97-116. Child and Adult Care Food Program; Improved Targeting of Day Care Home Reimbursements  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 4 (Tuesday, January 7, 1997)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 889-915]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-116]
    
    
    
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    Federal Register / Vol. 62, No. 4 / Tuesday, January 7, 1997 / Rules 
    and Regulations
    
    [[Page 889]]
    
    
    
    DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
    
    Food and Consumer Service
    
    7 CFR Parts 210 and 226
    
    RIN 0584-AC42
    
    
    Child and Adult Care Food Program; Improved Targeting of Day Care 
    Home Reimbursements
    
    AGENCY: Food and Consumer Service, USDA.
    
    ACTION: Interim rule with request for comments.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: This interim rule amends the Child and Adult Care Food Program 
    regulations governing reimbursement for meals served in family or group 
    day care homes by incorporating provisions of the Personal 
    Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996. 
    Specifically, this rule establishes a two-tiered reimbursement rate 
    structure for day care homes. Under this structure, the level of 
    reimbursement for meals served to enrolled children will be determined 
    by economic need based on: the location of the day care home; the 
    income of the day care provider; or the income of individual children's 
    households. In addition, this rule makes a minor amendment to the 
    National School Lunch Program regulations to facilitate the provision 
    of elementary school data on free and reduced price eligibility 
    determinations to sponsors of family day care homes. These revisions 
    are intended to target higher CACFP reimbursements to low-income 
    providers and children.
    
    DATES: Effective July 1, 1997, except for sections 210.9(b)(20), 
    210.19(f), 226.6(f)(2) and 226.6(f)(9), which are effective March 10, 
    1997. To be assured of consideration, comments must be postmarked on or 
    before April 7, 1997, except for comments on the information collection 
    which must be received by March 10, 1997.
    
    ADDRESSES: Comments should be addressed to Mr. Robert M. Eadie, Chief, 
    Policy and Program Development Branch, Child Nutrition Division, Food 
    and Consumer Service, Department of Agriculture, 3101 Park Center 
    Drive, Room 1007, Alexandria, Virginia 22302. Comments in response to 
    this rule may be inspected at the above address during normal business 
    hours, 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Robert M. Eadie or Edward Morawetz at 
    the above address or by telephone at 703-305-2620.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Executive Order 12866
    
        This interim rule has been determined to be economically 
    significant and was reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget 
    under Executive Order 12866.
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        This rule has also been reviewed with regard to the requirements of 
    the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601-612). This rule is 
    expected to have a significant impact on a substantial number of small 
    entities. Specifically, it will impact day care homes classified as 
    tier II day care homes. Additional discussion of this impact is 
    contained in the Economic Impact Analysis following this rule.
    
    Executive Order 12372
    
        The Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) and the National 
    School Lunch Program (NSLP) are listed in the Catalog of Federal 
    Domestic Assistance under No. 10.559 and 10.555, respectively, and are 
    subject to the provisions of Executive Order 12372, which requires 
    intergovernmental consultation with State and local officials (7 CFR 
    Part 3015, Subpart V, and final rule related notice published at 48 FR 
    29114, June 24, 1983).
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        Summary: In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, 
    this Notice announces the Food and Consumer Service's (FCS) intention 
    to request Office of Management and Budget (OMB) review of the 
    adjustments to be made to the information collections for the Child and 
    Adult Care Food Program and the National School Lunch Program as a 
    result of the interim rule, Child and Adult Care Food Program: Improved 
    Targeting of Day Care Home Reimbursements.
        To be assured of consideration, comments on the information 
    collection must be received by March 10, 1997.
        Comments on the information collection should be addressed to Mr. 
    Robert M. Eadie, Chief, Policy and Program Development Branch, Child 
    Nutrition Division, Food and Consumer Service, Department of 
    Agriculture, 3101 Park Center Drive, Room 1007, Alexandria, Virginia 
    22302.
        Comments are invited on the following areas: (a) Whether the 
    proposed collection of information is necessary for the proper 
    performance of the functions of the agency, including whether the 
    information will have practical utility; (b) the accuracy of the 
    agency's estimate of the burden of the proposed collection of 
    information, including the validity of the methodology and assumptions 
    used; (c) ways to enhance the quality, utility and clarity of the 
    information to be collected; and (d) ways to minimize the burden of the 
    collection of information on those who are to respond, including 
    through the use of appropriate automated, electronic, mechanical, or 
    other technological collection techniques or other forms of information 
    technology.
        All responses to this Notice will be summarized and included in the 
    request for OMB approval, and will become a matter of public record.
        Titles: 7 CFR Part 226, Child and Adult Care Food Program and 7 CFR 
    Part 210, National School Lunch Program.
        OMB Numbers: 0584-0055 and 0584-0006.
        Type of request: Revision of existing collections.
        Abstract: The interim rule, Child and Adult Care Food Program: 
    Improved Targeting of Day Care Home Reimbursements, is intended to 
    implement the provision included in Public Law 104-193, the Personal 
    Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996, that 
    establishes a two-tiered reimbursement system for day care homes 
    participating in the Child and Adult Care Food Program. Under this 
    structure, the level
    
