Form ACF-700 CCDF Annual Tribal Report

Child Care and Development Fund Tribal Annual Report

ACF-700 to expire 01-31-2023 update 20Sept2021_CLEAN

CCDF Annual Tribal Report ACF-700 (Tribes with small allocation)

OMB: 0970-0430

Document [docx]
Download: docx | pdf

OMB Control Number: 0970-0430

Expiration Date: 01/31/2023


CHILD CARE AND DEVELOPMENT FUND ANNUAL REPORT (ACF-700)

ON SERVICES PROVIDED FROM OCTOBER 1, 20__ THROUGH SEPTEMBER 30, 20__

COMPLETE NAME OF TRIBAL LEAD AGENCY (TLA):

ADDRESS:

CONTACT PERSON: First Name, Middle Name, Last Name

Phone: Phone Type: Work or Mobile

Email:


INTRODUCTION: Program Characteristics


  1. Did your Tribal Lead Agency (TLA) supplement the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) grant with dollars from other sources during the last fiscal year? These OTHER sources do not include the CCDF Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act funding, CCDF Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations (CRRSA) Act funding, and CCDF American Rescue Plan (ARP) Act Discretionary Supplemental funding. Check one.

  • Yes

  • No


1a. If yes, what other sources of funding were used? Check all that apply.


  • Tribal funds

  • Grant/Foundation funds

  • Private donations

  • State funds

  • Other Federal funds

  • Other (list) _________________


1a (i). Describe the additional sources of funds and how they were used:



1a (ii) Do the numbers provided in Part 1: Administrative Data include (check one):

  • CCDF funded children only [preferable]

  • All children regardless of funding source [used if TLA is unable to only report CCDF funded children]


1a(iii) Do the numbers provided in Part 1: Administrative Data include families and children served with (check all that apply):

  • CCDF Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act funding

  • CCDF Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations (CRRSA) Act funding

  • CCDF American Rescue Plan (ARP) Act Discretionary Supplemental funding

  • None of the above



  1. If you are a grantee with a small allocation, did your Tribal Lead Agency (TLA) only provide quality activities and no direct child care services? [Note that Tribal grantees with large and medium allocations are required to report both Part 1: Administrative Data and Part 2: Tribal Narrative. Tribal grantees with small allocations are not required to report Part 1 if NO direct child care services are provided].


  • Yes (skip to Part 2: Tribal Narrative)

  • No (complete Part 1: Administrative Data and Part 2: Tribal Narrative)

PART 1: Administrative Data

Provide the administrative data for the families and children you served during the fiscal year. The ACF-700 Administrative Data section should include information about families and children who meet CCDF eligibility requirements, and whose direct child care services were provided during the Federal fiscal year, regardless of which year’s CCDF funds paid for those services. These funds could be broader CCDF dollars, or CCDF Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act moneys, or CCDF Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations (CRRSA) Act dollars, or CCDF American Rescue Plan (ARP) Act Discretionary Supplemental funds.


PART 1: ADMINISTRATIVE DATA QUESTIONS

NUMBER/RESPONSE

1. Total number of families that received child care services this fiscal year:


2. Total number of children that received services this fiscal year:


2a. Number of children served by a Relative in a Child’s Home


2b. Number of children served by a Non-Relative in a Child’s Home


2c. Number of children served by a Relative in a Family Child Care Home


2d. Number of children served by a Non-Relative in a Family Child Care Home


2e. Number of children served in a Center


3. Total number of children receiving services that fall into each age category below:


3a. 0 up to 1 year


3b. 1 year up to 2 years


3c. 2 years up to 3 years


3d. 3 years up to 4 years


3e. 4 years up to 5 years


3f. 5 years up to 6 years


3g. 6 years up to 13 years


3h. 13 years and older


4. Number of children who received child care services because:


4a. Their parents worked


4b. Their parents were in training or an educational program


4c. Child received or needed protective services


4d. Their parents worked AND were in training/educational program


4e. Program has implemented categorical eligibility and employment or training status is not an eligibility criterion


5. Average number of hours of child care services provided per child per month:


6. Average monthly amount paid for child care service:


6a. Average monthly CCDF program subsidy per child


6b. Average monthly parent copayment per child


7. Number of children served by payment type this fiscal year:


7a. grant/contract with provider


7b. certificate or voucher to parent and/or provider


7c. cash payment to parent


7d. CCDF funding to a tribally operated center for direct services


Comments (explanatory comments re: any of the questions in Part 1):





