[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 45, Volume 4]
[Revised as of October 1, 2007]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 45CFR1304.52]

[Page 140-142]
 
                        TITLE 45--PUBLIC WELFARE
 
CHAPTER XIII--OFFICE OF HUMAN DEVELOPMENT SERVICES, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH 
                           AND HUMAN SERVICES
 
PART 1304_PROGRAM PERFORMANCE STANDARDS FOR THE OPERATION OF HEAD START 
 
                 Subpart D_Program Design and Management
 
Sec.  1304.52  Human resources management.

    (a) Organizational structure. (1) Grantee and delegate agencies must 
establish and maintain an organizational structure that supports the 
accomplishment of program objectives. This structure must address the 
major functions and responsibilities assigned to each staff position and 
must provide evidence of adequate mechanisms for staff supervision and 
support.
    (2) At a minimum, grantee and delegate agencies must ensure that the 
following program management functions are formally assigned to and 
adopted by staff within the program:
    (i) Program management (the Early Head Start or Head Start 
director);
    (ii) Management of early childhood development and health services, 
including child development and education; child medical, dental, and 
mental health; child nutrition; and, services for children with 
disabilities; and
    (iii) Management of family and community partnerships, including 
parent activities.
    (b) Staff qualifications--general. (1) Grantee and delegate agencies 
must ensure that staff and consultants have the knowledge, skills, and 
experience they need to perform their assigned functions responsibly.
    (2) In addition, grantee and delegate agencies must ensure that only 
candidates with the qualifications specified in this part and in 45 CFR 
1306.21 are hired.
    (3) Current and former Early Head Start and Head Start parents must 
receive preference for employment vacancies for which they are 
qualified.
    (4) Staff and program consultants must be familiar with the ethnic 
background and heritage of families in the program and must be able to 
serve and effectively communicate, to the extent feasible, with children 
and families with no or limited English proficiency.
    (c) Early Head Start or Head Start director qualifications. The 
Early Head Start or Head Start director must have demonstrated skills 
and abilities in a management capacity relevant to human services 
program management.
    (d) Qualifications of content area experts. Grantee and delegate 
agencies must hire staff or consultants who meet the qualifications 
listed below to provide content area expertise and oversight on an 
ongoing or regularly scheduled basis. Agencies must determine the 
appropriate staffing pattern necessary to provide these functions.
    (1) Education and child development services must be supported by 
staff or consultants with training and experience in areas that include: 
The theories and principles of child growth and development, early 
childhood education, and family support. In addition, staff or 
consultants must meet the qualifications for classroom teachers, as 
specified in section 648A of the Head Start Act and any subsequent 
amendments regarding the qualifications of teachers.
    (2) Health services must be supported by staff or consultants with 
training and experience in public health, nursing, health education, 
maternal and child health, or health administration. In addition, when a 
health procedure must be performed only by a licensed/certified health 
professional, the agency must assure that the requirement is followed.
    (3) Nutrition services must be supported by staff or consultants who 
are registered dietitians or nutritionists.
    (4) Mental health services must be supported by staff or consultants 
who are licensed or certified mental health professionals with 
experience and expertise in serving young children and their families.
    (5) Family and community partnership services must be supported by 
staff or consultants with training and experience in field(s) related to 
social, human, or family services.
    (6) Parent involvement services must be supported by staff or 
consultants

[[Page 141]]