    [[Page 890]]
    
    of reimbursement for day care homes will be determined by economic need 
    based on: (1) The location of the day care home; (2) the income of the 
    day care home provider; or (3) the household income of each 
    participating child.
        In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, the 
    Department is providing the public with the opportunity to comment on 
    the information requirements of this interim rule as noted below:
    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                            Annual  
                    Section                       Annual No. of          Annual      Annual       Per       burden  
                                                   respondents         frequency   responses   response     hours   
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
     7 CFR 210.9(b)(20) School food authorities provide State agencies with a listing of elementary schools with at 
                                                  least 50% eligibility                                             
                                                                                                                    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    New...................................  4,969 school food                1          4,969      .50         2,485
                                             authorities.                                                           
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      7 CFR 210.19(f) State agency collects and maintains a listing of all elementary schools participating in the  
                               National School Lunch Program with at least 50% eligibility                          
                                                                                                                    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    New...................................  54 State agencies........        1             54     2              108
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      7 CFR 210.19(f) State agency provides Child and Adult Care Food Program State agencies with a listing of all  
           elementary schools participating in the National School Lunch Program with at least 50% eligibility      
                                                                                                                    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    New...................................  12 State agencies........        1             12      .50             6
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
         7 CFR 226.6(f)(9) State agencies administering CACFP provide listing of eligible schools to sponsoring     
                                                      organizations                                                 
                                                                                                                    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    New...................................  54 State agencies........       23          1,242     1            1,242
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          7 CFR 226.6(f)(9) State agencies administering CACFP provide census data to sponsoring organizations      
                                                                                                                    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    New...................................  54 state agencies........        2.3          124     1              124
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
     7 CFR 226.6(f)(10) Sponsoring organizations submit tier I and tier II enrollment information to State agencies 
                                                                                                                    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    New...................................  1,240 sponsors...........        1          1,240     1            1,240
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
           7 CFR 226.15(e)(3) Sponsoring organizations maintain documentation used to classify homes as tier I      
                                                                                                                    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    New...................................  1240 sponsors............       40         49,600     1           49,600
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
        7 CFR 226.13(b) Sponsoring organizations collect and report meals by category to State agency each month    
                                                                                                                    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    New...................................  1,240 sponsors...........       12         14,880     2           29,760
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            7 CFR 226.13(d)(1)-(3), 226.18(e) Tier I and Tier II homes submit monthly meal counts to sponsors       
                                                                                                                    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    New...................................  193,000 homes............       12      2,316,000     1.25     2,895,000
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
       7 CFR 226.13(d)(3)(i)-(iii) Sponsoring organizations establish reimbursement amounts for tier II homes with  
                                                income-eligible children                                            
                                                                                                                    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    New...................................  496 sponsors.............       78         38,688      .50        19,344
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
     7 CFR 226.15(e)(3) Sponsoring organizations, upon request, collect free and reduced applications from enrolled 
      children in Tier II that are not providers own at least once a year and maintain eligibility determination of 
                                                   each enrolled child                                              
                                                                                                                    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    New...................................  496 sponsors.............       39         19,344      .50         9,672
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      7 CFR 226.23(e)(1) Households of children enrolled in tier II day care homes complete free and reduced price  
                                                      applications                                                  
                                                                                                                    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    New...................................  166,752 households.......        1        166,752      .075       12,506
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    7 CFR 226.23(h)(6) Sponsoring organizations collect information to conduct verification of homes that qualify as
                                            tier I based on provider's income                                       
                                                                                                                    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    New...................................  1,240 sponsors...........       16         19,840     1           19,840
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total Proposed Burden Hours: 3,040,927.                                                                         
    
    Executive Order 12778
    
        This interim rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12778, 
    Civil Justice Reform. This rule is intended to have preemptive effect 
    with respect to any State or local laws, regulations or policies which 
    conflict with its provisions or which would otherwise impede its full 
    implementation. This
    
