above the age of 21
years.
(3) If development consent under the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979 is required for the conduct of a children’s service
at the premises of the proposed service, an application for a licence may not
be made until development consent has been
obtained.
(4) An application for the Director-General’s consent under
subclause (1) (c) is to be made in the approved
form.
8 How is an application made?
(1) An application for a licence is to be made in the approved
form.
(2) For the purposes of this Regulation, an application is incomplete
unless:(a) the application is accompanied by all the information, documents
and particulars required by or under this Part (unless the Director-General
has waived or postponed the requirement in relation to the applicant under
clause 19), and
(b) the applicant has furnished to the satisfaction of the
Director-General any further particulars that the Director-General may require
under section 206 (4) of the Act.
Note. Section 206 (4) of the Act provides that the Director-General may
require an applicant for a licence to furnish such further particulars with
respect to the application as the Director-General may specify in a written
notice to the applicant.
9 Personal information to be contained in
application
(1) An application is to contain the information specified in
subclause (2) about each of the following persons:(a) if the applicant is a natural person, the
applicant,
(b) if the applicant is a public authority:(i) the chief executive officer (however described) of the public
authority, and
(ii) if the public authority is a local authority, the manager of
community services (however described) of the local
authority,
(c) if the applicant is neither a natural person nor a public
authority:(i) each natural person involved in the control and management of the
applicant, and
(ii) if the applicant is a corporation and a majority shareholder of
the applicant is another corporation, each natural person involved in the
control and management of the majority shareholder
corporation,
(d) the proposed supervisor for the children’s service nominated
under clause 15.
(2) For the purposes of subclause (1), the specified information is
the following:(a) the person’s full name, any other name by which the person
is known (such as a nickname) and all former names of the
person,
(b) the person’s contact details, including the person’s
postal address, home and business telephone numbers (including any mobile
telephone numbers), any home and business fax numbers and any address for
electronic mail,
(c) the person’s residential address, if different from the
postal address,
(d) the period of time for which the person has lived at that
residential address, and the residential address at which the person lived
before taking up residence at the current residential
address,
(e) the person’s date of birth and place of birth (including
country of birth),
(f) details of the person’s qualifications, experience and
training,
(g) details of any children’s services or other youth related
activities that the person has previously been involved in (for example, a
service or activity that the person operated, managed, carried out or assisted
with),
(h) details of any criminal conviction of the person for an offence
relating to neglect of a child or young person or assault (including sexual
assault), whether or not the conduct constituting the offence occurred, or the
person was convicted, in New South Wales,
(i) details of any charge for an offence relating to neglect of a
child or young person or assault (including sexual assault) preferred against
the person in the period of 5 years immediately before the application is
made, whether or not the conduct to which the charge relates occurred, or the
charge was preferred, in New South Wales,
(j) details of any disciplinary action or departmental or other
proceedings of which the person is aware that have been taken in respect of
the person relating to neglect of a child or assault (including sexual
assault) in the period of 5 years immediately before the application is made,
whether or not the conduct to which the action or proceedings relate occurred,
or the proceedings were taken, in New South Wales.
10 Identity documents to accompany application
(1) An application is to be accompanied by duly certified copies of
the documents specified in subclause (2) for each of the following
persons:(a) if the applicant is a natural person, the
applicant,
(b) if the applicant is a public authority:(i) the chief executive officer (however described) of the public
authority, and
(ii) if the public authority is a local authority, the manager of
community services (however described) of the local
authority,
(c) if the applicant is neither a natural person nor a public
authority:(i) each natural person involved in the control and management of the
applicant, and
(ii) if the applicant is a corporation and a majority shareholder of
the applicant is another corporation, each natural person involved in the
control and management of the majority shareholder
corporation,
(d) the proposed supervisor for the children’s service nominated
under clause 15.
(2) For the purposes of subclause (1), the specified documents are the
following:(a) the person’s birth certificate (or if the person cannot
practicably obtain such a certificate, any current passport held by the
person),
(b) if the person changed his or her name upon marriage, the marriage
certificate,
(c) either:(i) a current Australian driver licence held by the person,
or
(ii) if the person does not hold a current Australian driver licence,
any current driver licence held by the person (together with a photograph of
the person taken and certified in accordance with subclause (3)) or any
current passport held by the person,
(d) if applicable, any registered deed by which the person has
formally changed the person’s name,
(e) if applicable, the person’s naturalisation
certificate.
(3) A photograph referred to in subclause (2) (c) (ii):(a) must have been taken no earlier than 12 months before it is
provided to the Director-General, and
(b) must be accompanied by a written statement from a natural person
(the
verifier) who knows the person that:(i) states the full name and address of the verifier,
and
(ii) states that the verifier is of or above the age of 18 years,
and
(iii) states that the verifier has known the person for 12 months or
more, and
(iv) states that the verifier is not a relative of the person,
and
(v) is signed by the verifier, and
(c) must be endorsed on the reverse of the photograph with the words
“I, [name of verifier], certify that this is a true photograph of
[name of person]” and the signature of the
verifier.
11 Documents showing applicant is a fit and proper
person
(1) An application for a licence is to be accompanied by information
to demonstrate that the applicant is a fit and proper person to be concerned
in the provision of the children’s service.
(2) For the purposes of subclause (1), the application is to be
accompanied by the documents specified in subclause (3) for each of the
following persons:(a) if the applicant is a natural person, the
applicant,
(b) if the applicant is a public authority:(i) the chief executive officer (however described) of the public
authority, and
(ii) if the public authority is a local authority, the manager of
community services (however described) of the local
authority,
(c) if the applicant is neither a natural person nor a public
authority:(i) each natural person involved in the control and management of the
applicant, and
(ii) if the applicant is a corporation and a majority shareholder of
the applicant is another corporation, each natural person involved in the
control and management of the majority shareholder
corporation.
(3) For the purposes of subclause (2), the specified documents are the
following:(a) a duly certified copy of the person’s qualifications in the
area of children’s services or any related area (such as a diploma,
certificate of competency or statement of attainment),
(b) character references from 2 independent referees, each dated no
earlier than 3 months before the reference is furnished to the
Director-General and containing an address to which further inquiries of the
referee may be made,
(c) if the person has any training or work experience in providing
children’s services (or assisting with providing children’s
services), references from 2 independent referees, each describing the
person’s performance during the training or work experience and
containing an address to which further inquiries of the referee may be
made.
(4) Subclause (3) does not limit the information that may accompany
the application for the purposes of subclause (1).Note. For example, the information may include copies of bank
statements, financial records and any other documents indicating that the
applicant has a sound financial reputation and stable financial
background.
12 Information to be provided by applicant who is neither a
natural person nor a public authority
An application by a person who is neither a natural person nor a
public authority must be accompanied by the following information:(a) the full name of the person, including any Australian Company
Number or Australian Business Number,
(b) any former names of the person,
(c) the address of the registered office or head office of the
person,
(d) the contact details for the person, including the postal address
(if different from the registered office or head office), telephone numbers
(including any mobile telephone numbers), any facsimile number and any address
for electronic mail,
(e) the current constitution, charter, memorandum, rules, statement of
objects, deed of trust or partnership agreement of the person (if
any),
(f) in the case of a corporation or body corporate, evidence of
incorporation (such as a certificate of incorporation, or a certificate of
registration under the Corporations Act
2001 of the Commonwealth).
13 Information about training and development
(1) Centre based or mobile children’s
service
An application for a licence for a centre based or mobile
children’s service must be accompanied by information to demonstrate
that the applicant:(a) intends to make provision for the training and development of
primary contact staff, and
(b) intends to ensure that all primary contact staff:(i) have the required abilities to care for children,
and
(ii) understand their responsibilities under the child protection
legislation, and
(iii) are fit and proper persons to care for
children.
Note. The required abilities to care for children are specified in
clause 6. The licensee of a centre based or mobile children’s service is
required by clause 51 to ensure that members of the primary contact staff are
fit and proper persons to be members of the primary contact
staff.
(2) Family day care children’s service
An application for a licence for a family day care
children’s service must be accompanied by information to demonstrate
that the applicant:(a) intends to make provision for the training and development of
family day care carers and staff of the service, and
(b) intends to ensure that all family day care carers and staff of the
service understand their responsibilities under the child protection
legislation.
(3) Home based children’s service
An application for a licence for a home based children’s
service must be accompanied by information to demonstrate that the
applicant:(a) intends to participate in training in child development and child
care on an annual basis to maintain and update the applicant’s knowledge
and skills, and
(b) understands the applicant’s responsibilities under the child
protection legislation.
14 Information about abilities, experience and capacity of
applicant for a licence for a home based children’s service
An application for a licence for a home based children’s
service must be accompanied by information to demonstrate that the
applicant:(a) has the required abilities to care for children,
and
(b) has experience in caring for children, and
(c) has demonstrated a capacity to exercise overall supervision of the
provision of a children’s service, and
(d) has an understanding of nutrition, safe food handling, health,
hygiene and safety in caring for children.
Note. The required abilities to care for children are specified in
clause 6.
15 Authorised supervisor
(1) An application for a licence for a children’s
service:(a) must nominate a person as the proposed supervisor for the service,
and
(b) must be accompanied by the prescribed documents to demonstrate
that the person is eligible to be an authorised supervisor for the
service.
Note. Under section 208 (1) (c) of the Act, the licence must specify the
authorised supervisor of the service.
(2) Subject to this clause, a person is eligible to be an authorised
supervisor for a children’s service if the person:(a) has the required abilities to care for children,
and
(b) has the required qualifications and experience,
and
(c) has demonstrated a capacity to exercise overall supervision of the
provision of the service, and
(d) is a fit and proper person to be concerned in the provision of the
service, and
(e) has successfully completed a course in child protection approved
by the Director-General for the purposes of this clause (being a course that
covers all applicable requirements under the child protection
legislation).
Note. The required abilities to care for children are specified in
clause 6.
(3) For the purposes of subclause (2) (b), a person has the required
qualifications and experience if the person:(a) has obtained:(i) a degree or diploma in early childhood education from a university
following a course with a duration (on a full-time basis) of not less than 3
years, or
(ii) a Child Care Certificate, a Certificate of Child Care Studies or
an Associate Diploma of Social Science (Child Studies) from a registered
training organisation, or
(iii) a Diploma of Community Services (Children’s Services) from a
registered training organisation, being a diploma as part of which the person
has successfully completed a course unit in administration and a course unit
in service management, or
(iv) another approved qualification, and
(b) has 12 months’ full-time experience or its equivalent in
part-time experience (gained after obtaining the qualification referred to in
paragraph (a)) in providing a relevant children’s service as a member of
the primary contact staff.
(4) Subclause (3) (a) and (b) do not apply in relation to the
authorised supervisor of a home based children’s
service.
(5) Subclause (3) (a) and (b) do not apply in relation to the
authorised supervisor of a children’s service that forms part of a
school (within the meaning of the Education
Act 1990) if the authorised supervisor:(a) is the school principal or some other member of the school
teaching staff, and
(b) has tertiary qualifications in the field of education,
and
(c) has an active role in the management of the early childhood
curriculum at the school.
(6) A person may be nominated as a proposed supervisor in relation to
2 children’s services if at least one other member of staff of each
service is qualified as required by clause 52, but may not be nominated as a
proposed supervisor in relation to more than 2 children’s
services.
(7) For the purposes of subclause (1) (b), the prescribed
documents are the following:(a) duly certified copies of the person’s qualification referred
to in subclause (3) (a) and of any other of the person’s qualifications
in the area of children’s services or any related area (such as a
diploma, certificate of competency or statement of attainment from a
registered training organisation),
(b) work references from 2 independent referees describing the
person’s performance during the training or work experience referred to
in subclause (3) (b),
(c) character references from 2 independent referees attesting to the
person’s suitability to work with children, each dated no earlier than 3
months before the reference is furnished to the Director-General and
containing an address to which further inquiries of the referee may be
made.
16 Information about premises to accompany
application—centre based or mobile children’s service
(1) An application for a licence for a centre based children’s
service must be accompanied by the following information and documents:(a) the address of the premises where the children’s service
will be provided,
(b) evidence of the applicant’s eligibility to apply for a
licence under clause 7,
(c) 3 copies of a site plan of the premises at which the service is to
be provided that:(i) shows the location of every building, structure, outdoor play
area, fence, gate and shaded area on the premises, and
(ii) shows the location of each point of entry to or exit from the
premises, including entries and exits by way of any residential premises,
and
(iii) specifies the type of each fence and gate located on the premises,
and
(iv) shows the boundaries of the premises, and
(v) is drawn by a person who is an architect within the meaning of the
Architects Act 2003 or who
is accredited by the Building Designers Association of NSW Inc in relation to
the design of the class of buildings concerned, and
(vi) is drawn to a metric scale of 1:100 or 1:200,
and
(vii) is drawn on one sheet of paper,
(d) 3 copies of a plan of each building on the premises that:(i) shows the elevations and dimensions of the building and the
dimensions of the lot on which the building is located,
and
(ii) shows the location of fences on the premises,
and
(iii) shows the floor plan of each of the buildings concerned, together
with the proposed use of each part of the building (including the location of
the toilets, any nappy change area, craft preparation area and internal
storeroom),
(iv) is drawn by a person who is an architect within the meaning of the
Architects Act 2003 or who
is accredited by the Building Designers Association of NSW Inc in relation to
the design of the class of buildings concerned, and
(v) is drawn to a metric scale of 1:50 or 1:100,
and
(vi) is drawn on one sheet of paper,
(e) a statement in writing signed or sealed by the applicant and by
the person referred to in paragraph (d) (iv):(i) stating that the premises comply with the Part 3 facilities and
equipment requirements applicable to a centre based children’s service,
or
(ii) stating any respect in which the premises do not comply with those
requirements,
(f) if an occupation certificate is required under the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979 for the proposed use of the premises for a
children’s service, a copy of the certificate,
(g) a certificate issued under section 149A of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979 for the premises.
(2) An application for a licence for a mobile children’s service
must be accompanied by the following information and documents:(a) the address of the premises where the children’s service
will be provided, including any adjacent premises that will be used to provide
the service in conjunction with the main premises,
(b) if an occupation certificate is required under the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979 for the proposed use of the premises for a
children’s service, a copy of the certificate,
(c) a certificate issued under section 149A of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979 for the premises.
17 Venue management plans for mobile children’s
services
(1) An application for a licence for a mobile children’s service
is to be accompanied by:(a) a statement as to whether any of the premises at which the service
is proposed to be provided do not comply with the Part 3 facilities and
equipment requirements applicable to a mobile children’s service,
and
(b) if so, a plan describing how the applicant intends to ensure the
safety and well-being of children at those
premises.
(2) The Director-General:(a) may approve a plan submitted under subclause (1) (b),
or
(b) may require the applicant to revise the plan as to any matter or
in any respect specified by the Director-General.
(3) A revised plan may be resubmitted to the Director-General for the
approval of the Director-General.
(4) Subclauses (2) and (3) apply to a revised plan resubmitted under
subclause (3) in the same way as they apply to a plan submitted under
subclause (1) (b).
(5) The Director-General may not grant a licence for a mobile
children’s service for which a plan is required unless the
Director-General has approved a plan for the service under this
clause.
(6) A plan approved by the Director-General under this clause is
referred to in this Regulation as a venue management
plan.
18 Statements and undertakings about facilities and
equipment, administration and policies to accompany application
(1) An application for a licence must be accompanied by a statement of
the philosophy and aim of the service.
(2) Subject to subclause (3), an application for a licence for a
centre based children’s service or mobile children’s service must
also be accompanied by the following:(a) a written undertaking signed or sealed by the applicant that at
all times during the term of the licence the applicant will conduct such
checks as are necessary to ensure that:(i) the premises of the children’s service comply with the Part
3 facilities and equipment requirements applicable to the class of
children’s services the subject of the application,
and
(ii) the children’s service is conducted in accordance with the
Part 6 operational requirements and Part 7 administrative requirements
applicable to the class of children’s services the subject of the
application,
(b) a written undertaking signed by the proposed supervisor that at
all times during the term of the licence the proposed supervisor will conduct
such checks as are necessary to ensure that:(i) the premises of the children’s service comply with the Part
3 facilities and equipment requirements applicable to the class of
children’s services the subject of the application,
and
(ii) the children’s service is conducted in accordance with the
Part 6 operational requirements and Part 7 administrative requirements
applicable to the class of children’s services the subject of the
application.