with training, experience, and skills in assisting the parents of young 
children in advocating and decision-making for their families.
    (7) Disabilities services must be supported by staff or consultants 
with training and experience in securing and individualizing needed 
services for children with disabilities.
    (8) Grantee and delegate agencies must secure the regularly 
scheduled or ongoing services of a qualified fiscal officer.
    (e) Home visitor qualifications. Home visitors must have knowledge 
and experience in child development and early childhood education; the 
principles of child health, safety, and nutrition; adult learning 
principles; and family dynamics. They must be skilled in communicating 
with and motivating people. In addition, they must have knowledge of 
community resources and the skills to link families with appropriate 
agencies and services.
    (f) Infant and toddler staff qualifications. Early Head Start and 
Head Start staff working as teachers with infants and toddlers must 
obtain a Child Development Associate (CDA) credential for Infant and 
Toddler Caregivers or an equivalent credential that addresses comparable 
competencies within one year of the effective date of the final rule or, 
thereafter, within one year of hire as a teacher of infants and 
toddlers. In addition, infants and toddler teachers must have the 
training and experience necessary to develop consistent, stable, and 
supportive relationships with very young children. The training must 
develop knowledge of infant and toddler development, safety issues in 
infant and toddler care (e.g., reducing the risk of Sudden Infant Death 
Syndrome), and methods for communicating effectively with infants and 
toddlers, their parents, and other staff members.
    (g) Classroom staffing and home visitors. (1) Grantee and delegate 
agencies must meet the requirements of 45 CFR 1306.20 regarding 
classroom staffing.
    (2) When a majority of children speak the same language, at least 
one classroom staff member or home visitor interacting regularly with 
the children must speak their language.
    (3) For center-based programs, the class size requirements specified 
in 45 CFR 1306.32 must be maintained through the provision of 
substitutes when regular classroom staff are absent.
    (4) Grantee and delegate agencies must ensure that each teacher 
working exclusively with infants and toddlers has responsibility for no 
more than four infants and toddlers and that no more than eight infants 
and toddlers are placed in any one group. However, if State, Tribal or 
local regulations specify staff:child ratios and group sizes more 
stringent than this requirement, the State, Tribal or local regulations 
must apply.
    (5) Staff must supervise the outdoor and indoor play areas in such a 
way that children's safety can be easily monitored and ensured.
    (h) Standards of conduct. (1) Grantee and delegate agencies must 
ensure that all staff, consultants, and volunteers abide by the 
program's standards of conduct. These standards must specify that:
    (i) They will respect and promote the unique identity of each child 
and family and refrain from stereotyping on the basis of gender, race, 
ethnicity, culture, religion, or disability;
    (ii) They will follow program confidentiality policies concerning 
information about children, families, and other staff members;
    (iii) No child will be left alone or unsupervised while under their 
care; and
    (iv) They will use positive methods of child guidance and will not 
engage in corporal punishment, emotional or physical abuse, or 
humiliation. In addition, they will not employ methods of discipline 
that involve isolation, the use of food as punishment or reward, or the 
denial of basic needs.
    (2) Grantee and delegate agencies must ensure that all employees 
engaged in the award and administration of contracts or other financial 
awards sign statements that they will not solicit or accept personal 
gratuities, favors, or anything of significant monetary value from 
contractors or potential contractors.
    (3) Personnel policies and procedures must include provision for 
appropriate

[[Page 142]]

penalties for violating the standards of conduct.
    (i) Staff performance appraisals. Grantee and delegate agencies 
must, at a minimum, perform annual performance reviews of each Early 
Head Start and Head Start staff member and use the results of these 
reviews to identify staff training and professional development needs, 
modify staff performance agreements, as necessary, and assist each staff 
member in improving his or her skills and professional competencies.
    (j) Staff and volunteer health. (1) Grantee and delegate agencies 
must assure that each staff member has an initial health examination 
(that includes screening for tuberculosis) and a periodic re-examination 
(as recommended by their health care provider or as mandated by State, 
Tribal, or local laws) so as to assure that they do not, because of 
communicable diseases, pose a significant risk to the health or safety 
of others in the Early Head Start or Head Start program that cannot be 
eliminated or reduced by reasonable accommodation. This requirement must 
be implemented consistent with the requirements of the Americans with 
Disabilities Act and section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act.
    (2) Regular volunteers must be screened for tuberculosis in 
accordance with State, Tribal or local laws. In the absence of State, 
Tribal or local law, the Health Services Advisory Committee must be 
consulted regarding the need for such screenings (see 45 CFR 1304.3(20) 
for a definition of volunteer).
    (3) Grantee and delegate agencies must make mental health and 
wellness information available to staff with concerns that may affect 
their job performance.
    (k) Training and development. (1) Grantee and delegate agencies must 
provide an orientation to all new staff, consultants, and volunteers 
that includes, at a minimum, the goals and underlying philosophy of 
Early Head Start and/or Head Start and the ways in which they are 
implemented by the program.
    (2) Grantee and delegate agencies must establish and implement a 
structured approach to staff training and development, attaching 
academic credit whenever possible. This system should be designed to 
help build relationships among staff and to assist staff in acquiring or 
increasing the knowledge and skills needed to fulfill their job 
responsibilities, in accordance with the requirements of 45 CFR 1306.23.
    (3) At a minimum, this system must include ongoing opportunities for 
staff to acquire the knowledge and skills necessary to implement the 
content of the Head Start Program Performance Standards. This program 
must also include:
    (i) Methods for identifying and reporting child abuse and neglect 
that comply with applicable State and local laws using, so far as 
possible, a helpful rather than a punitive attitude toward abusing or 
neglecting parents and other caretakers; and
    (ii) Methods for planning for successful child and family 
transitions to and from the Early Head Start or Head Start program.
    (4) Grantee and delegate agencies must provide training or 
orientation to Early Head Start and Head Start governing body members. 
Agencies must also provide orientation and ongoing training to Early 
Head Start and Head Start Policy Council and Policy Committee members to 
enable them to carry out their program governance responsibilities 
effectively.

(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control number 
0970-0148 for paragraph (j))

[61 FR 57210, Nov. 5, 1996, as amended at 63 FR 2314, Jan. 15, 1998]