PART 2: Tribal Narrative

Provide a brief description of the Tribal Lead Agency’s (TLA) quality improvement activities during the last fiscal year by answering the questions below. The Tribal Narrative section should include information about quality improvement efforts the Tribal Lead Agency funded during the Federal fiscal year, regardless of which year’s CCDF funds paid for those services. These funds could be broader CCDF dollars, or CCDF Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act moneys, or CCDF Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations (CRRSA) Act dollars, or CCDF American Rescue Plan (ARP) Act Discretionary Supplemental funds. Keep in mind that the Tribal Lead Agency SHOULD include further information about the ARP Stabilization Grants in the new Part 3: American Rescue Plan (ARP) Act Stabilization Grants below.



TRIBAL NARRATIVE QUESTIONS

RESPONSE/NARRATIVE

  1. What quality improvement efforts did the Tribal Lead Agency fund this fiscal year? Check all that apply. Tribal Lead Agencies must fund quality efforts in at least one of the following 10 activities (98.53(a)):


  • Supporting the training and professional development of the child care workforce

  • Improving on the development or implementation of early learning and developmental guidelines

  • Developing, implementing, or enhancing a tiered quality rating and improvement system for child care providers and services

  • Improving the supply and quality of child care programs and services for infants and toddlers

  • Establishing or expanding a system of child care resource and referral services

  • Supporting compliance with requirements for licensing, inspection, monitoring, training, and health and safety

  • Evaluating the quality of child care programs, including evaluating how programs positively impact children

  • Supporting providers in the voluntary pursuit of accreditation

  • Supporting the development or adoption of high-quality program standards related to health, mental health, nutrition, physical activity, and physical development

  • Carrying out other activities determined by the Tribal Lead Agency to improve the quality of child care services provided, and for which measurement of preparedness, child safety, child well-being, or entry to kindergarten is possible. This can include activities and services related to tribal language, culture, and consumer education activities.


2a.What trainings did the Tribal Lead Agency provide for child care caregivers, teachers and directors? Check all that apply.

  • Prevention and control of infectious diseases (including immunizations)

  • Prevention of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) and use of safe sleeping practices

  • Administration of medication, consistent with standards for parental consent

  • Prevention of and response to emergencies due to food and allergic reactions

  • Prevention of shaken baby syndrome and abusive head trauma

  • Emergency preparedness and response planning for emergencies resulting from a natural disaster or a human-caused event (such as violence at a child care facility)

  • Handling and storage of hazardous materials and the appropriate disposal of bio contaminants

  • Building and physical premises safety, including identification of and protection from hazards that can cause bodily injury such as electrical hazards, bodies of water, and vehicular traffic

  • Precautions in transporting children (if applicable)

  • First aid and cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) certification

  • Family engagement

  • Access to physical activity

  • Nutrition

  • Promotion of child development

  • Language and literacy

  • Caring for children with special needs

  • Fiscal management

  • Administration and program management

  • Curriculum development and instruction

  • Child care as a business

  • Other topic(s) (List):__________________________________________________

  • None


Describe the trainings the Tribal Lead Agency provided during the fiscal year. In your narrative, please also include the number of caregivers, teachers and directors trained during the fiscal year:


2b. Did the Tribal Lead Agency support child care caregivers, teachers, and directors in achieving any of the following along a career pathway?

  • Credit towards required training hours

  • Certificate

  • Credential

  • Degree

  • Other (list) ______________________________________________

  • None


Describe the support given to providers in achieving credits, credentials, or degrees. In your narrative, please also include the number of caregivers, teachers and directors who received support from the Tribal Lead Agency to obtain credits, credentials or degrees:



2c.How did the Tribal Lead Agency assist providers in meeting health and safety standards? Check all that apply.

  • Provide health and safety equipment/materials

  • Grants/mini-grants for health and safety equipment/materials

  • Classroom materials and resources

  • Financial assistance in meeting licensing requirements

  • Other (list) ______________________________________________

  • None


Describe how the Tribal Lead Agency assisted providers in meeting health and safety standards:


2d.How did the Tribal Lead Agency support and provide culturally appropriate activities to children, parents, and providers? Check all that apply.

  • Incorporation of Tribal language into child care settings

  • Modified curriculum to reflect Tribal culture

  • Served traditional Tribal foods in facilities

  • Culturally-based training opportunities for parents and providers

  • Culturally-based training to non-Tribal providers

  • Other (list) ______________________________________________

  • None


Describe the Tribal Lead Agency’s support and provision of culturally appropriate activities:


2e.How did the Tribal Lead Agency provide consumer education to parents and providers? Check all that apply.