(3) An application for a licence for a mobile children’s service
that is accompanied by a venue management plan must, in place of the
undertakings referred to in subclause (2) (a) (i) and (b) (i), be accompanied
by:(a) a written undertaking signed or sealed by the applicant that at
all times during the term of the licence the applicant will conduct such
checks as are necessary to ensure that the premises comply with the venue
management plan, and
(b) a written undertaking signed by the proposed supervisor that at
all times during the term of the licence the proposed supervisor will conduct
such checks as are necessary to ensure that the premises comply with the venue
management plan.
(4) An application for a licence for a family day care or home based
children’s service must also be accompanied by a written undertaking
signed or sealed by the applicant that at all times during the term of the
licence the applicant will conduct such checks as are necessary to ensure
that:(a) the premises of the children’s service comply with the Part
3 facilities and equipment requirements applicable to the class of
children’s services the subject of the application,
and
(b) the children’s service is conducted in accordance with the
Part 6 operational requirements and Part 7 administrative requirements
applicable to the class of children’s services the subject of the
application.
19 Waiver and postponement of certain requirements
The Director-General may waive or postpone a requirement to
provide specified information or documents under this Part, or may approve the
production of specified information or documents in place of information or
documents the subject of such a requirement.
20 Advertising of application and copy of advertisement to
accompany application
(1) An applicant for a licence must advertise notice of intention to
apply for a licence in a daily newspaper circulating generally throughout New
South Wales and in a newspaper circulating generally in the locality where the
service is to be provided.
(2) Such a notice:(a) must be in the approved form, and
(b) must state the name of the applicant (including any alternative
name by which the applicant is known) and any former names of the applicant,
and
(c) if the applicant is neither a natural person nor a public
authority, must state the name (and any former names and alternative names)
of:(i) each natural person involved in the control and management of the
applicant, and
(ii) if the applicant is a corporation and a majority shareholder of
the applicant is another corporation, each natural person involved in the
control and management of the majority shareholder corporation,
and
(d) in the case of a centre based or home based children’s
service, must identify the address of the premises where the children’s
service is proposed to be provided, and
(e) must state that submissions in respect of the proposed application
may be made to the Director-General within 3 weeks after the publication of
the notice, and
(f) must be published no earlier than 2 weeks before the application
is lodged with the Director-General and no later than the day on which the
application is lodged.
(3) An application for a licence must be accompanied by evidence of
the due publication of the notice required by this
clause.
21 Further licences
(1) A licensee who intends to continue to provide the children’s
service to which the licence relates may apply for a further licence for that
service in accordance with this clause.
(2) The application:(a) is to be made at least 6 months before the expiry of the licence,
and
(b) is to be made in the approved form.
(3) The application is to be accompanied by the information and
documents required by clauses 9–18, except that:(a) the application is not required to be accompanied by any of the
documents referred to in clause 16 if:(i) there have been no structural alterations to the premises to which
the licence relates (including any fences) since the licence was granted,
or
(ii) any such structural alterations have been approved in writing by
the Director-General, and
(b) the application is not required to be accompanied by any
information or documents referred to in clause 9 (2) (d)–(g), 10 (2)
(a)–(e), 11 (3) (a), 12 (e) or (f) or 15 (1) (b) unless the relevant
information (or the information contained in the relevant documents) that
accompanied the initial application for the licence is no longer correct or
accurate.
Note. The premises of a children’s service include each part of
the premises.
(4) If an application for a further licence has not been determined by
the Director-General by the time the licence expires:(a) the application is taken to have been refused by the
Director-General on the day that the licence expires, and
(b) if an application for a review of the refusal is made under clause
123, the licence remains in force until the application for review is finally
dealt with.
Note. Clause 123 enables an applicant to apply for a review of a
decision to refuse to grant a licence.
Division 2 Licences
22 Grant of licence
(1) If a person applies to the Director-General for a licence, the
Director-General is to:(a) grant the licence, or
(b) cause to be served on the applicant a notice stating that, when 4
weeks have expired after service of the notice, the Director-General intends
to refuse to grant the licence on the grounds specified in the notice unless
it has been established to the Director-General’s satisfaction that the
licence should not be refused.
(2) When 4 weeks have expired after a notice has been served under
subclause (1) (b), the Director-General, after considering any submissions
made during that period, is to:(a) grant the licence, or
(b) refuse to grant the licence and cause to be served on the
applicant a notice stating the grounds on which the licence has been
refused.
Note. In order to lawfully operate a children’s service it may be
necessary to obtain approvals or consents from other public authorities, in
addition to obtaining a licence.
23 Form of licence
(1) A licence is to be in the approved
form.
(2) A licence is to be endorsed with any condition imposed on it by
the Minister under section 209 (b) of the Act.
(3) A person may be a licensee for more than one children’s
service.
24 Term of licence
(1) The Director-General may grant a licence for a term not exceeding
3 years.
(2) A licence takes effect on the day on which it is granted or such
later date as is specified in the licence.
25 Licence conditions generally
(1) For the purposes of section 209 (a) of the Act, the prescribed
conditions for a licence for a children’s service are the provisions of
Parts 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 that are relevant to that class of children’s
service.
(2) For the purposes of section 210 (1) of the Act, a provision of
Part 3, 4, 5, 6 or 7 applies to the licensee unless it is expressed to apply
to someone else.
(3) The prescribed conditions are taken to include an additional
condition to the effect that the licensee will develop procedures to ensure
that the authorised supervisor, and all other members of staff of the service,
comply with the provisions of this Regulation that apply to
them.
(4) In the case of a licence for a mobile children’s service for
which there is a venue management plan, the prescribed conditions are taken to
include a further additional condition to the effect that the licensee will
ensure that the premises of the service will comply with that
plan.
(5) In the case of a licence for a family day care children’s
service, the prescribed conditions are taken to include a further additional
condition to the effect that the licensee:(a) will make it a condition of registration with the service that a
family day care carer must comply with the provisions of this Regulation that
apply to a family day care carer, and
(b) will develop procedures to ensure that each family day care carer
who is registered with the service complies with those
provisions.
Division 3 Variation, suspension and revocation of
licences
26 Grounds for variation, suspension or revocation of
licences
(1) Subject to this Division, the Director-General:(a) may vary or revoke a condition of a licence,
or
(b) may impose a further condition on a licence,
or
(c) may vary a particular specified in a licence,
or
(d) may suspend a licence for a period not exceeding 6 months,
or
(e) may revoke a licence.
(2) The grounds on which the Director-General may take an action under
subclause (1) are:(a) the licensee under the licence has requested that the
Director-General take the action, or
(b) either the licensee or the authorised supervisor under the licence
is no longer a fit and proper person to be concerned in the provision of the
children’s service, or
(c) either of those persons has contravened or failed to comply with a
provision of the Act or this Regulation that applies to that person,
or
(d) any premises of a children’s service do not comply with any
provision of the Act or this Regulation, or of a licence condition, that
applies to them, or
(e) the authorised supervisor under the licence does not have the
overall supervision of the provision of the children’s service to which
the licence relates.
Note. Section 211 of the Act specifies other grounds on which a licence
may be revoked. These grounds include:(a) the Director-General is of the opinion that the continued
operation of the children’s service would constitute an unacceptable
risk to the safety, welfare or well-being of any child or class of children
attending the service, or
(b) exceptional circumstances arise in which the Director-General
considers it contrary to the best interests of the children attending the
children’s service for the service to continue, or
(c) the Director-General is of the opinion that any person involved in
the control and management of a licensee that is not a natural person is no
longer a suitable person to hold a licence.
27 Variation, suspension or revocation of licence
(1) If the Director-General intends to take any action referred to in
clause 26 (1), the Director-General is to cause to be served on the licensee
and the authorised supervisor under the licence a notice:(a) stating that when 4 weeks have expired after service of the
notice, the Director-General intends to take the action specified in the
notice unless it has been established to the Director-General’s
satisfaction that the action should not be taken, and
(b) stating the reasons for the intention to take the action,
and
(c) stating that the licensee may make submissions to the
Director-General about the proposed action within the period of 4 weeks after
service of the notice.
(2) When 4 weeks have expired after the notice was served under
subclause (1), the Director-General may, after considering any submissions
made during that period by the licensee, take the action specified in the
notice by a further notice served on the licensee.
(3) Subsections (1) and (2) do not apply to any action taken at the
request of the licensee.
(4) Action taken pursuant to the further notice under subclause (2)
takes effect on the date specified in the notice for that
purpose.
(5) A licence is taken not to be in force while it is
suspended.
(6) If a licence is revoked, the person who was the licensee under the
licence immediately before the revocation:(a) must return the licence to the Director-General within the period
specified in the notice for its return, and
(b) must take all reasonably practicable steps to inform a parent of
each child to whom the service is provided that the service will cease to be
provided on the date specified in the notice for that
purpose.
(7) If a licence has been suspended, the Director-General may, at any
time during the period of suspension, restore the licence by serving on the
person who was the licensee under the licence immediately before it was
suspended a notice stating that the licence is
restored.
28 Notice to parents of variation, suspension or revocation
of licence
(1) A licensee who requests the Director-General to vary or revoke a
licence condition, or add a further licence condition, or revoke the
licence:(a) must give notice in writing of the request to a parent of each
child to whom the service is provided within 2 weeks after the request is
made, and
(b) must give notice in writing of the result of the request to each
parent within 2 weeks after the licensee is notified of the result of the
request by the Director-General.
(2) A licensee must cause written notice to be given to a parent of
each child to whom the service is provided of any other variation or addition
of a licence condition within 2 weeks after the licensee is notified by the
Director-General of the variation or addition.
Maximum penalty: 5 penalty
units.
29 Change of mobile children’s service
A licensee of a mobile children’s service who intends to
change the premises specified in the licence (whether by relocating the
service, ceasing to provide the service at particular premises or providing
the service at additional premises) or to change a venue management
plan:(a) must request the Director-General to vary the licence under clause
26 (1) (c) with respect to the premises or venue management plan specified in
the licence, and
(b) must provide the information and documents specified in clauses 16
and 17, where relevant, and such other information as the Director-General may
reasonably require.
Part 3 Facilities and equipment requirements
Division 1 Facilities
30 Space requirements: centre based children’s
services
(1) The premises of a centre based children’s service must
have:(a) a room or an area that is used only for administration of the
service and for private consultation between staff and parents,
and
(b) a room or an area, located away from the areas used by children,
that is used for respite of staff, and
(c) a room or an area that is used only for sleeping for children
under 2 years of age.
(2) The premises of a centre based children’s service must have
at least 3.25 square metres of unencumbered indoor play space per child that
is exclusively for the use of children provided with education and care while
in attendance at the service.
(3) For the purposes of calculating unencumbered indoor play space,
items such as any passage way or thoroughfare, door swing areas, kitchen, cot
rooms, toilet or shower areas located in the building or any other facility
such as cupboards and areas set aside as referred to in subclause (1) are to
be excluded.
(4) Subject to subclauses (7) and (8), the premises of a centre based
children’s service must have at least 7 square metres of useable outdoor
play space per child that is exclusively for the use of children provided with
education and care while in attendance at the
service.
(5) For the purposes of calculating useable outdoor play space, items
such as car parking areas, storage sheds and other fixed items that prevent
children from using the space or that obstruct the view of staff supervising
children in the space are to be excluded.
(6) The outdoor play space must be adequately shaded in accordance
with guidelines published by the New South Wales Cancer Council under the
title Shade for Child Care
Services, as in force immediately before the commencement of
this Regulation.
(7) If the Director-General is satisfied that the location of a centre
based children’s service makes it impracticable to provide the required
amount of useable outdoor play space, the Director-General may consent to the
provision of some or all of that space in an indoor area that is to be
designed and equipped to permit children to participate in activities that
promote gross motor skills.
(8) The Director-General may impose conditions on such a consent
relating to any matter the Director-General sees fit, including the
availability of natural light and ventilation.
31 Laundry
(1) All children’s services
A children’s service must have laundry arrangements, whether
on the premises of the children’s service or through another facility,
service or arrangement.
(2) The premises of a children’s service must have safe,
sanitary facilities for the storage of soiled clothes, linen and nappies
before laundering or disposal.
(3) Centre based children’s service
A centre based children’s service that provides children
under 3 years of age with the service must have laundry facilities available
on the premises of the service, being facilities that include at least a
laundry tub connected to both hot and cold water.
32 Craft preparation facilities: centre based or mobile
children’s service
(1) The premises of a centre based or mobile children’s service
must have separate facilities (including a sink, bench top and lockable
cupboard) for use in craft activities.
(2) The area must not be next to any food preparation facilities or
nappy change area at the premises.
33 Food preparation facilities
(1) The premises of a children’s service must have a designated
area, that is both safe and hygienic, for food preparation and
storage.
(2) Facilities in the designated area must include a stove or
microwave, sink, refrigerator, suitable disposal facilities and hot water
supply.
(3) Facilities for the preparation and storage of food must be
designed, located and maintained so as to prevent children from gaining access
to any harmful substance, equipment or amenity.
(4) Without limiting subclause (3), if the premises of a centre based
or mobile children’s service contains a separate kitchen, the kitchen
must have a door, half-gate or other barrier to prevent unsupervised entry by
children into the kitchen.
(5) In addition to a food preparation area, a centre based
children’s service must also have a designated area, that is both safe
and hygienic, for the preparation of bottles for children under the age of 2
years.
(6) Any area in which bottles are prepared for children under the age
of 2 years, whether in a centre based children’s service or any other
children’s service, must be separate from any area in which
nappy-changing facilities are provided.
(7) Despite subclause (1), a mobile children’s service may
provide food preparation and storage facilities through another facility,
service or regular arrangement if food preparation and storage facilities are
not available on the premises used by the mobile children’s
service.
34 Toilets and washing facilities
(1) All children’s services
The premises of a children’s service must have toilet, hand
washing and bathing facilities that are safe and appropriate to the ages of
the children at the service and must have products and equipment for cleaning
those facilities whenever necessary.
(2) Centre based children’s service
The sanitary facilities of a centre based children’s service
must comply with the requirements for class 9b buildings (Early childhood
centres) of clause F2.3 of the Building Code of
Australia.Note. Table F2.3—9b provides that for every 15 children or part
thereof there must be:(a) a junior toilet or adult toilet with a firm step and a junior
seat,
(b) one hand basin either with a firm step, or at a height so as to
provide reasonable child access.
35 Nappy change facilities
(1) All children’s services
The following facilities must be provided at the premises of a
children’s service if any child provided with the service wears
nappies:(a) a stable surface for changing nappies, together with a mat that
has an impervious washable surface, for every 10 children (or part
thereof),
(b) hand washing facilities for adults in the immediate vicinity of
the nappy changing area,
(c) sanitary facilities for the storage of soiled nappies pending
laundering or disposal of the nappies,
(d) if the children’s soiled clothing is laundered by the staff
of a centre based or mobile children’s service or by a family day care
carer or home based licensee, adequate facilities for laundering the clothing
or otherwise dealing hygienically with waste,
(e) facilities for the storage of clean
nappies.
(2) If any such child is under the age of 3 years, the stable surface
referred to in subclause (1) (a) is to be a properly constructed nappy
changing bench.
(3) Any nappy changing bench or mat must be cleaned after each
use.
(4) The nappy changing facilities must be designed, located and
maintained so as to prevent unsupervised access by
children.
(5) The nappy changing facilities must be separated from food
preparation facilities and craft preparation
facilities.
(6) Centre based children’s service
In addition to the facilities referred to in subclause (1), the
premises of a centre based children’s service must be equipped with the
following:(a) an age appropriate washing facility with temperature regulated hot
and cold running water in, or adjacent to, the nappy change
area,
(b) a sluice or contaminated waste disposal unit in the nappy change
area.
(7) Nothing in subclause (6) prevents the premises of a centre based
children’s service from being equipped with an additional movable nappy
changing bench. However, if such a bench is provided it must provide a stable
surface on which to place a child when changing
nappies.
