Child
Care Minimum Standards
Texas Licensing Law, Rules & Minimum Standards
Chapter 42 of the Texas Human Resources Code requires the Texas Department of Family & Protective Services (DFPS) to regulate child care and child-placing activities in Texas, to investigate alleged abuse/neglect in child-care facilities, and to create and enforce minimum standards. Click here to learn more.
Charged with this task, the Child Care Licensing division of DFPS develops rules for child-care in Texas. Once proposed, reviewed, and adopted, these rules become part of the Texas Administrative Code (Child Care Licensing Rules). Each set of Minimum Standards is based on a particular chapter of the Texas Administrative Code and the corresponding child-care operation permit type(s). The Minimum Standards are designed to mitigate risk for children in out-of-home care settings by outlining basic requirements to protect the health, safety, and well-being of children in care.
Each of the Child Care Licensing Minimum Standards in Texas has been assigned a weight (High, Medium High, Medium, Medium Low, or Low) based on the risk that a violation of that standard presents to children. Weights are noted within the minimum standards documents in the left margin next to each standard or subsection. Only those standards that can be violated (marked as a deficiency) are weighted. For example, definitions are not weighted.
Assigning weights to the Minimum Standards takes into account the relative importance of standard violations and helps facilitate a clear and common understanding of risk among providers, consumers, and Licensing staff. When child-care providers and Licensing staff have the same understanding regarding the risk associated with each standard deficiency, they can use this information as a guide in correcting deficiencies and setting priorities when making corrections. While weights reflect the risk to children if a rule is violated, the assigned weights do not change based on the scope or severity of the specific circumstances surrounding an actual deficiency. In addition to the weights of the standards, Licensing staff consider, assess, and document scope and severity factors when making Licensing decisions.
Minimum Standards
NEW:
- DFPS has posted adopted March 2012 files below for Chapters 743, 744, 746, 747, 748, and 749.
Background Check Information
Criminal History Convictions and Requirements Charts. These include specific offenses and what action, if any, a conviction for that offense may require in different types of child care settings.
These charts supplement two sections of the Texas Administrative Code:
- Section 745.651: What types of criminal convictions may preclude a person from being present in an operation?
- Section 745.693: In what circumstances can someone with a criminal history be present in a child-care operation?
These and other Child Care Licensing Rules related general licensing procedures essential to the regulation of all child care operations can be found in the Texas Administrative Code under Title 40, Part 19, Chapter 745.
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