I just attended a meeting on Tuesday with my local child care association and went over this and a bunch of other stuff too. I already knew about it but this was a chance for us providers to ask for clarification. It was put on by licensing and we had 1 of the 2 child care advocates in the state leading it.
Here were my take-away's about the new mandated reporter training from the meeting:
- You can take it here http://childcare.mandatedreporterca.com/
- New family child care providers will be required to submit their certificate of completion along with their application
- Current family child care providers have until March 30 2018 to complete it
- You must keep your certificate in your facility files, licensing will be checking for it after March 30
- New staff you may hire has 90 days to complete the training, put their certificate in their personnel files
- Volunteers you may have (your own kids, spouse, older kids etc) that help you are encouraged to take it
- After March 30 if you (or your staff) don't have it completed it's a $100 citation and a plan of correction will be made with a deadline to complete it
- If you don't complete it by your deadline you get fined $100 per day starting from your deadline day until the day of your completion
- You and your staff have to re-certify every 2 years
- The training portion can be taken in a group, the test must be taken individually
I'm not too worried about it, it seems long but I've had providers tell me they went through it all in an hour and a half including the test portion of it. They're the ones like me that would already take the old mandated reporter online course even if it wasn't required so were familiar with it. This mandated reporter training is new and has replaced the old one we used to take and is now mandatory so I'm curious to see what's different. I plan on taking it this weekend so I'll update you on how long it takes me. Many providers joked about waiting until March 29 to take it so they wouldn't have to re-certify until March 2020 instead of taking it now

I was more worried about the Incidental Medical Services section number 102417 because it makes us all mandated ADA providers. I still have to draw up my policy for those and send them to my analyst.
And get ready for a mandatory SIDS training requirement. It's not a requirement yet but it's in the works already and should be added in the next year or so. It will be just like CPR and Mandated Reporter training, we'll have to re-certify every couple of years. And we'll have Safe Sleep regulation in place to follow as well. Common sense stuff really ... back-to-sleep, no blankets/pillows/bumpers and no sleeping babies in car seats etc. We're finally going to have regulations to show the parents, not just "recommendations".
... AND remember that Preventative Health & Safety Practices certificate you got when you first submitted your license? You know, the one that has no expiration date? Well if you move or upgrade your license from a small to a large you'll have to re-take it again. Lots and lots of changes happening and more coming.