36 Sleeping facilities
(1) The premises of a children’s service must have an adequate
number of cots, beds, stretchers or sleeping mats (together with waterproof
covers) or other culturally appropriate forms of bedding for all children who
sleep while at the premises.
(2) For the purposes of subclause (1), the ages of children at the
service, the program of activities of the service and hours of operation of
the service are to be taken into account when determining adequate sleeping
facilities.
(3) Provision must be made at the premises of a children’s
service to ensure that:(a) mattresses and other bedding are clean and comfortable,
and
(b) bed clothing is appropriate to the climate,
and
(c) all bed clothing is kept clean and in good repair,
and
(d) there is individual bed linen and blankets for each child,
and
(e) children do not share the same bed at the same time,
and
(f) bed linen used by one child is washed before it is used by another
child, and
(g) no child who is of or above 7 years of age sleeps in the same room
as another child of the opposite sex who is not a relative,
and
(h) no child who is of or above the age of 2 years, and (except with
the written consent of a parent of the child) no child who is under the age of
2 years, sleeps in a room in which an adult is
sleeping.
(4) Cots, beds, stretchers, mattresses and other bedding at the
premises of a children’s service must be arranged so as:(a) to be in an area that has natural light, and
(b) to allow easy exit of any child, and
(c) to allow easy access to any child, and
(d) to reduce the risk of cross infection between
children.
(5) A sleeping area for children must be designed to ensure that all
children in the area are readily accessible to staff of the service, or the
family day care carer or home based licensee.
(6) Cots must comply with the requirements of Australian/New Zealand
Standard AS/NZS 2172–1995
Cots for household use—Safety requirements, as
published on 5 April 1995.
37 Storage facilities
(1) All children’s services
The premises of a children’s service must have storage
facilities (whether fixed or movable) that are secure and inaccessible to
children.
(2) Centre based or mobile children’s
service
The premises of a centre based or mobile children’s service
must have:(a) storage facilities for indoor and outdoor equipment,
and
(b) storage facilities that give each child provided with the service
at the premises access to a space for storage of the child’s personal
belongings.
(3) Equipment used for providing a mobile children’s service may
be stored at any premises at which the service is provided, at the offices of
the service or in any vehicle used to transport equipment used for providing
the service.
38 Swimming pools
(1) Centre based or mobile children’s
services
There must not be a swimming pool (within the meaning of the
Swimming Pools Act 1992) on
the premises of any centre based or mobile children’s service unless the
pool existed on the premises before 6 November
1996.
(2) Any swimming pool on the premises of a centre based or mobile
children’s service on or before the commencement of this clause must be
fenced. The fencing must be in accordance with the Swimming Pools Act 1992 (whether or
not that Act applies to the swimming pool
concerned).
(3) Family day care or home based children’s
services
Any swimming pool at the premises of a family day care carer or
home based licensee must be fenced to the standard to which a new swimming
pool would be required to be fenced under the Swimming Pools Act
1992.
Division 2 Equipment
39 Telephone
(1) The premises of a children’s service must be equipped with
an operating telephone or two-way radio capable of communication with, at
least, the nearest police station, ambulance station, fire service, and
medical emergency facility and that is readily accessible to staff of the
service.
(2) The telephone may include a mobile telephone, but only if the
telephone has a reception adequate for communication as referred to in
subclause (1) and is maintained in a state of operation such that it may be
used immediately at any time.
40 Development and play equipment
(1) All children’s services
Play equipment (whether fixed or not) used on the premises of a
children’s service must not constitute a hazard to children at the
service because of:(a) the height from which a child can fall, or
(b) the likelihood that a child can be trapped, pinched or crushed in
the equipment or struck by it, or
(c) sharp or rough edges and projections or rust,
or
(d) lack of stability.
(2) Play equipment used on the premises must be safe and in good
repair.
(3) All broken equipment and broken toys must immediately be removed
from play areas.
(4) The premises of a children’s service must have independent
access for children to books and equipment that are suitable to the
children’s development and needs and that are representative of a
diverse range of cultures.
(5) Centre based or mobile children’s
service
The premises of a centre based or mobile children’s service
must be equipped with a balance of indoor and outdoor equipment to meet the
developmental and other needs of children that is readily available for use by
the children and staff of the service.
(6) In determining the balance of types of equipment and the
sufficiency of equipment for the purposes of subclause (5), the age, number
and interests of the children provided with the service must be taken into
account.
(7) The surfacing used underneath or around play equipment on the
premises of a centre based children’s service must comply with the
requirements of Australian and New Zealand Standard AS/NZS 4422:1996 Playground
surfacing—Specifications, requirements and test method
as in force on the commencement of this Regulation.
(8) Family day care or home based children’s
service
The home of a family day care carer or home based licensee must be
equipped with equipment that is:(a) adequate and sufficient to meet the individual interests and
capabilities of each child provided with the service, and
(b) readily available for use by children and the family day care
carer or home based licensee.
(9) In determining the adequacy and sufficiency of equipment for the
purposes of subclause (8), the age, number and interests of children provided
with the service must be taken into account.
41 First aid kits
(1) The premises of a children’s service must be equipped with a
suitable and fully stocked first-aid kit of a kind approved by the WorkCover
Authority under the Occupational Health and
Safety Act 2000.
(2) The first aid kit must be inaccessible to children, but readily
accessible to staff or a family day care carer or home based
licensee.
(3) Adult and child cardio-pulmonary resuscitation charts must be
displayed in a prominent position both inside and outside the premises of a
centre based or mobile children’s service, or the part of the home of a
family day care carer or home based licensee used to provide the
service.
42 Fire safety equipment
(1) All children’s services
The premises of a children’s service must be provided
with:(a) appropriately located smoke detectors, and
(b) a fire blanket that is kept adjacent to the cooking facilities at
the premises, and
(c) appropriately located fire
extinguishers.
(2) Centre based or mobile children’s
services
All fire protection equipment with which the premises of a centre
based or mobile children’s service is equipped must be tested in
accordance with the requirements of AS
1851.1 for Level 1 service and be kept in proper working
condition.Note. AS 1851.1
requires equipment to be tested every 6 months at Level 1 service
levels.
(3) In subclause (2), AS 1851.1 means Australian
Standard AS 1851.1–1995,
Maintenance of fire protection equipment, Part 1: Portable fire
extinguishers and fire blankets as in force on the
commencement of this Regulation.
(4) Family day care and home based children’s
services
All fire protection equipment with which the home of a family day
care carer or home based licensee is equipped must be inspected annually and
after any use.
Division 3 General
43 Ventilation, light and heating
(1) The premises of a children’s service must have access to
natural light and must be properly ventilated, lit and heated when children
are being provided with the service.
(2) All heating and cooling units on the premises of a
children’s service must be adequately secured and guarded to prevent
injury to children through contact with hot surfaces or moving parts or the
emission of any sparks or flames.
(3) The controls of all equipment on the premises that may be
hazardous to children must be guarded to prevent access by
children.
(4) Fans on the premises or the home must be placed in a position that
is inaccessible to children.
44 Hot water
(1) Centre based children’s service
Hot water from any outlet accessible to children at a centre based
children’s service must be regulated to keep the temperature of water
from the outlet below 43.5 degrees Celsius.
(2) Family day care and home based children’s
service
Children under school age who are provided with a children’s
service at the home of a family day care carer or home based licensee must not
have unsupervised access to any hot water supply.
(3) Children of school age who are provided with a children’s
service at the home of a family day care carer or home based licensee must not
have unsupervised access to any hot water supply unless the hot water supply
is regulated so as to keep it below the temperature at which a child can be
scalded.
45 Fencing
(1) Any part of the premises of a children’s service that is
designated for outdoor play space must be fenced on all
sides.
(2) The design and height of any fence or gate on the premises must
prevent children from scaling or crawling under or through it and must inhibit
or impede intruders from entering the premises.
(3) Any side of a stairway, ramp, corridor, hallway or external
balcony on the premises of a children’s service that is not abutting a
wall must be enclosed to prevent a child being trapped or falling
through.
(4) All gates leading to or from the premises of a children’s
service must be designed so as to prevent children from entering or leaving
the premises unsupervised.
(5) Child-proof barriers that are appropriate to the ages of children
provided with the service must be provided at the top and bottom of stairs at
the premises of a children’s service if:(a) the Director-General so requires by notice in writing served on
the licensee, or
(b) in the case of a family day care children’s service, the
authorised supervisor of the service so requires by notice in writing served
on the family day care carer concerned.
46 Glass
The licensee of a children’s service must ensure that any
glazed area of the premises of the children’s service that is in a room
or other place accessible to children and is 0.75 metres or less above the
level of the floor:(a) is glazed with safety glass, if the Building Code of Australia requires the area
to be glazed with safety glass, or
(b) in any other case:(i) is treated with a product that prevents glass from shattering if
broken, or
(ii) is guarded by barriers that prevent a child from striking or
falling against the glass.
47 Cleanliness, maintenance and repairs
(1) The premises of a children’s service, and all equipment and
furnishing used in providing the children’s service, must be maintained
in a safe, clean and hygienic condition and in good repair at all
times.
(2) The licensee and the authorised supervisor must use their best
endeavours to ensure that any buildings and grounds on the premises are kept
free of vermin and pests.
(3) The premises must not be fumigated while children are attending
the premises.
(4) The premises of a children’s service must be fitted with
appropriate devices that:(a) are designed to prevent children from gaining access to power
points or other electrical outlets, and
(b) are designed to minimise the risk of electrical shocks arising
from electrical wiring.
(5) The licensee and the authorised supervisor of a children’s
service must ensure that the premises of the service are kept clean of
garbage, rubbish and rubble.
48 Safe environment—centre based or mobile
children’s service
The licensee of a centre based or mobile children’s service
must comply with the requirements of the Occupational Health and Safety Act
2000 that apply to the licensee.Note. The Occupational Health and
Safety Act 2000 requires employers to ensure the health,
safety and welfare at work of all employees of the
employer.
49 Repair of premises
(1) If the Director-General directs the licensee of a centre based,
mobile or home based children’s service to effect any repairs or
maintenance at the premises of the service, the licensee:(a) if the licensee owns the premises (or does not own the premises
but has the responsibility in relation to the licensee’s occupation of
the premises to effect repairs or maintenance of the kind directed), must
comply with the direction within the time specified by the Director-General,
or
(b) if the licensee does not own the premises and does not have the
responsibility in relation to the licensee’s occupation to effect
repairs or maintenance of the kind directed, must use the licensee’s
best endeavours to ensure that the owner of the premises carries out the
repairs or maintenance within the time specified by the
Director-General.
(2) If the Director-General notifies the licensee of a family day care
children’s service that any repairs are necessary at the home of a
family day care carer of the service, the licensee must use his or her best
endeavours to ensure that the owner of the home carries out the repairs or
maintenance within the time specified by the
Director-General.
50 Facilities and equipment requirements—responsibility
of family day care carer
A family day care carer must ensure that the grounds and buildings
of his or her home, and any equipment and amenities used at the home in
providing the service, comply with the requirements of this Part that are
applicable to family day care children’s services.Note. Under clause 101, the Director-General may direct the licensee to
remove the name of a family day care carer who fails to comply with this
provision from the family day care register for the
service.
Part 4 Staffing requirements
Division 1 Staff of centre based and mobile children’s
services
51 Employment of staff
(1) The licensee of a centre based or mobile children’s service
must not employ a person as a member of the primary contact staff for the
service unless the licensee is satisfied that the person is a fit and proper
person to be a member of the primary contact staff.Note. Part 7 of the Commission for
Children and Young People Act 1998 requires an employer to
conduct employment screening of a preferred applicant for certain
child-related employment, including employment in child care
centres.The Child Protection
(Prohibited Employment) Act 1998 prohibits a person convicted
of a serious sex offence from applying for, undertaking or remaining in
child-related employment.
(2) For the purposes of subclause (1), the licensee of a centre based
or mobile children’s service must ensure that each person whom the
licensee employs or proposes to employ as a member of the primary contact
staff has:(a) an understanding of the principles set out in section 202 of the
Act, and
(b) an understanding that the environment of a children’s
service must be safe for children, and
(c) a basic knowledge of the stages of physical, emotional, cognitive,
social and cultural development of children, and
(d) a basic knowledge of activities and learning experiences that are
appropriate for the various ages and stages of development of children,
and
(e) a basic knowledge of the health, hygiene and nutrition needs of
children, and
(f) except in the case of a trainee, experience in caring for
children.
(3) A licensee of a centre based or mobile children’s service
must not employ a person as a member of the primary contact staff of the
service unless the person is at least 18 years of
age.
(4) The licensee of a centre based or mobile children’s service
is to ensure that all primary contact staff for the service understand their
responsibilities under the child protection
legislation.
52 Qualified staff
(1) The licensee of a centre based or mobile children’s service
must ensure that the following number of teaching staff members are in
attendance at the premises of the service while the service is being
provided:(a) 1, if there are 30 or more but less than 40 children (other than
school children) being provided with the service,
(b) 2, if there are 40 or more but less than 60 children (other than
school children) being provided with the service,
(c) 3, if there are 60 or more but less than 80 children (other than
school children) being provided with the service,
(d) 4, if there are 80 or more children (other than school children)
being provided with the service.
(2) The licensee of a centre based or mobile children’s service
must ensure that at all times while a child under 2 years of age is being
provided with the service at least one primary contact staff member is in
attendance at the service who:(a) is an enrolled nurse (mothercraft) within the meaning of the
Nurses Act 1991 or an
enrolled nurse within the meaning of that Act who has obtained:(i) a Certificate IV from a TAFE establishment on completion of a
course in Parenthood, or
(ii) a Certificate III from a registered training organisation on
completion of a course in Children’s Services,
or
(b) is a registered nurse within the meaning of the Nurses Act 1991 who has had previous
work experience in providing a children’s service or has other approved
qualifications, or
(c) has obtained:(i) a Child Care Certificate, a Certificate of Child Care Studies or
an Associate Diploma of Social Science (Child Studies) from a TAFE
establishment, or
(ii) a Diploma of Community Services (Children’s Services) from a
registered training organisation, or
(d) has some other approved qualification.
(3) The authorised supervisor of a centre based or mobile
children’s service must ensure that at least one person who holds a
current approved first aid qualification is on the premises of the service at
all times while children provided with the service are on the
premises.
(4) In this clause, teaching staff
member of a children’s service means a member of staff of the
service who:(a) has a degree or diploma in early childhood education from a
university following a course with a duration (on a full-time basis) of not
less than 3 years, or
(b) has some other approved qualification, or
(c) has other approved training and other approved
experience.
53 Staff to child ratios
(1) The licensee of a centre based or mobile children’s service
must ensure that the ratio of primary contact staff to children being provided
with the service is:(a) 1:5 in respect of all children who are under the age of 2 years,
and,
(b) 1:8 in respect of all children who are 2 or more years of age but
under 3 years of age, and
(c) 1:10 in respect of all children who are 3 or more years of age but
under 6 years of age.
(2) The licensee of a centre based or mobile children’s service
must ensure that at least 2 members of the primary contact staff are present
on the premises of the service whenever children are being provided with the
service at the premises.
(3) If a centre based or mobile children’s service is being
provided to a group of children who are not all in the same age bracket, the
licensee of the service must ensure that the ratio of primary contact staff to
children in the group is the ratio specified in subclause (1) for the age
bracket in which the youngest child in the group
belongs.
(4) In counting the number of primary contact staff for the purposes
of this clause, a trainee referred to in paragraph (c) of the definition of
primary contact
staff in the dictionary to this Regulation is not to be included
unless a majority of the staff counted (and at least 2) are primary contact
staff who are not trainees.
(5) In this clause, age bracket means a
range of ages specified in subclause (1) (a), (b) or
(c).
54 Cooking staff
(1) The licensee of a centre based or mobile children’s service
must ensure that a qualified cook is employed by the service if meals are
prepared and provided to children on the premises of the
service.
(2) The cook is to be available for the period necessary to prepare
the meals for the number of children being catered for and to clean the area
of the premises used to prepare the meals.