  • Written materials, including newsletters, brochures, booklets, checklists, or handbooks about child care topics

  • Local/Tribal media

  • Social media such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram

  • Guidance and Education from Child Care Resource and Referral agencies

  • Internet, including electronic media, publications, and webcasts about child care topics

  • Postings on community bulletin boards

  • Other (list): ______________________________________________

  • None


Describe the consumer education the Tribal Lead Agency provided to parents and child care providers:




2f. Did any CCDF child care providers participate in the following? Check all that apply.

  • State system of assessing and improving quality, such as Quality Rating and Improvement System (QRIS)

  • Tribal system of assessing and improving quality, such as QRIS

  • Nationally-recognized accreditation

  • Other (list) ______________________________________________

  • None


Describe the quality rating and improvement system used. If none was selected, please explain why no quality rating and improvement system is being used:



2g. Describe any other significant

quality activities that occurred during the past fiscal year:






PART 3: American Rescue Plan (ARP) Act Stabilization Grants

The American Rescue Plan (ARP) Act included funding for child care stabilization grants to stabilize the child care sector and do so in a way that builds back a stronger child care system that supports the developmental and learning needs of children, meets parents’ needs and preferences with equal access to high-quality child care, and supports a professionalized workforce that is fairly and appropriately compensated for the essential skilled work that they do. Tribal Lead Agencies must spend stabilization funds to support the stability of the child care sector during and after the COVID-19 public health emergency. This section should include information about the ARP stabilization grants awarded to providers during the Federal fiscal year.


PART 3: ARP STABILIZATION GRANTS QUESTIONS

RESPONSE

1. Number of stabilization grants awarded during the fiscal year to:

 (system calculated 1a+1b+1c)

1a. Family Home providers


1b. Center providers


1c. Providers at Child’s Home


2. Average provider total licensed or identified capacity (i.e., number of children they can serve)


2a. Average provider infant licensed or identified capacity (i.e., average number of infants they can serve)


2b. Average provider toddler licensed or identified capacity (i.e., average number of toddlers they can serve)


2c. Average provider preschooler licensed or identified capacity (i.e., average number of preschoolers they can serve)


2d. Average provider school-age children licensed or identified capacity (i.e., average number of school-age children they can serve)


3. Stabilization grant award amounts

 

3a. Minimum award amount per provider

 

3b. Maximum award amount per provider

 

3c. Average award amount per provider

 

4. Number of stabilization grants awarded to providers that, at the time of application, were serving children who received subsidy


5. Number of providers who temporarily closed due to public health, financial hardship, or other reasons relating to COVID-19


6. Number of providers planning to use the stabilization grants for:

 

6a. Personnel costs, including any sole proprietor or independent contractor-- employee benefits, premium pay, or costs for employee recruitment and retention


 

6b. Rent, mortgage, utilities, facility maintenance or improvements, insurance


 

6c. Personal protective equipment cleaning and sanitization supplies and services, or training and professional development related to health and safety practices


 

6d. Purchases of or updates to equipment and supplies to respond to the COVID–19 public health emergency


 

6e. Goods and services necessary to maintain or resume child care services


 

6f. Mental health supports for children and employees


 

7. Comments (explanatory comments re: any of the questions in Part 3):




PAPERWORK REDUCTION ACT OF 1995 (Pub. L. 104-13) STATEMENT OF PUBLIC BURDEN:

Through this information collection, ACF is obtaining data from Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) Tribal Lead agencies on their efforts to provide affordable and quality child care using CCDF funds. Public reporting burden for this collection of information is estimated to average 19 hours per response for Tribes with small allocations, and 26 hours per response for Tribes with medium/large allocations, including the time for reviewing instructions, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and reviewing the collection of information. This is a mandatory collection of information as required by 42 U.S.C. 9857, and sections 98.70 and 98.71 of the CCDF Final Rule (45 CFR Parts 98 and 99). An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, a collection of information subject to the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number. If you have any comments on this collection of information, please contact Helen Papadopoulos, Office of Child Care, 330 C Street, SW, Washington, DC 20201.



8


File Typeapplication/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
File TitleACF-700 Form
AuthorPapadopoulos, Helen (ACF)
File Modified0000-00-00
File Created2021-10-04

© 2024 OMB.report | Privacy Policy