(3) A person is a qualified cook only if the person holds a
certificate attesting to the person’s successful completion of a basic
training course in food safety and nutrition that:(a) complies with guidelines issued by the Director-General from time
to time for the purpose of this clause, and
(b) is provided by a registered training
organisation.
(4) The licensee and the authorised supervisor of a centre based or
mobile children’s service must ensure that, for each cook employed by
the service to prepare and provide meals to children on the premises, a copy
of the cook’s certificate, as referred to in subclause (3), is displayed
on the premises in a prominent position.
55 Additional staff
(1) The licensee of a centre based or mobile children’s service
must employ staff, additional to any other staff required by this Division, if
the Director-General so requires by notice in writing served on the
licensee.
(2) Such a notice may specify both the number of staff to be employed
and the qualifications they must have.
(3) The Director-General may make such a requirement if satisfied
that, having regard to any particular function carried out by the service,
sufficient staff with suitable qualifications are not employed by the
service.
56 Supervision by authorised supervisor—centre based
children’s service
The licensee of a centre based children’s service must
ensure that the authorised supervisor for the service:(a) has the overall supervision of the provision of the service,
and
(b) is, each week, present on the premises of the service for no less
than 50% of the time that the service is provided.
Division 2 Use of volunteers
57 Use of volunteers
A licensee of a children’s service may provide a
children’s service with the assistance of volunteers, but only if the
volunteers:(a) in the case of a centre based or mobile children’s service,
supplement the Part 4 staffing requirements and are not counted (except for
the purposes of clauses 78 and 79) in determining whether the required
staffing levels have been met, and
(b) are accompanied by primary contact staff whenever they are in the
presence of children, and
(c) are covered by appropriate insurance
arrangements.
Note. A licensee may be required to conduct a probity check of a
volunteer as a licence condition, or under Part 7 of the Commission for Children and Young People Act
1998.
Part 5 Child number requirements
58 Number of children
(1) Centre based or mobile children’s
service
Subject to clause 59, the number of children who may attend a
centre based or mobile children’s service at any one time while a
service is being provided must not exceed the number of children specified in
the licence for the service unless the Minister otherwise approves in a
particular case.
(2) The maximum number of children that may be so specified is 90, of
whom:(a) no more than 30 may be children under the age of 2 years,
and
(b) no more than 60 may be children of or above the age of 2 years,
but under the age of 6 years, who do not ordinarily attend
school.
(3) Family day care children’s service
The licensee of a family day care children’s service must
ensure that the number of children for whom a service is provided by any
family day care carer of the service (including children related to the carer)
does not at any one time exceed 7 children under the age of 12 years,
including no more than 5 who do not ordinarily attend
school.
(4) Home based children’s service
The licensee of a home based children’s service must not
provide a children’s service for a number of children (including
children related to the licensee) that at any one time exceeds 7 children
under the age of 12 years, including no more than 5 who do not ordinarily
attend school.
59 Director-General may approve emergency child care
arrangements
(1) Centre based or mobile children’s
service
The Director-General may give approval for the licensee of a
centre based or mobile children’s service to provide the service to more
children than the number of children specified in the licence for that service
if the Director-General is of the opinion that the children need to be
provided with the service as a matter of urgency.
(2) The Director-General may give such an approval:(a) only with the agreement of the licensee of the centre based or
mobile children’s service, and
(b) only if the number of additional children specified in the
approval does not at any one time exceed 5, or 10% of the number of children
specified in the licence for the service, whichever is the
lesser.
(3) Family day care children’s service
The Director-General may give approval for a family day care carer
to provide a family day care children’s service to one more child than
the number of children specified in the family day care register for the
service as the maximum number of children that may be placed with that family
day care carer if the Director-General is of the opinion that the child needs
to be provided with the service as a matter of
urgency.
(4) Home based children’s service
The Director-General may give approval for one more child to be
provided with a home based children’s service than the maximum number of
children who may be provided with the service under clause 58 if the
Director-General is of the opinion that the child needs to be provided with
the service as a matter of urgency.
60 Requirements for approval of emergency child care
arrangements
(1) The Director-General may give an approval under clause 59 only if
each child the subject of the approval:(a) is a client of the Department or is a member of a family that is a
client of the Department, or
(b) is, in the opinion of the Director-General, likely to become a
client of the Department, or is a member of a family that is likely to become
a client of the Department, or
(c) has a parent whose health needs require urgent care for the child,
or
(d) has a parent who is undertaking a rehabilitation program,
or
(e) is a client of, or is a member of a family that is a client of, an
organisation funded by the Department (other than an organisation funded by or
under the Children’s Services Program administered by the Department),
or
(f) has a parent who is participating in an approved job skills
program for the long-term unemployed, or
(g) is the holder of a visa of a class of visas described as
“protection” visas under the Migration
Act 1958 of the Commonwealth (or is the child of a person who
holds such a visa).
(2) The period for which a child may be provided with a service under
such an approval must not exceed 6 months.
(3) Each child who is the subject of an approval under clause 59 is to
be named in the approval.
(4) The licensee of a centre based, mobile or home based
children’s service must admit a child who is the subject of such an
approval to the first available vacancy at the
service.
(5) The authorised supervisor of a family day care children’s
service must admit a child who is the subject of such an approval to the first
available vacancy at the service.
(6) The Director-General may give an approval for a particular child
to be provided with a service under this clause on more than one
occasion.
61 Group size—centre based or mobile children’s
service
The licensee of a centre based or mobile children’s service
must ensure that children are arranged and supervised in groups as
follows:(a) if the children are under 2 years of age, in groups of not more
than 10,
(b) if the children are 2 or more years of age but under 3 years of
age, in groups of not more than 16,
(c) if the children are 3 or more years of age but under 6 years of
age and do not ordinarily attend school, in groups of not more than
20.
62 Caring for school children at service—centre based
or mobile children’s service
(1) The licensee of a centre based or mobile children’s service
must ensure that if any school child is provided with education or care by the
licensee:(a) the access of any pre-school child attending the service to
facilities and staff of the service is not diminished, and
(b) any programs provided for pre-school children attending the
service are not adversely affected, and
(c) if all the school children attending the service are attending
school in kindergarten or Year 1, the total number of school children who are
cared for at the premises of the service is not greater than 20% of the number
of children specified in the licence for the service, and
(d) if any school children attending the service are attending school
other than in kindergarten or Year 1, the total number of school children who
are cared for at the premises of the service is not greater than 10% of the
number of children specified in the licence for the
service.
(2) The percentages referred to in subclause (1) (c) and (d) may be
exceeded if:(a) the indoor and outdoor areas and amenities used by the children
are not used at the same time by any other children attending the service,
and
(b) the staff providing the service to the children are not at the
same time providing the service to any other children attending the
service.
(3) Nothing in subclause (1) authorises the licensee to provide
education or care to more children (including school children) than the number
specified in the licence for the service.
Note. Clause 59 provides that in certain circumstances the
Director-General may authorise the licensee of the children’s service to
provide a children’s service to a number of children that exceeds the
number of children specified in the licence for the
service.
63 Service to be provided only to children enrolled at
service
The authorised supervisor of a children’s service must
ensure that all children (including school children) to whom the licensee
provides education or care are enrolled in the
service.
Part 6 Operational requirements
Division 1 General
64 Programs for children
(1) The licensee of a children’s service must develop policies
for the development and education of children that set out:(a) the level of involvement of children, parents and staff in the
development of the curriculum, and
(b) the ways in which the service ensures that individual
children’s interests are taken into account, and
(c) the ways in which children will be assisted in the transition to
other early childhood programs or to school.
(2) The authorised supervisor of a children’s service must
ensure that there is provided a program of activities that:(a) balances indoor and outdoor experiences, and
(b) stimulates and develops each child’s social, physical,
emotional, cognitive, language and creative potential, and
(c) is appropriate to the individual needs and development level of
each child, and
(d) is capable of engaging the interest of children,
and
(e) allows children to freely select experiences,
and
(f) is appropriate to the development of
children.
(3) In the case of a family day care children’s service, the
obligations of an authorised supervisor under subclause (2) are taken to be
the obligations of each family day care carer of the
service.
65 Interactions with children
(1) All children’s services
The licensee and authorised supervisor of a children’s
service must ensure that interactions with children for whom the service is
being provided occur in a way that ensures that the children:(a) are encouraged to express themselves and their opinions,
and
(b) are given the opportunity to become self-reliant and to develop
self-esteem, and
(c) are given guidance as to positive and responsible behaviour,
and
(d) are not required to perform duties that are inappropriate, having
regard to each child’s family and cultural values, age and physical and
intellectual development.
(2) The licensee and authorised supervisor of a children’s
service must ensure that the dignity and rights of each child being provided
with the service are maintained at all times and that:(a) child management techniques do not include physical, verbal or
emotional punishment, including, for example, punishment that humiliates,
frightens or threatens the child, and
(b) the child is not isolated for any reason other than illness,
accident or a pre-arranged appointment with parental consent,
and
(c) a child is given positive guidance directed towards acceptable
behaviour with encouragement freely given, and
(d) the values of the child’s family are respected,
and
(e) the child is given support in the child’s learning
experiences, and
(f) the child is given emotional support, and
(g) the child is not required to sleep or rest against the
child’s wishes or needs.
(3) The licensee and authorised supervisor of a children’s
service must ensure that all children enrolled in the service:(a) are treated without bias regardless of ability, gender, religion,
culture, family structure or economic status, and
(b) if they have disabilities, or come from different cultural and
linguistic backgrounds, are encouraged to fully participate (with any
necessary help and support) in programs at the service,
and
(c) if they have disabilities, are given access to:(i) buildings, areas and facilities at which the service is provided,
and
(ii) appropriate support services and specialised equipment and
resources.
(4) In the case of a family day care children’s service, the
obligations of an authorised supervisor under this clause are taken to be the
obligations of each family day care carer of the
service.
66 Supervision of children
(1) All children’s services
The licensee and authorised supervisor of a children’s
service must ensure that no member of the primary contact staff, a family day
care carer or the home based licensee is performing other duties while
supervising children.
(2) The licensee and authorised supervisor of a children’s
service must ensure that children at the service are supervised at all times
(including while they are asleep) having regard to their ages and physical and
intellectual development and to the activities in which they are
engaged.
(3) In the case of a family day care children’s service, the
obligations of an authorised supervisor under subclauses (1) and (2) are taken
to be the obligations of each family day care carer of the
service.
(4) Centre based or mobile children’s
service
If, in the case of a centre based or mobile children’s
service, the toilet, hand washing and bathing facilities are not visible or
easily accessible from the main areas where the service is provided, children
provided with the service must be supervised when using those
facilities.
(5) The licensee and authorised supervisor of a centre based or mobile
children’s service must use their best endeavours to monitor whether
children provided for by the service are able to climb or crawl under any
fences or gates on the premises at which the service is provided and, if so,
to take appropriate action to prevent them doing
so.
67 Child health
(1) Centre based or mobile children’s
service
The authorised supervisor of a centre based or mobile
children’s service must ensure that:(a) in relation to children provided with the service, all members of
staff of the service observe strict health and hygiene practices that have
regard to current community standards, and are in accordance with relevant
government guidelines to minimise risks to children, and
(b) no alcohol or unlawful substances are consumed on any part of the
premises of the service at any time when the service is being provided to
children, and
(c) no tobacco or any other substance is smoked on any part of the
premises of the service at any time when the service is being provided to
children and that all practicable steps are taken to ensure that no tobacco is
smoked on any part of the premises that is indoors at any other
time.
(2) The licensee of a centre based or mobile children’s service
must develop and maintain procedures and policies to ensure that the
authorised supervisor and primary contact staff of the service comply with the
requirements of this clause.
(3) Family day care or home based children’s
service
A family day care carer or home based licensee:(a) in relation to children provided with the service, must observe
strict health and hygiene practices that have regard to current community
standards and are in accordance with relevant government guidelines to
minimise risks to children, and
(b) must encourage children to observe these practices,
and
(c) must not provide care for children unless he or she is in good
health and is free from any medical conditions or dependency on any medication
or substance that may affect the carer’s or licensee’s ability to
provide care for children, and
(d) if the family day care carer or home based licensee requires
regular medication, must obtain a medical certificate confirming his or her
ability to care for children, and
(e) must not be under the influence of alcohol or any other drug while
the family day care carer or home based licensee is providing children with
the service, and
(f) must not consume any alcohol or unlawful substance while the
family day care carer or home based licensee is providing children with the
service, and
(g) must provide a smoke free environment while providing the children
with the service at the home of the family day care carer or home based
licensee.
(4) The licensee of a family day care children’s service must
develop and maintain procedures and policies to ensure that the family day
care carers of the service comply with the requirements of this
clause.
68 Food and nutrition
(1) Centre based or mobile children’s
service
The licensee of a centre based or mobile children’s service
must ensure a policy is developed and maintained that:(a) is consistent with the Food Act
2003 and the regulations under that Act,
and
(b) is consistent with the Dietary Guide for Children,
and
(c) ensures that each child provided with the service is given food
and drinks that are nutritious, adequate in quantity, varied, offered at
frequent intervals, appropriate to the developmental needs of the child and
any special dietary needs of the child and appropriate to the culture and
religion of the child, and
(d) provides a system for parents of a child to be given information
about:(i) the approach taken by the service to meet the nutritional needs of
the child, and
(ii) the eating habits of the child, and
(e) outlines a program of nutrition education for primary contact
staff covering the following matters:(i) safe eating practices (including the eating
environment),
(ii) understanding and handling eating behaviour of children (including
refusal of food by children),
(iii) teaching children provided with the service about nutrition
through food-related activities, and
(f) requires information to be given to parents of children provided
with the service to assist them in providing food for the child that is
varied, adequate in quantity, appropriate to the developmental needs of the
child and consistent with the Dietary Guide for Children,
(g) requires information to be prominently displayed as to the
service’s weekly menu for children’s meals,
(h) outlines practices for the preparation, storage, handling and
hygiene of food,
(i) requires eating utensils and furniture used when eating to have a
size and shape that encourage development of eating skills and independence in
eating by children,
(j) requires primary contact staff to ensure that drinking water is
provided and available to children at all times while the service is being
provided.
(2) The authorised supervisor of a centre based or mobile
children’s service must ensure that the policy referred to in subclause
(1) is practised by each member of staff.
(3) Family day care or home based children’s
service
A family day care carer or home based licensee must ensure
that:(a) each child provided with the service is given food and drinks that
are nutritious, adequate in quantity, varied, offered at frequent intervals,
appropriate to the developmental needs of the child and any special dietary
needs of the child and appropriate to the culture and religion of the child,
and
(b) drinking water is available to children at all times while the
service is being provided, and
(c) information is readily available to parents of a child that
outlines:(i) the approach taken by the family day care carer or home based
licensee to meet the nutritional needs of the child, and
(ii) the eating habits of the child.
(4) The licensee and the authorised supervisor of a family day care
children’s service must use their best endeavours to ensure that a
family day care carer for the service complies with subclause
(3).
(5) In this clause, Dietary Guide for
Children means the guide published by the Department of Health under
the title Caring for Children—Food, Nutrition
and Fun Activities, Third Edition.
69 Pool safety
(1) The authorised supervisor of a children’s service must
ensure that the written authorisation of a parent of a child provided with the
service is obtained before the child enters a pool of water on the premises of
the children’s service (whether or not the pool has been identified on
the site plan accompanying the application for the licence for the service or
the Director-General has otherwise been notified about the
pool).
(2) The authorised supervisor of a children’s service must
ensure that if children provided with the service are allowed to swim at a
swimming pool on the premises of the children’s service, then there must
be present within the fenced area of the pool at least one adult for each
child using the pool.
(3) The authorised supervisor of a children’s service must
ensure that:(a) all paddling pools at the premises of the service are emptied
immediately after use and stored to prevent the collection of water,
and
(b) other water containers at the premises that could constitute a
drowning hazard are safely covered or are inaccessible to children,
and
(c) any pool filters at the premises are inaccessible to
children.
(4) The licensee of a children’s service (other than a home
based children’s service) must develop and maintain procedures and
policies to ensure that the authorised supervisor, primary contact staff or
family day care carers comply with the requirements of this
clause.
(5) In the case of a family day care children’s service, the
obligations of an authorised supervisor under this clause are taken to be the
obligations of each family day care carer of the
service.
70 Storage of dangerous substances and equipment
(1) The authorised supervisor of a children’s service must
ensure that all dangerous cleaning materials, disinfectants, poisonous and
other dangerous substances and medications are kept in a child resistant
container that is labelled with a description of its contents and directions
for their use.
(2) The authorised supervisor of a children’s service must
ensure that the following items are kept in secure storage facilities that are
inaccessible to children:(a) dangerous cleaning materials,
(b) disinfectants,
(c) poisonous and other dangerous substances,
(d) dangerous tools and equipment,
(e) toiletries,
(f) medications,
(g) first aid equipment,
(h) sharp or jagged objects that pose a hazard to
children.
(3) The authorised supervisor of a children’s service must
ensure that if a substance referred to in subclause (2) needs to be
refrigerated, it is kept in a child resistant container in the
refrigerator.
(4) In the case of a family day care children’s service, the
obligations of an authorised supervisor under this clause are taken to be the
obligations of each family day care carer of the
service.
(5) The licensee of a children’s service (other than a home
based children’s service) must develop and maintain procedures and
policies to ensure that the authorised supervisor and family day care carers
comply with the requirements of this clause.
71 Animals
(1) The licensee and authorised supervisor of a children’s
service must ensure that any animal (including livestock) or domesticated bird
that enters or is kept on the premises of the service is in a clean and
healthy condition.
(2) The licensee and authorised supervisor of a children’s
service must ensure that any animal (including livestock) or domesticated bird
that enters or is kept on the premises of the service does not constitute a
health or safety risk to children (for example, by causing an allergic
response or infection or in any other way having a detrimental effect on the
well-being of children provided with the service).
(3) The licensee and authorised supervisor of a children’s
service must ensure that the following are made inaccessible to a child in the
care of the service unless the child is under direct supervision:(a) every domestic pet or farm animal or other potentially dangerous
animal kept on the premises of the service,
(b) any bedding, toys, litter tray, food, feeding container or water
container used or consumed by animals.
(4) The licensee and authorised supervisor of a children’s
service must ensure that all play areas are kept free from the
following:(a) animal droppings,
(b) bones,
(c) holes dug by animals.
(5) The licensee and authorised supervisor of a children’s
service must ensure that animals do not have access to the following:(a) bedding used by children,
(b) toys or play equipment used by children,
(c) food preparation areas or food prepared by the
service,
(d) eating surfaces,
(e) eating utensils.
(6) The licensee and authorised supervisor of a children’s
service must ensure that no animal travels in a motor vehicle with a child in
the course of the provision of the service to the child unless the animal is
restrained in the car (for example, by a fixed barrier or harness or in a
cage).
(7) In the case of a family day care children’s service, the
obligations of an authorised supervisor under this clause are taken to be the
obligations of each family day care carer of the
service.
72 Plants
(1) The licensee and authorised supervisor of a children’s
service must ensure that any poisonous vegetation in children’s play
areas on the premises of a children’s service is identified and
maintained so as to ensure that it does not present a hazard to
children.
(2) In particular, any vegetation on the premises of a
children’s service that can lead to injury or severe discomfort (for
example, because of sharp prickles or prominent thorns) must be identified and
maintained so as to ensure that it does not present a hazard to
children.
(3) In the case of a family day care children’s service, the
obligations of an authorised supervisor under this clause are taken to be the
obligations of each family day care carer of the
service.
Division 2 Information about and access to
children
73 Obtaining information about child
The licensee of a children’s service must ensure that
procedures are in place for a parent of a child attending the service to
obtain information from the licensee, the authorised supervisor, primary
contact staff or family day care carers about the health, welfare and conduct
of the child.
74 Arrival and departure of child
(1) All children’s services
The authorised supervisor of a centre based or mobile
children’s service, or a family day care carer or home based licensee,
must ensure that:(a) when a child arrives at the premises of the children’s
service, a member of staff of the service, the family day care carer or the
home based licensee receives the child, and
(b) when a child leaves the premises of the children’s service,
the person who collects the child is a parent of the child or another person
who is authorised in writing by a parent of the child to collect the child,
and
(c) if it is not possible to comply with paragraph (b), alternative
arrangements to secure the safety and welfare of the child are made before the
child is permitted to leave the premises, and
(d) if a school age child arrives at or leaves the premises of the
children’s service unaccompanied by a parent of the child, the arrival
or departure is in accordance with procedures agreed to in writing by the
child’s parents.
(2) For the purposes of subclause (1), a child who is collected or
returned by a member of staff of a children’s service is taken to have
arrived when he or she is collected from the pick-up address and to have left
when he or she is returned to the drop-off address.
(3) Centre based or mobile children’s
service
The authorised supervisor of a centre based or mobile
children’s service must ensure that at the end of each day all beds and
all areas of the premises (whether indoors or outdoors) are thoroughly checked
by at least 2 members of the primary contact staff to ensure that no child
remains on the premises after the service closes for the
day.
(4) The licensee of a centre based or mobile children’s service
must develop and maintain procedures and policies to ensure that the
authorised supervisor of the service complies with the requirements of
subclause (1).
(5) Family day care children’s service
The licensee of a family day care children’s service must
develop and maintain procedures and policies to ensure that the family day
care carers of the service comply with the requirements of subclause
(1).
75 Access to children
(1) The authorised supervisor of a children’s service must
ensure that any parent of a child:(a) can contact the child at any time during the hours the child is at
the service, and
(b) can exchange information about the child with primary contact
staff, with family day care carers or with the home based licensee at mutually
convenient times on an ongoing basis.
(2) The licensee of a children’s service must ensure that the
authorised supervisor and members of staff or family day care carers of the
service comply with the requirements of subclause
(1).
(3) The licensee of a children’s service must ensure that video
monitoring or surveillance equipment on the premises of the service is not
used so as to enable children and staff at the premises to be viewed from a
place other than those premises or that home.
76 Information and access to be denied to certain
persons
(1) Despite any other provision of this Division, a person who has
been forbidden by court order from having contact with a child attending a
children’s service:(a) must not be given any information concerning the child,
and
(b) must not be allowed to enter the premises of the children’s
service while the child is attending the service, and
(c) must not be permitted to collect the child from the
service.
(2) The licensee of a children’s service must ensure that
procedures are in place to ensure that the requirements of subclause (1) are
complied with.
Division 3 Excursions
77 Authority for excursions
(1) All children’s services—routine
excursions
The authorised supervisor of a children’s service must
ensure that no child provided with the service leaves the premises of the
service to participate in any routine excursion unless the licensee of the
service has obtained written authorisation from a parent of the child for the
child to participate in excursions of that kind.
(2) All children’s services—non-routine
excursions
The authorised supervisor of a children’s service must
ensure that no child provided with the service leaves the premises of the
service to participate in any non-routine excursion unless the licensee of the
service has obtained written authorisation from a parent of the child for the
child to participate in that excursion.
(3) An authorisation referred to in subclause (2) must state the
following:(a) the date of the excursion,
(b) the proposed destination,
(c) the method of transport or walking itinerary,
(d) the activities to be carried out during the
excursion,
(e) the number of adults to accompany and supervise the
children,
(f) the name of the person with first aid qualifications who will
accompany the children on the excursion,
(g) the proposed period of time during which the excursion is to take
place,
(h) if practicable, an emergency contact number for the
excursion.
(4) The licensee of a children’s service (other than a home
based children’s service) must develop and maintain procedures and
policies to ensure that the authorised supervisor complies with the
requirements of this clause.
78 Conduct of excursions: general
(1) All children’s services
The authorised supervisor of a children’s service must
ensure that all excursions are conducted in a safe
manner.
(2) The authorised supervisor of a children’s service must
ensure that any motor vehicle that is used to transport children on excursions
(other than a motor vehicle with seating for more than 9 persons) is fitted
with child restraints approved by the Roads and Traffic
Authority.
(3) The authorised supervisor of a children’s service must
ensure that a suitable and fully stocked first aid kit is taken on all
excursions and that the children on such an excursion are accompanied by a
primary contact staff member with approved first aid
qualifications.
(4) The licensee of a children’s service (other than a home
based children’s service) must develop and maintain procedures and
policies to ensure that the authorised supervisor, primary contact staff or
family day care carers comply with the requirements of this clause that apply
to them.
(5) Centre based or mobile children’s
service
The authorised supervisor of a centre based or mobile
children’s service must ensure that at least 2 adult persons, at least
one of whom is a primary contact staff member, accompany the children on any
excursion.
(6) Subject to subclause (7), the authorised supervisor of a centre
based or mobile children’s service must ensure that the minimum adult to
child ratio of persons participating in the excursion is:(a) one adult for each 2 children who are under 3 years of age,
and
(b) one adult for each 5 children who are 3 or more years of
age.
(7) The authorised supervisor of a centre based or mobile
children’s service must ensure that children are not taken on any
excursion that involves using public transport or crossing a major road unless
the minimum adult to child ratio of persons participating in the excursion
is:(a) one adult for each 2 children who are under 3 years of age,
and
(b) one adult for each 4 children who are 3 or more years of
age.
(8) Family day care or home based children’s
service
A family day care carer or home based licensee must conduct all
excursions in a safe manner.
79 Conduct of excursions: water hazards
(1) All children’s services
The authorised supervisor of a children’s service must
ensure that:(a) children provided with the service are taken on an excursion to
swim for the purpose only of learning water safety or learning to swim,
and
(b) when children are taken on such an excursion, the minimum adult to
child ratio of participants in the excursion is one adult for each
child.
(2) The authorised supervisor of a children’s service must
ensure that if children provided with the service are taken on any excursion
to a beach, river, lake or other place where there is a significant water
hazard (otherwise than for the purpose of learning water safety or learning to
swim), the minimum adult to child ratio of persons participating in the
excursion is:(a) one adult for each child who is under 3 years of age,
and
(b) one adult for each 2 children who are 3 or more years of age but
who do not normally attend school, and
(c) one adult for each 5 children who normally attend
school.
(3) The licensee of a children’s service (other than a home
based children’s service) must develop and maintain procedures and
policies to ensure that the authorised supervisor, primary contact staff or
family day care carers comply with the requirements of this clause that apply
to them.
(4) Centre based or mobile children’s
services
The authorised supervisor of a centre based or mobile
children’s service must ensure that children are not taken on an
excursion to a beach, river, lake or other place where there is a significant
water hazard unless 2 of the adult persons accompanying the children
have:(a) a certificate issued on completion, within the period of 12 months
immediately before the excursion, of a senior first aid course that relates to
resuscitation approved by the WorkCover Authority under the Occupational Health and Safety Act
2000, and
(b) a Bronze Medallion Award, or award given on completion of a water
rescue test, issued by the Royal Life Saving Society—Australia,
and
(c) the knowledge and ability to implement water safety
procedures.
(5) Family day care or home based children’s
service
A family day care carer or home based licensee must ensure that
the person in charge of any excursion to a beach, river, lake or other place
where there is a significant water hazard has a current approved first aid
qualification and the knowledge and ability to implement water safety
procedures.
Division 4 Emergencies
80 Illness, accident and emergency treatment
(1) All children’s services
The authorised supervisor of a children’s service must
ensure that a child is not enrolled in the service unless a parent of the
child:(a) has given written authorisation for the service to seek urgent
medical, dental or hospital treatment or ambulance service,
and
(b) has given written consent to the carrying out of appropriate
medical, dental or hospital treatment,
in the event that such action appears to be necessary because the child
has been injured, or is ill, at the premises.
(2) The authorised supervisor of a children’s service must
ensure that:(a) if a child has an accident or becomes ill while being provided
with the service:(i) the child is kept under adult supervision until the child recovers
or until a parent of the child or some other responsible person takes charge
of the child, and
(ii) if the child requires urgent medical or dental treatment,
immediate steps are taken to secure that treatment, and
(iii) the child is returned as soon as practicable to the care of a
parent of the child, and
(b) if any medication or medical, hospital or dental treatment or
ambulance services are obtained for a child, a parent of the child is notified
as soon as practically possible of the accident or illness and the treatment
or services arranged for the child, and
(c) if any other matter concerning the child’s health arises
while the child is being provided with the service, a parent of the child is
given notice of that matter.
(3) If the written authorisation referred to in subclause (1) (a)
nominates a preferred medical practitioner or dentist to treat the child, any
medical or dental treatment for the child must, if practicable, be carried out
by that medical practitioner or dentist.Note. Nothing in this clause limits the authority of a medical
practitioner or dentist to carry out emergency medical or dental treatment on
a child without the consent of the child’s parent as referred to in
section 174 of the Act.
(4) An authorised supervisor of a children’s service who becomes
aware of a serious accident involving a child attending the service, being an
accident that requires the child to receive medical, dental or hospital
treatment, must immediately cause notice of that fact to be given to:(a) a parent of the child, and
(b) the Director-General, and
(c) the licensee of the service (except in the case of a home based
licensee).
(5) The authorised supervisor of a children’s service who
becomes aware of a serious accident involving a child attending the service,
being an accident that requires the child to be hospitalised or causes the
child to die, must immediately cause notice of that fact to be given to the
licensee of the service.
(6) An authorised supervisor or home based licensee who becomes aware
of the death of a child while being provided with the children’s service
at the premises of the children’s service, must immediately cause notice
of that fact to be given to:(a) a parent of the child, and
(b) a police officer, and
(c) the Director-General, and
(d) the licensee of the service (except in the case of a home based
licensee).
(7) Centre based or mobile children’s
service
The licensee of a centre based or mobile children’s service
must develop and maintain procedures and policies to ensure that the
authorised supervisor and the primary contact staff of the service comply with
the requirements of this clause.
(8) Family day care children’s service
The licensee of a family day care children’s service must
develop and maintain procedures and policies to ensure that the authorised
supervisor and the family day care carers of the service comply with the
requirements of this clause.
81 Medication
(1) The licensee of a children’s service must ensure
that:(a) a policy is developed and maintained concerning the administration
of medication to children, and
(b) procedures to implement that policy are developed and
observed.
(2) The authorised supervisor of a children’s service must
ensure that:(a) medication is not administered to a child being provided with the
service without written authorisation or authority from a parent of the child,
and
(b) medication is administered from the container in which it was
originally packaged, being (in the case of a prescription medicine) a
container that is labelled with the child’s name, the prescribed dosage
and the medicine’s use by date, and
(c) if it is necessary in an emergency to administer medication to a
child that is being provided with the service without the prior consent of the
child’s parent, every attempt is made to secure that
consent.
(3) In the case of a family day care children’s service, the
obligations of an authorised supervisor under subclause (2) are taken to be
the obligations of each family day care carer of the
service.
82 Infectious diseases
(1) All children’s services
The licensee of a children’s service must ensure that a
policy on infectious diseases is developed and maintained for the service
that:(a) is consistent with the Public
Health Act 1991 and the regulations under that Act, including
the requirements for mandatory reporting, and
(b) outlines practices to be adopted in the event of an outbreak of an
infectious disease at the service, and
(c) outlines the exclusion practices and conditions for return to care
for children who have an infectious disease or who have been exposed to an
infectious disease.
(2) Centre based or mobile children’s
service
The licensee and the authorised supervisor of a centre based or
mobile children’s service must ensure that primary contact staff, casual
employees and contractors of the children’s service practise the policy
on infectious diseases.
(3) The authorised supervisor of a centre based or mobile
children’s service must ensure that information about the occurrence
within the service of significant infectious disease:(a) in any child provided with the service, or
(b) in any member of staff of the service,
is made available to the parents of children provided with the service in
a manner that is not prejudicial to the rights of individual children or
staff.
(4) Family day care and home based children’s
service
The licensee and authorised supervisor of a family day care or
home based children’s service must ensure that the infectious diseases
policy covers all persons normally resident in the home of a family day care
carer or the home based licensee.
(5) The licensee and the authorised supervisor of a family day care
children’s service must use their best endeavours to ensure that the
family day care carers of the children’s service practise the policy on
infectious diseases.
(6) The licensee of a home based children’s service must
practise the policy on infectious diseases.
(7) The authorised supervisor of a family day care children’s
service or a home based licensee must ensure that information about the
occurrence within the children’s service of significant infectious
disease:(a) in any child provided with the service, or
(b) in any family day care carer or in the home based licensee,
or
(c) in any person resident at the home of a family day care carer or
the home based licensee,
is made available to the parents of children provided with the service in
a manner that is not prejudicial to the rights of individual children, carers
or other persons.
83 Emergency and evacuation procedures
(1) The licensee of a children’s service must ensure that a
written emergency plan for fire and other emergencies (including evacuation
procedures) is developed and kept up to date.
(2) A copy of each plan must be displayed:(a) in the case of a centre based children’s service, in each
playroom in any building on the premises of the service and at each main exit
from the building, and
(b) in the case of a mobile children’s service, at each of the
premises where the service is provided, and
(c) in the case of a family day care children’s service, at the
home of each family day care carer of the service, and
(d) in the case of a home based children’s service, at the home
of the licensee of the service.
(3) The licensee and authorised supervisor of a children’s
service must ensure that primary contact staff, family day care carers or the
home based licensee practise emergency procedures (including evacuation
procedures) with all children provided with the service at least once every 3
months so that they and the children are prepared for
emergencies.
(4) The licensee and the authorised supervisor of a children’s
service must ensure that a record of each practice is taken that includes an
evaluation of the procedures followed and is kept at the premises of the
service (or the offices of the service or the home of the home based licensee)
for a period of 2 years after the practice.
(5) The licensee of a children’s service must ensure that an
effective emergency communications plan is in place for situations in which
the means of communication referred to in clause 39 are unavailable or
inoperable.
84 Family day care carer or home based licensee to hold first
aid qualification
A family day care carer of a family day care children’s
service, or a home based licensee, must hold a current approved first aid
qualification.
Part 7 Administrative requirements
Division 1 Information
85 Policies to be made available
(1) The licensee of a children’s service must develop policies
to promote the health, safety and well-being of children attending the
service, and must ensure that copies of those policies are available at the
premises of the service for inspection by the children’s
parents.
(2) In particular, the policies must deal with the following
matters:(a) child protection,
(b) ethical conduct,
(c) development and education,
(d) the treatment of children with special needs,
(e) interactions with children,
(f) procedures for handling complaints,
(g) parental involvement,
(h) access,
(i) arrival and departure,
(j) excursions,
(k) confidentiality of records,
(l) child health,
(m) illness, accident and emergency treatment,
(n) administration of medication,
(o) infectious diseases,
(p) food and nutrition,
(q) water safety,
(r) sun protection,
(s) storage of dangerous substances and dangerous
equipment.
86 Information or documents required by
Director-General
The licensee of any class of children’s service, or a family
day care carer of a family day care children’s service, must provide the
Director-General with such information in relation to the service as the
Director-General may from time to time reasonably
require.
87 Entry and inspection
The licensee of any class of children’s service:(a) must not hinder any person authorised by or under the Act to enter
and inspect the premises of the children’s service, or where documents,
records or a register maintained in connection with the service are kept, in
the exercise of the person’s functions, and
(b) must ensure that the authorised supervisor, any staff of the
service, or any family day care carer of the service, does not hinder any
person authorised by or under the Act to enter and inspect any premises where
the children’s service is provided, or where documents, records or a
register maintained in connection with the service are kept, in the exercise
of the person’s functions.
Note. It is an offence under section 241 (2) of the Act for a person to
fail to comply with any requirement under that section made by a person
authorised to enter and inspect the premises concerned. The maximum penalty
for the offence is 200 penalty units.
88 Notice of complaint
If a parent of a child provided with any class of children’s
service makes a complaint to the licensee about the conduct of the service,
the licensee must, unless the complaint is of an obviously trivial
nature:(a) give written notice of the complaint to the Director-General
within one week after the complaint is made, and
(b) give written notice to the Director-General of any action taken in
response to the complaint as soon as reasonably practicable after the action
is taken.
89 Public liability insurance
(1) The licensee of any class of children’s service (other than
a family day care children’s service):(a) must obtain and keep current a policy of insurance that adequately
meets the licensee’s public liability in respect of the provision of
children’s services, being a policy that provides for cover for an
amount of not less than $10,000,000, and
(b) must provide the Director-General with a duly certified copy of a
certificate of currency with respect to such insurance on request by the
Director-General, and
(c) must not require or request any parent of a child provided with
the service to release or indemnify the licensee against any liability in
proceedings against the licensee involving injury caused to the child while
being provided with the service.
(2) The licensee of a family day care children’s service must
ensure that each family day care carer who is listed on the family day care
register for the service:(a) obtains and keeps current a policy of insurance that adequately
meets the carer’s public liability in respect of the provision of
children’s services, being a policy that provides for cover for an
amount of not less than $10,000,000, and
(b) provides the licensee with a duly certified copy of a certificate
of currency with respect to such insurance on request by the Director-General,
and
(c) does not require or request any parent of a child provided with
the service to release or indemnify the carer against any liability in
proceedings against the carer involving injury caused to the child while being
provided with the service.
90 Display of licence and family day care carer’s
certificate of registration
(1) The licensee of a children’s service (other than a family
day care children’s service) must ensure that the licence for the
service is displayed at all times in a prominent place on the premises of the
service that is accessible to parents of children attending the
service.
(2) A family day care carer must ensure that the carer’s
certificate of registration as a family day care carer is displayed at the
carer’s home at all times in a prominent place that is accessible to
parents of children attending the service.
91 Copy of Regulation to be kept on premises of
service
The licensee of a children’s service must ensure that at
least one copy of this Regulation is available at the premises of the service
for inspection by the parents of children in respect of whom the service is
provided.
Division 2 Records
92 Records in relation to children
(1) Subject to subclause (2), the licensee and authorised supervisor
of a children’s service must ensure that the records referred to in
Schedule 1 are made in relation to each child provided with the service and
(as appropriate) kept up to date.
(2) In the case of a family day care children’s service, the
family day care carer of the service who provides care for the child (rather
than the licensee or the authorised supervisor) must ensure that the records
referred to in Schedule 1 (other than those referred to in clause 4 of that
Schedule) are made in relation to each child provided with the service and (as
appropriate) kept up to date.
93 Records in relation to staff and visitors
(1) Centre based and mobile children’s
services
The licensee of a centre based or mobile children’s service
must ensure that the following records are made and kept up to date in
relation to each member of staff of the service:(a) a copy of any relevant qualification held by the
member,
(b) a copy of any first aid qualification held by the
member,
(c) any other particulars that the Director-General requires, by
notice in writing served on the licensee, to be kept in relation to the
member.
(2) The licensee of a centre based or mobile children’s service
must ensure that records are made and kept up to date of the day to day
attendance of each member of staff, casual employee or contractor of the
service, including times of arrival and departure during the day and including
details of all absences.
(3) All children’s services
The licensee of a children’s service must ensure that
records are made and kept up to date of the attendance of any visitor to the
premises of the service, including times of arrival and
departure.
(4) The records kept under this clause in relation to any person must
be signed by the person.
94 Records in relation to attendance at children’s
service
(1) Centre based or mobile children’s
service
The licensee of a centre based or mobile children’s service
must ensure that the authorised supervisor of the children’s service
maintains and keeps up to date a record of attendance by children at the
service.
(2) The licensee of a centre based or mobile children’s service
must maintain and keep up to date a staff roster detailing the hours to be
worked by each member of staff, casual employee or contractor of the
service.
(3) Family day care children’s service
The licensee of a family day care children’s service must
ensure that the authorised supervisor of the service maintains and keeps up to
date a record of attendance by children at the
service.
(4) Home based children’s service
The licensee of a home based children’s service must
maintain and keep up to date a record of attendance by children at the
service.
95 Records about programs for children, developmental
records, daily routine
The licensee and authorised supervisor of a children’s
service must ensure that the following records are maintained and kept up to
date:(a) the programs provided under clause 64,
(b) the structure of the children’s day,
(c) a developmental record for each child provided with the
service,
(d) a weekly record of the service.
96 Retention of records
(1) The licensee of a children’s service must ensure that the
records referred to in clause 92 in respect of a child are kept:(a) in a safe and secure area at the premises of the service (or in
the case of a family day care children’s service, at the premises where
the service is organised and arranged) for a period of not less than 2 years
after the making of the record, and
(b) thereafter at a place approved by the Director-General until the
time the child reaches (or would have reached) 24 years of
age.
(2) The licensee of a centre based or mobile children’s service
must ensure that the records referred to in clause 93 in relation to a member
of staff are kept:(a) in a safe and secure area at the premises of the service while the
member of staff remains a member of staff of the service,
and
(b) thereafter at a place approved by the Director-General for a
period of not less than 7 years after the member of staff ceases to be a
member of staff of the service.
(3) The licensee of a children’s service must ensure that the
records referred to in clauses 94 and 95 are kept in a safe and secure area at
the premises of the service for a period of 12 months after the record is
made.
(4) If the Director-General so directs, the licensee must give the
records specified in the direction to the person (including the
Director-General) specified in the direction within one week after the
licensee receives the direction.
(5) If a children’s service ceases operation, the licensee must
either:(a) keep the records referred to in clauses 92 and 93 at a safe and
secure place and, if the records are to be moved to that place, obtain the
approval of the Director-General before the records are moved to that place,
or
(b) give the records to such person (including the Director-General)
as the Director-General approves in writing.
(6) The licensee or authorised supervisor must give the parent of a
child formerly provided with the service copies of the developmental records
for the child kept by the service if requested to do so within 6 months after
the child ceases to be provided with the service.
97 Inspection of records
(1) The licensee of a children’s service must ensure that the
records relating to a child remain confidential and are made available only to
the following persons:(a) if the licensee is a natural person, the
licensee,
(b) if the licensee is not a natural person, a natural person
nominated by the licensee,
(c) the authorised supervisor of the service,
(d) a member of staff or contractor of the service authorised to
access the records by the licensee or the authorised supervisor of the
service,
(e) the Director-General,
(f) a person otherwise authorised by law to inspect the
records,
(g) a parent of the child,
(h) any person authorised in writing to inspect the records by a
parent of the child.
(2) Nothing in this clause prevents records relating to a person who
was formerly a child provided with the service being made available to that
person.
98 Confidentiality guidelines
The licensee of a children’s service is to prepare or cause
to be prepared written guidelines setting out the policies and practices to be
observed by the licensee, staff or family day care carers of the service and
agents and contractors of the service to ensure confidentiality about records
of the service, or information obtained by the licensee or staff, family day
care carers, agents or contractors concerning:(a) children provided with the service, and
(b) staff and their families, and
(c) family day care carers and their families, and
(d) the families of children provided with the service,
and
(e) contractors of the service and their
families.
99 Mobile children’s service register
A licensee of a mobile children’s service, must keep a
register of the following particulars:(a) the address of each of the premises at which the service is
provided,
(b) the name of the proprietor of each of those
premises.
100 Family day care register
(1) The licensee of a family day care children’s service is to
cause a register of the following particulars to be kept in relation to each
family day care carer of the service:(a) the name, address and home telephone number of the
carer,
(b) the maximum number of children, as determined by the authorised
supervisor, who may be placed with the carer at any one
time,
(c) the number of children who have been placed with the carer at any
one time.
(2) The licensee of a family day care children’s service is not
to enter the name of a person as a family day care carer on the register for
the service unless the person is an adult who, in the opinion of the
authorised supervisor:(a) has an appropriate understanding of young children’s needs
and development, including:(i) the individual differences between children,
and
(ii) activities that stimulate a child’s growth and development,
and
(iii) nutrition, health, hygiene and safety, and
(iv) behaviour management, and
(b) is responsive to children, and
(c) is physically and emotionally able to care for young children,
and
(d) is the holder of a current first aid certificate or is otherwise
appropriately qualified to provide first aid in a medical or other emergency,
and
(e) is able to communicate effectively with adults,
and
(f) is aware of and sensitive to the needs of young children and their
families, including children from a range of cultures and religions and
children with disabilities, and
(g) is a fit and proper person to be concerned in the provision of the
service, and
(h) has a general understanding of the relevant requirements of this
Regulation.
(3) Before entering the name of a person on the register for the
service as a family day care carer, the licensee must ensure that:(a) an inspection is carried out of the prospective carer’s
home, and
(b) an assessment is made as to whether the prospective carer’s
home is adequate for provision of the service.
(4) The licensee is not to enter the name of a person on the register
for the service as a family day care carer unless the person agrees in writing
that his or her continued registration is conditional upon the carer
permitting the licensee (or his or her delegate) and any officer of the
Department to inspect the carer’s home during the normal hours in which
the children’s service is provided by the
carer.
(5) The licensee is to issue a certificate of registration in the
approved form to each person whose name is entered on the register for the
service as a family day care carer.
101 Removal of names from family day care register
(1) The Director-General may direct the licensee of a family day care
children’s service to remove a family day care carer’s name from
the register for the service:(a) if the carer:(i) is convicted of a notifiable offence, or
(ii) fails to comply with an obligation that this Regulation requires
the licensee to impose on the carer, or
(b) if any part of the grounds and buildings of the carer’s home
that is available for use in connection with the service and is accessible to
children, or any equipment used at the home in providing the service, fails to
comply with the Part 3 facilities and equipment requirements applicable to
family day care children’s services, or
(c) if a person normally resident at the home of the carer:(i) is convicted of an offence about which the carer is required to
notify the Director-General, or
(ii) has injured a child provided with a service at the home,
or
(iii) in the opinion of the Director-General, has taken any verbal or
physical action against a child provided with a service at the home that has
seriously humiliated, frightened or threatened the
child.
(2) On receiving a direction under subclause (1) in relation to any
person, the licensee must remove the person’s name from the
register.
(3) Nothing in this clause prevents the licensee of a family day care
children’s service from removing the name of a family day care carer
from the family day care register for the service at any time and for any
reason.
(4) On removing a person’s name from the register for a family
day care children’s service, the licensee for the service:(a) must notify the person of that fact, and (if the removal arises
from a direction under subclause (1)) of the reasons given by the
Director-General for the direction, and
(b) must notify the parents of the children to whom the person was
providing the service of the fact that the person’s name has been
removed from the register.
Division 3 Authorised supervisors
102 Change of authorised supervisor
(1) A licensee for a children’s service who intends to appoint a
new supervisor to replace the existing authorised supervisor for the service
must apply for the Minister’s consent to the appointment of the proposed
new supervisor.
(2) The Minister, by notice served on the licensee, the existing
authorised supervisor and the proposed new supervisor:(a) if the Minister considers the proposed new supervisor suitable to
act as the authorised supervisor under the licence, may consent to the
proposed new supervisor becoming the authorised supervisor under the licence,
or
(b) may refuse the application.
(3) An application under this clause must be accompanied by the same
kind of documents as those required to accompany an application for a licence
in relation to a proposed supervisor.
103 Temporary supervisors
(1) The Minister may, by instrument in writing, appoint a specified
person (the
temporary supervisor) to act on behalf of the authorised supervisor
for a specified children’s service during the authorised
supervisor’s illness or absence.
(2) The instrument of appointment is to be served on both the licensee
and the temporary supervisor.
(3) During any absence from duty of the authorised supervisor, the
temporary supervisor has and may exercise all of the functions of the
authorised supervisor.
(4) The Minister may, by notice served on a temporary supervisor,
revoke that person’s instrument of appointment as such on any ground
that the Minister considers sufficient.
(5) Nothing in this clause prevents a person who is or has been the
temporary supervisor for a children’s service from being appointed,
subject to the other provisions of this Regulation, as the authorised
supervisor for that service.
104 Application of licence conditions if no authorised
supervisor
While a children’s service has no authorised supervisor, the
licence conditions for the service that apply to an authorised supervisor
extend to the licensee.
105 Notice of change relating to authorised
supervisor
At least one week before a new authorised supervisor commences
duty, the licensee must give written notice of that fact to the
Director-General.
Division 4 Miscellaneous
106 Notice of proposed change to constitution of
licensee
A licensee of any class of children’s service who is not a
natural person must give written notice of any proposed change to the
constitution, charter, memorandum, rules, statement of objects, deed of trust
or partnership agreement of the licensee to the Director-General no later than
4 weeks before the change occurs.
107 Notice of change in management of licensee: public
authorities
(1) This clause applies to a licensee that is a public
authority.
(2) If:(a) the chief executive officer (however described) of the public
authority ceases to be the chief executive officer, or
(b) if the public authority is a local authority, the manager of
community services (however described) ceases to be the manager of community
services,
the licensee must, within one week after the change, give the
Director-General written notice of the change.
(3) If:(a) a person becomes the chief executive officer (however described)
of the public authority, or
(b) if the public authority is a local authority, a person becomes the
manager of community services (however described) of the local
authority,
the licensee must, within one week after the change, give the
Director-General written notice of the change, together with the information
and documents in relation to a chief executive officer or manager of community
services that is required by Part 2 of this Regulation to accompany an
application for a licence.
108 Notice of change in management of licensee: bodies other
than public authorities
(1) This clause applies to a licensee that is neither a natural person
nor a public authority.
(2) If a person involved in the control and management of the licensee
substantially alters the person’s involvement or ceases to be so
involved, the licensee must, within one week after the change, give the
Director-General written notice of the change.
(3) If a person becomes involved in the control and management of the
licensee, the licensee must, within one week after the change, give the
Director-General written notice of the change, together with the information
and documents in relation to persons involved in the control and management of
a licensee that is required by Part 2 of this Regulation to accompany an
application for a licence.
109 Notice of significant change in circumstances of
licensee
If a significant change that may affect the licensee’s
capacity to provide the children’s service occurs:(a) in the circumstances (including financial circumstances) of the
licensee of any class of children’s service, or
(b) in the case of a licensee that is not a natural person, in the
circumstances (including financial circumstances) of a person involved in the
control and management of the licensee,
the licensee must give written notice to the Director-General of the
change within one week after the change occurs.
110 Notice of change in contact information to be
notified
Within one week after any change in a licensee’s contact
information, the licensee must give written notice of the fact, and new
contact information, to the Director-General.
111 Notice of cessation of children’s
service
If a licensee of any class of children’s service intends to
cease providing the service, the licensee must give the Director-General
notice in writing of that intention at least 3 weeks before the licensee
ceases providing the service.
112 Notice of changes to premises—centre based, mobile
or home based children’s service
The licensee of a centre based, mobile or home based
children’s service must give written notice to the Director-General of
any proposed alteration, renovation or demolition of any building or other
structure on the premises of the service:(a) at least 6 weeks before any relevant work commences,
or
(b) before the consent or approval of any public or local authority is
sought for the relevant work,
whichever is the earlier.
113 Notice of change to family day care carer’s
home
A family day care carer must give written notice to the authorised
supervisor of any proposed alteration, renovation or demolition of any
building or other structure at his or her home:(a) before the consent or approval of any public or local authority is
sought for the relevant work, or
(b) at least 6 weeks before any relevant work
commences,
whichever is the earlier.
114 Notice of criminal charges or
convictions—licensee
The licensee of any class of children’s service must
immediately give written notice to the Director-General:(a) if the licensee is charged with or convicted of a notifiable
offence, or
(b) in the case of a licensee that is not a natural person, if any
person involved in the control and management of the licensee, or in the
control and management of a majority shareholder corporation of the licensee,
is charged with or convicted of a notifiable offence, or
(c) if the licensee becomes aware that a member of the staff of the
service (including the authorised supervisor) or a family day care carer of
the service has been charged with or convicted of a notifiable offence,
or
(d) if the licensee becomes aware that a person who normally resides
at any residential premises of the service, or at the home of a family day
care carer of the service, has been charged with or convicted of a notifiable
offence.
115 Notice of criminal charges or convictions—family
day care carer
A family day care carer of a family day care children’s
service must immediately give written notice to the Director-General:(a) if the carer is charged with or convicted of a notifiable offence,
or
(b) if the carer becomes aware that any person who is normally
resident at the carer’s home has been charged with or convicted of a
notifiable offence.
116 Informing and meeting family day care carers
(1) The authorised supervisor of a family day care children’s
service is to provide a family day care carer whose name is entered on the
family day care register for the service with all information in the
authorised supervisor’s possession in relation to a child to be placed
with the carer before the child is placed with the
carer.
(2) The authorised supervisor is to convene a meeting as soon as
practicable between:(a) the person who requested the family day care children’s
service, and
(b) the family day care carer who provides that
service,
at the reasonable request of either person.
Part 8 Probity checks
117 Probity check of proposed licensee and
supervisor
(1) The Director-General must conduct a probity check of an applicant
for a licence, and of the proposed supervisor for the service, for the purpose
of establishing whether or not the applicant and proposed supervisor are fit
and proper persons to provide or be involved in the provision of a
children’s service.
(2) If the applicant for a licence is a public authority, the
Director-General must conduct a probity check of:(a) the chief executive officer (however described) of the public
authority, and
(b) if the public authority is a local authority, of the manager of
community services (however described) of the local
authority.
(3) If the applicant for a licence is neither a natural person nor a
public authority, the Director-General must conduct a probity check of:(a) each natural person involved in the control and management of the
applicant, and
(b) if the applicant is a corporation and a majority shareholder of
the corporation is another corporation, each natural person involved in the
control and management of the majority shareholder
corporation.
118 Probity checks of proposed staff
(1) The licensee of a children’s service must conduct a probity
check of any natural person who is, or who is proposed to be, engaged in the
operation or management of the children’s service, including a person
who is, or is proposed to be, engaged as a
volunteer.
(2) Subclause (1) does not apply if the licensee is required to carry
out employment screening of the person as the preferred applicant for
employment in primary child-related employment under Part 7 of the Commission for Children and Young People Act
1998.
119 Nature of probity check
(1) For the purposes of this Part, a probity check of a person is to
comprise the following procedures:(a) a check for any criminal record of the person (whether or not
within New South Wales),
(b) a check for any relevant apprehended violence orders made against
the person or for any relevant disciplinary proceedings completed against the
person,
(c) any other relevant check relating to the previous employment or
other activities of the person,
(d) an assessment of the risk to children provided with the
children’s service arising from anything disclosed by such a check,
having regard to all the circumstances of the case,
(e) in the case of a probity check carried out on behalf of a
licensee, the disclosure of the results of any such check or risk assessment
to the licensee of a children’s service.
(2) In this clause, relevant
apprehended violence order and relevant
disciplinary proceedings have the same meanings as they have in Part
7 of the Commission for Children and Young
People Act 1998.
120 By whom probity check to be carried out
(1) If a licensee so requests, a probity check that is required to be
conducted by the licensee may instead be conducted by the Director-General or
by the Commission for Children and Young People.
(2) The Director-General may engage the Commission for Children and
Young People to carry out a probity check, whether on his or her own behalf or
on behalf of a licensee.
121 Probity check to be carried out in compliance with
guidelines
As far as practicable, a probity check is to be conducted in
accordance with any guidelines in force under section 35 of the Commission for Children and Young People Act
1998 in relation to the procedures and standards for
employment screening.
122 Unauthorised disclosure or dishonest collection of
information
(1) A person who discloses any information obtained by the person in
connection with a probity check under this Part is guilty of an offence unless
the disclosure:(a) is made in good faith for the purposes of employment screening or
the exercise of a function under this Part, or
(b) is made with the consent of the person from whom the information
was obtained, or
(c) is ordered by a court, or any other body or person exercising
judicial functions, for the purposes of the hearing or determination by the
court, body or person of any matter, or
(d) is made with other lawful excuse.
Maximum penalty: 10 penalty
units.
(2) A person who dishonestly obtains confidential information relating
to a probity check under this Part is guilty of an offence.Maximum penalty: 10 penalty
units.
Part 9 Miscellaneous
123 Review by Administrative Decisions
Tribunal—general
Pursuant to section 245 (g) of the Act, the following classes of
decisions are prescribed:(a) a decision to refuse to grant a licence,
(b) a decision to impose a condition on a licence (other than a
condition imposed by this Regulation), or to refuse to impose a condition on a
licence,
(c) a decision to vary or revoke a condition of a
licence,
(d) a decision to vary, suspend or revoke a
licence,
(e) a decision of the Director-General to refuse to grant consent to
the making of an application for a licence,
(f) a decision of the Minister to refuse to grant consent to the
replacement of an authorised supervisor,
(g) a decision of the Director-General to require the licensee of a
children’s service to employ additional staff,
(h) a decision of the Director-General to direct the licensee of a
family day care children’s service to remove the name of a family day
care carer from the register for the service.
123A Review by Administrative Decisions Tribunal of certain
family day care service licensee’s decisions
Application may be made to the Administrative Decisions Tribunal
for a review of any of the following decisions:Decisions of a licensee of a family day care children’s
service to remove or suspend a family day care carer’s name from the
register for the service.
124 Original documents may be used instead of certified
copies
A requirement of this Regulation for production of a duly
certified copy of a document may be satisfied by production of the original
document if the owner of the original document so
elects.
125 Savings and transitional provisions
Schedule 2 has effect.
Schedule 1 Records to be kept for each child
(Clause 92)
1 Records of personal information
The following written records are to be kept in relation to the
child’s personal information:(a) the child’s full name and any other names by which the child
is known, and any former names of the child,
(b) the child’s date of birth and place of birth (if possible,
verified by the authorised supervisor, within 6 weeks after the child is
enrolled at the service, by inspection of a duly certified copy of the
child’s birth certificate, Australian citizenship certificate or
passport or other documentation approved by the
Director-General),
(c) the child’s sex,
(d) the child’s residential address,
(e) a description of the child’s family circumstances, in
particular any court orders of which the staff or carers of the service are
aware that affect the residence of the child or contact with the child by the
parents (if possible, court orders are to be verified by the authorised
supervisor or licensee by inspection of a duly certified copy of the court
order at the time of enrolment of the child at the service or after the making
of any subsequent court order),
(f) the full name of each parent of the child, and any other name by
which each parent is known,
(g) the residential address, place of employment, all contact
telephone numbers (whether for the residence, place of employment or for a
mobile telephone) and any other contact details for each parent of the
child,
(h) any special requirements concerning the child notified by a parent
of the child (such as requirements relating to the child’s culture or
religion or to the child’s needs in relation to any disability that the
child has),
(i) the ethnic and cultural identity of the child and the primary
language spoken by the child, or if the child has not learned to speak, the
primary language or languages of the child’s
parents,
(j) information (if any) provided by a parent of the child concerning
the child’s religion and cultural background and any practice that the
parent considers should, to the greatest extent possible, be observed at the
service in respect of the child because of that religion or
background,
(k) the full name, address, all telephone numbers (whether for the
residence, place of employment or for a mobile telephone) and any other
contact details for each person authorised by a parent of the child to collect
the child from the premises of the service,
(l) the full name, address, all telephone numbers (whether for the
residence, place of employment or for a mobile telephone) and any other
contact details for each person who may be contacted in an emergency if a
parent of the child is not available.
2 Records concerning health matters
The following written records are to be kept in relation to the
child’s health:(a) the name, address and telephone number of the child’s doctor
(if any),
(b) any written authorisation by a parent of the child for the
administration of any medication by a member of staff of the service or by a
carer, and any medical practitioner’s instructions relating to its
administration,
(c) if any medication is administered to the child by a member of
staff of the service or by a carer:(i) the name of the medication, and
(ii) the date, time and dosage administered, and
(iii) the names and signatures of the persons who checked the dosage and
administered the medication,
(d) any written particulars provided by a parent of the child advising
the licensee that the child suffers from allergies, epilepsy, asthma or any
other specified medical condition and of the treatment to be given if the
child appears to be severely physically affected by the condition while being
provided with the service,
(e) any written authorisation by a parent of the child for emergency
medical, hospital, dental and ambulance service,
(f) the medicare number by which the child is covered, and (if known)
the name of any health fund that has issued a policy by which the child is
covered,
(g) the nature and circumstances (including the date and time) of any
injury to the child or illness of the child while being provided with the
service,
(h) particulars of treatment given to the child if the child is
injured or becomes ill while being provided with the
service,
(i) if the child dies while being provided with the service, the
details surrounding the child’s death.
3 Records of attendance and excursions
The following written records are to be kept of the child’s
attendance and excursions:(a) the day to day attendance of the child at the premises of the
service, including arrival and departure times,
(b) as far as is practicable, the signature of the person who brings
the child to the service each time the child arrives at the service, and the
signature of the person who collects the child each time the child departs
from the service,
(c) any authorisation by a parent for a child to be taken on an
excursion or escorted to or from a specified place.
4 Records of complaints
The following written records are to be kept in relation to
complaints relating to the child:(a) details of any complaint by a parent or person responsible for a
child provided with the service concerning the care provided to the child or
the operations of the service,
(b) details of any action taken in response to the
complaint.
Schedule 2 Savings and transitional provisions
(Clause 125)
1 Definitions
In this Schedule:1987 Act means the
Children (Care and Protection) Act
1987.
1998 Act means the
Children and Young Persons (Care and
Protection) Act 1998.
CBM
Regulation means the Centre Based and Mobile Child Care Services
Regulation (No 2) 1996.
existing
licence means a licence for a child care service granted under
Schedule 1 to the 1987 Act, being a licence in force immediately before the
transition day, and includes a licence granted under that Schedule as referred
to in clause 7.
FDH
Regulation means the Family Day Care and Home Based Child Care Services
Regulation 1996.
transition
day means the day on which Division 1 of Part 3 of the 1987 Act is
repealed.
transition
period means the period commencing on the transition day and ending
on 31 December 2005.
2 Licences granted under the 1987 Act
(1) A person who is the holder of an existing licence for a class of
child care service is taken to be the holder of a licence under the 1998 Act
for the corresponding class of children’s
service.
(2) After the transition day, the licence:(a) is taken to have been granted subject to the same conditions as
those to which it was subject immediately before the repeal of Division 1 of
Part 3 of the 1987 Act, and
(b) remains in force for the remainder of the period for which it was
granted or until the end of the transition period, whichever first occurs,
and
(c) is not subject to the applicable conditions set out in Parts 3, 4,
5, 6 and 7 of this Regulation for a licence for the corresponding class of
children’s service.
(3) The provisions of the CBM Regulation or FDH Regulation, as
applicable, continue to apply in relation to the licence for:(a) the transition period, or
(b) for the remainder of the period for which it was
granted,
whichever is the lesser period, as if the Regulation concerned had not
been repealed, subject to any necessary
modifications.
(4) Subclause (2) does not prevent a condition being imposed on the
licence by the Minister under section 209 of the 1998
Act.
(5) After the expiry of the transition period:(a) the licence (if still in force) is subject to this Regulation and
the provisions of the CBM Regulation or FDH Regulation cease to apply to the
licence, and
(b) the licence is subject to the conditions set out in Parts 3, 4, 5,
6 and 7 of this Regulation that apply to a licence for that class of
children’s service.
3 Licences under 1987 Act that expire during transition
period
(1) This clause applies if an existing licence expires during the
transition period and the person who was the holder of the licence immediately
before that expiry applies for another licence for the same class of
children’s service before that expiry.
(2) The application is taken to be accompanied by all the information,
documents and particulars required by clauses 16 and 17 of this Regulation
if:(a) in the case of a centre-based children’s service—the
application is accompanied by the information, documents and particulars that
it would be required to be accompanied by clause 9 (2) of the CBM Regulation
if it were an application for a licence for a centre based child care service
under the 1987 Act and if that Schedule and the relevant Regulation were still
in force, and
(b) in the case of a mobile children’s service—the
application is accompanied by a statement as to whether any of the premises at
which the service is proposed to be provided do not comply with the applicable
requirements of Schedule 1 to the CBM Regulation.
(3) The undertakings required by this Regulation to accompany an
application for a licence are taken to be undertakings to comply with the
relevant requirements from the time that they commence to apply in relation to
the licence under this clause.
(4) If a licence is granted for an application referred to in
subclause (1), for the remainder of the transition period the licence:(a) is taken to have been granted subject to the same conditions as
those to which the existing licence was subject immediately before it expired,
and subject to any conditions imposed by the Minister on the licence under
section 209 of the Act, and
(b) is not subject to the applicable conditions set out in Parts 3, 4,
5, 6 and 7 of this Regulation for the licence for that class of
children’s service.
(5) The provisions of the CBM Regulation or FDH Regulation, as
applicable, continue to apply in relation to a licence granted under the 1998
Act as referred to in subclause (4) for the remainder of the transition period
as if the Regulation concerned had not been repealed, subject to any necessary
modifications.
(6) After the expiry of the transition period:(a) a licence granted under the 1998 Act as referred to in subclause
(4) is subject to this Regulation and the provisions of the CBM Regulation or
FDH Regulation cease to apply in relation to the licence,
and
(b) the licence is subject to the applicable conditions set out in
Parts 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 of this Regulation that apply to that class of
licence.
(7) Nothing in this clause prevents:(a) the Director-General from requiring an applicant for a licence for
a children’s service under the 1998 Act to furnish further particulars
under section 206 of the 1998 Act, or
(b) a condition being imposed under section 209 of the 1998 Act on a
licence granted by the Minister under that Act.
4 Space requirements
(1) The following provisions have effect despite clauses 2 and
3:(a) an existing licence (including any further licence for the same
service) is not subject to the space requirements set out in clause 30 of this
Regulation, either during or after the transition period,
(b) during the transition period, an existing licence (including any
further licence for the same service) is subject to the same space
requirements as those to which it was subject immediately before the
transition day,
(c) after the transition period, an existing licence (including any
further licence for the same service) is subject to such space requirements as
are set out in the licence.
(2) In the case of a licence for a centre based children’s
service, the space requirements referred to in subclause (1) (c) must include
the requirement that, on and from 1 January 2008, the premises of the service
must have a room or area that is used only for sleeping for children under 2
years of age.
5 Application of Part 3 facilities and equipment requirements
to existing school-based services
Part 3 of this Regulation (clauses 34, 40 and 45 excepted) does
not apply to or in respect of a children’s service that is located, and
has at all times since the commencement of Chapter 12 of the Act been located,
on the premises of a school within the meaning of the Education Act
1990.
6 Venue management plans
(1) Before the expiry of the transition period:(a) the holder of an existing licence for a mobile children’s
service that will not expire until the end of the transition period,
or
(b) the licensee of a licence for a mobile children’s service
granted under the 1998 Act during the transition
period,
is to prepare and submit to the Director-General a statement and, if
necessary, a plan describing how the licensee intends to ensure the safety and
well-being of children at the premises of the
service.
(2) The provisions of clause 17 (2)–(4) of this Regulation apply
to a plan referred to in subclause (1) in the same way as they apply to a plan
required to accompany an application for a licence for a mobile
children’s service.
7 Pending applications
(1) Schedule 1 to the 1987 Act continues to apply (despite the repeal
of section 32 of that Act) to and in respect of an application for a grant of
a licence for a child care service or for restoration of such a licence that
was pending immediately before the transition day.
(2) A licence granted or restored under Schedule 1 to the 1987 Act
pursuant to subclause (1) is taken to have been granted or restored
immediately before the transition day.
8 Pending appeals
(1) Any application for review by the Administrative Decisions
Tribunal under section 112 of the 1987 Act pending immediately before the
transition day is to continue and be determined as if Division 1 of Part 3 of
the 1987 Act had not been repealed.
(2) For the purposes of the operation of this Schedule, the
determination of the application for review is to have effect as if the
application was made immediately before transition
day.
9 Authorised supervisors
(1) A person who was the authorised supervisor for an existing licence
under Division 1 of Part 3 of the 1987 Act immediately before the transition
day is taken to be the authorised supervisor for the licence under the 1998
Act.
(2) A person who was authorised to act as an authorised supervisor
under clause 10 of Schedule 1 to the 1987 Act immediately before the
transition day is taken to be a temporary supervisor for the licence under the
1998 Act for the remainder of the period specified in the
authorisation.
10 Carers
A person who was a carer under a licence for a family day care
service under the 1987 Act immediately before the transition day is taken to
be a family day care carer under the transferred
licence.
11 Guidelines for approved first aid
qualifications
Guidelines for first aid qualifications issued by the Department
for the purposes of the definition of approved first aid
qualification in the CBM Regulation are taken to be guidelines
issued for the purposes of the definition of approved first aid
qualification in this Regulation, until the Department issues
guidelines to replace those guidelines.
12 Guidelines for basic training course in food safety and
nutrition
(1) Guidelines for basic training courses in food safety and nutrition
issued by the Director-General for the purposes of clause 23 of the CBM
Regulation are taken to be guidelines issued for the purposes of clause 54
(Cooking staff) of this Regulation until the Director-General issues
guidelines to replace those guidelines.
(2) The provisions of clause 54 of this Regulation with respect to
certificates do not apply until 1 January 2006.
13 Continuity of things done before commencement
Anything done or omitted to be done under or for the purposes of a
provision of Division 1 of Part 3 of the 1987 Act, the CBM Regulation or the
FDH Regulation is, to the extent that the thing done or omitted has effect
immediately before the repeal of the provision, taken to have been done or
omitted under or for the purposes of the corresponding provision of the 1998
Act or this Regulation.
Dictionary
(Clause 4)
adult means a person who
is of or above the age of 18 years.
approved means
approved by the Director-General.
approved
first aid qualification means:
(a) a successfully completed first aid course that is approved by the
WorkCover Authority for the purposes of the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation
2001 and that specifically relates to first aid and emergency
care of children and meets the guidelines issued for the purposes of this
definition by the Department, or
(b) another successfully completed first aid course approved by the
Director-General for the purposes of this
definition.
authorised
supervisor has the same meaning as in section 199 of the Act.
Note. Section 199 of the Act defines authorised
supervisor, in relation to a children’s service, as the person
specified as the authorised supervisor in the licence for the
service.
Building Code of
Australia has the same meaning as in the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979.
centre based
children’s service has the same meaning as in section 199 of
the Act.
Note. Centre
based children’s service is defined in section 199 of the Act
as a children’s service that is provided at a fixed premises (other than
the home of the licensee of the service).
child
protection legislation means the Child Protection (Prohibited Employment) Act
1998, the Children and
Young Persons (Care and Protection) Act 1998, the Commission for Children and Young People Act
1998 and Part 3A of the Ombudsman Act 1974.
children’s
service means a centre based children’s service, a mobile
children’s service, a family day care children’s service or a home
based children’s service.
children’s
service record means a record required to be kept under clause
92.
client of the
Department means a person to whom services are provided or
assistance is given by any person or body under any Act administered by the
Minister for Community Services.
contractor, in
relation to a children’s service, means a person engaged by the licensee
of the children’s service to perform a service on the premises of the
children’s service, but does not include:
(a) a person engaged by a contract of employment,
or
(b) a person engaged to deliver any item to the
service.
de facto
partner, in relation to a person, means any other person with whom
the person is in a de facto relationship within the meaning of the Property (Relationships) Act
1984.
developmental
record of a child means an ongoing record of all aspects of the
individual development of the child.
diploma means a diploma
in early childhood studies awarded by a university, a TAFE establishment or a
registered training organisation.
duly certified
means certified in accordance with guidelines approved by the
Director-General.
excursion means an
activity carried out for a recreational or educational purpose:
(a) in the case of a centre based or mobile children’s service,
under the supervision of one or more members of staff of the service at a
place other than the premises of the service, and
(b) in the case of a family day care children’s service, under
the supervision of one or more carers at a place other than the home of a
carer of the service, and
(c) in the case of a home based children’s service, under the
supervision of the home based licensee at a place other than the home of the
home based licensee.
exercise a function
includes perform a duty.
family day care
carer means:
(a) a natural person who is directly involved, at his or her home, in
educating, supervising or caring for children for a family day care
children’s service (a primary
carer), or
(b) a natural person who is directly involved, at a primary
carer’s home, in educating, supervising or caring for children for a
family day care children’s service so as to relieve the primary carer (a
relief
carer),
being in either case a natural person whose name is on the family day
care register for the service.
family day
care children’s service has the same meaning as in section 199
of the Act.
Note. Family
day care children’s service is defined in section 199 of the
Act as a children’s service that organises or arranges for the care to
be provided at the home of a carer other than the licensee of a home based
children’s service.
family day care
register means a register for a family day care children’s
service referred to in clause 100.
function includes a
power, authority or duty.
group of
children, in relation to a centre based or mobile children’s
service, means one or more children supervised by one or more members of the
primary contact staff of the service in:
(a) an individual room or well-defined space within a room,
or
(b) a part of a room that is recognisably a space for a
group,
(c) a well-defined outdoor area that is recognisably a space for a
group.
health fund means a
registered organisation within the meaning of the National Health Act 1953 of the
Commonwealth.
home based
children’s service has the same meaning as in section 199 of
the Act.
Note. Home
based children’s service is defined in section 199 of the Act
as a children’s service in which the care (not being care organised or
arranged by a family day care children’s service) is provided at the
home of the carer, not being the home of any of the children receiving the
care (other than a child related to the carer).
home based
licensee means the licensee of a home based children’s
service.
home of a
family day care carer means the premises where a carer of a family
day care children’s service resides for most of the time.
home of a home
based licensee means the premises where the licensee of a home based
children’s service resides for most of the time.
independent
referee, in relation to an applicant for a licence or a proposed
authorised supervisor, means:
(a) in the case of an applicant for a licence who is a natural person,
a natural person who is not a relative of the applicant or of a spouse or de
facto partner of the applicant, or
(b) in the case of an applicant for a licence who is a public
authority, a natural person who:(i) is not a relative of the chief executive officer (however
described) of the public authority or of a spouse or de facto partner of the
chief executive officer, and
(ii) if the public authority is a local authority, is not a relative of
the manager of community services (however described) of the local authority
or of a spouse or de facto partner of the manager of community services,
or
(c) in the case of an applicant for a licence who is neither a natural
person nor a public authority, a natural person who:(i) is not involved in the control and management of the applicant,
and
(ii) if the applicant is a corporation and a majority shareholder of
the applicant is another corporation, is not involved in the control and
management of the majority shareholder corporation,
or
(d) in the case of a proposed authorised supervisor, a natural person
who is not a relative of the proposed authorised supervisor or of a spouse or
de facto partner of the proposed authorised
supervisor.
licence has the same
meaning as in section 199 of the Act.
Note. Licence is defined in
section 199 of the Act as a licence that has been granted under the Act and is
in force.
licensee has the same
meaning as in section 199 of the Act.
Note. Licensee is defined in
section 199 of the Act in relation to a children’s service as the person
specified as the licensee in the licence for the
service.
local authority
means a council or a county council within the meaning of the Local Government Act
1993.
major road
means:
(a) a two-way road with a dividing line or median strip that indicates
the parts of the road to be used by vehicles travelling in opposite
directions, or
(b) a one-way road with more than one marked
lane.
majority
shareholder has the same meaning as in section 199 of the
Act.
Note. Majority
shareholder is defined in section 199 of the Act in relation to a
corporation as a person holding 50% or more of the shares of the
corporation.
medicare number
has the same meaning as in section 84 of the National Health Act 1953 of the
Commonwealth.
mobile
children’s service has the same meaning as in section 199 of
the Act.
Note. Mobile
children’s service is defined in section 199 of the Act as a
children’s service that visits specific premises, areas or places at
specific times for the purpose of providing the care.
mobile
children’s service register is a register for a mobile
children’s service required to be kept as a condition of a licence for a
mobile children’s service.
non-routine
excursion, in relation to a children’s service, means an
excursion that is not a routine excursion.
Note. An example of a non-routine excursion is a visit to a zoo or
museum.
notifiable
offence—see clause 5.
parent of a child has
the same meaning as in the Act.
Note. Parent
is defined in the Act as a person having parental responsibility for the child
or young person. Parental
responsibility is defined as meaning all the duties, powers,
responsibilities and authority which, by law, parents have in relation to
their children.
Part 3 facilities and
equipment requirements means the requirements arising under Part
3.
Part 4 staffing
requirements means the requirements arising under Part
4.
Part 6
operational requirements means the requirements arising under Part
6.
Part 7
administrative requirements means the requirements arising under
Part 7.
premises includes a
structure, building, vehicle, vessel or place (including a public or other
place), whether built on or not, and any part of such a structure, building,
vehicle, vessel or place.
premises of a centre
based children’s service means the premises at which a centre
based children’s service is provided as specified in the licence for the
service, and includes any part of those premises.
premises of a
children’s service means:
(a) in relation to a centre based children’s service, the
premises of the service, and
(b) in relation to a mobile children’s service, the premises of
the service, and
(c) in relation to a family day care children’s service, the
home of a family day care carer of the service, and
(d) in relation to a home based children’s service, the home of
the licensee of the service.
premises of a mobile
children’s service means any premises at which a mobile
children’s service is provided from time to time as specified in the
licence for the service, and includes any part of those
premises.
pre-school
child means a child who is under 6 years of age and who does not
ordinarily attend school.
primary contact
staff, in relation to a centre based or mobile children’s
service, means:
(a) any member of the staff of the service who is directly involved in
educating or caring for children at the service, or
(b) the licensee of the service at any time while the licensee is
directly involved in educating or caring for children at the service,
or
(c) a trainee who is at the service as a formal part of studies at an
educational institution,
but does not include:
(d) a person who is engaged solely in administrative, clerical or
domestic duties at the service, or
(e) a person who is at the service for the purpose of work experience,
or
(f) a volunteer who is assisting in the provision of the
service.
public
authority means:
(a) a public authority constituted by or under an Act,
or
(b) a local authority, or
(c) a Government Department or government agency,
or
(d) a statutory body representing the Crown, or
(e) a university or TAFE establishment.
registered
training organisation means an education or training provider
registered under the Vocational Education
and Training Accreditation Act 1990 or under a law of the
Commonwealth or of another State or Territory that corresponds to that
Act.
relative of a person
means:
(a) the parent, grandparent, brother, sister, uncle, aunt, nephew,
niece, lineal descendant or adopted child of the person or of the
person’s spouse, or
(b) a spouse or de facto partner of the person or of a person referred
to in paragraph (a).
required abilities to care
for children—see clause 6.
routine
excursion, in relation to a children’s service, means an
excursion that is undertaken at least once a month to a particular place in
the locality of the place where the service is provided.
Note. An example of a routine excursion is a daily walk to a nearby park
or to a nearby library to borrow books.
school age
child means a child who is of or above the age of 4 years and 6
months.
school child means
a child who has started attending school.
staff of a
children’s service means those persons employed for remuneration by the
licensee of the service who are engaged in the provision of the
service.
TAFE
establishment has the same meaning as in the Technical and Further Education Commission Act
1990.
temporary
supervisor—see clause 103.
the Act means the
Children and Young Persons (Care and
Protection) Act 1998.
trainee means a person
who is enrolled at a registered training organisation in a duly accredited
child care course under the Vocational
Education and Training Accreditation Act 1990.
venue management
plan—see clause 17.
volunteer, in
relation to a service, means a person who assists in the provision of the
service but is not employed or engaged for remuneration in relation to that
assistance.
Historical notes
The following abbreviations are used in the Historical notes:
Am |
amended |
LW |
legislation website |
Sch |
Schedule |
Cl |
clause |
No |
number |
Schs |
Schedules |
Cll |
clauses |
p |
page |
Sec |
section |
Div |
Division |
pp |
pages |
Secs |
sections |
Divs |
Divisions |
Reg |
Regulation |
Subdiv |
Subdivision |
GG |
Government Gazette |
Regs |
Regulations |
Subdivs |
Subdivisions |
Ins |
inserted |
Rep |
repealed |
Subst |
substituted |
Table of amending instruments
Children’s Services Regulation
2004 published in Gazette No 87 of 21.5.2004, p 2925 and
amended as follows:
Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions)
Act 2004 No 55. Assented to 6.7.2004. Date of commencement of
Sch 2.2, assent, sec 2 (2).
Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions)
Act (No 2) 2004 No 91. Assented to 10.12.2004. Date of
commencement of Sch 2.11, assent, sec 2 (2).
Children’s Services Amendment (ADT
Review) Regulation 2004 (GG No 200 of 17.12.2004, p
9317)
Table of amendments
Cl 16 | Am 2004 No 91, Sch 2.11. |
Cl 76 | Am 2004 No 55, Sch 2.2. |
Cl 123, heading | Am 17.12.2004. |
Cl 123A | Ins 17.12.2004. |