    [[Page 891]]
    
    rule is not intended to have retroactive effect unless so specified in 
    the ``Effective Date'' section of this preamble. Prior to any judicial 
    challenge to the provisions of this rule or the application of its 
    provisions, all applicable administrative procedures must be exhausted. 
    In the Child and Adult Care Food Program: (1) Institution appeal 
    procedures are set forth in 7 C.F.R. Sec. 226.6(k); and (2) disputes 
    involving procurement by State agencies and institutions must follow 
    administrative appeal procedures to the extent required by 7 CFR 226.22 
    and 7 CFR 3015.
        This rule implements the amendments set forth under sections 708(e) 
    (1) and (3) of the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity 
    Reconciliation Act of 1996, Pub. L. 104-193 (the Act), which was 
    enacted on August 22, 1996. The Act made several fundamental changes 
    affecting the reimbursement provided for meals served in family or 
    group day care homes under the Child and Adult Care Food Program. 
    Section 708(k)(3) of Pub. L. 104-193 requires that interim regulations 
    implementing these amendments be issued by January 1, 1997, and that 
    final regulations be issued by July 1, 1997. For this reason, the 
    Administrator of the Food and Consumer Service has determined, in 
    accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(3)(B), that it is impracticable and 
    contrary to the public interest to take prior public comment and that 
    good cause therefore exists for publishing this rule without prior 
    public notice and comment. Comments are being solicited until April 7, 
    1997. A longer comment period is not practicable given the Act's 
    requirement that final regulations be issued by July 1, 1997. All 
    comments will be carefully considered prior to final rulemaking.
    
    Background
    
        Under the Child Care Food Program (CCFP), as it was initially 
    established and authorized in November 1975 by section 16 of the 
    National School Lunch Act and Child Nutrition Act of 1966 Amendments of 
    1975 (Pub. L. 94-105), application requirements, enrollee eligibility 
    determinations, and reimbursement rates were the same for both family 
    and group day care homes and centers. Specifically, individual 
    eligibility determinations based on household size and income 
    statements were required, and the meal reimbursement rates paid to 
    centers and to sponsors on behalf of day care homes were based on each 
    enrolled child's eligibility for free, reduced price, or paid meals. 
    Eligibility for free and reduced price meals was based on income 
    thresholds and procedures essentially the same as those used by the 
    National School Lunch Program (and still in use by the National School 
    Lunch Program). At this time, in both day care centers and day care 
    homes, approximately 70 percent of enrolled children were eligible for 
    free and reduced price meals; the remaining 30 percent were eligible 
    for paid meals.
        Over the next several years, concern was raised that licensing, 
    paperwork, and recordkeeeping requirements were creating barriers to 
    day care home participation in the CCFP, and it became clear that there 
    were major differences between the administrative capabilities and 
    operating methods of day care home providers and child care center 
    operators. Specifically, differences in size of facility, relationship 
    with parents, and management sophistication suggested the need for 
    simpler administrative procedures in day care homes. In 1978, these 
    concerns were addressed in the Child Nutrition Amendments of 1978 (Pub. 
    L. 95-627). This law eliminated individual free and reduced price 
    eligibility determinations (i.e., means testing) in day care homes and 
    established a single reimbursement rate for each type of meal served. 
    This rate was slightly less than the rate paid for comparable meals 
    served at the ``free'' rate in child care centers. These changes 
    encouraged day care home provider participation in the Program by 
    reducing their administrative paperwork burden.
        The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1981 (Pub. L. 97-35) 
    introduced a requirement to means test households of providers' own 
    children by eliminating reimbursement for providers' own children if 
    the providers' households had incomes greater than 185 percent of the 
    Federal income poverty guidelines. Otherwise, the simplified procedures 
    established by Public Law 95-627 were left intact. With the sole 
    exception of means testing of providers' own children, day care homes 
    have continued to receive reimbursement under the Program for meals 
    served to all enrolled children, without application and regardless of 
    income.
        Simpler administrative procedures for family and group day care 
    homes led to significant growth in their program participation. This 
    growth was especially evident among family day care homes serving 
    middle and upper-income children. The Study of the Child Care Food 
    Program (CCFP) conducted for FCS by Abt Associates, Inc., showed that 
    by 1986 approximately 70 percent of children then receiving 
    reimbursement for meals served in family day care homes would have 
    qualified for ``paid'' meals prior to the changes to the law in 1978. 
    (``Paid'' meals are for children from households with incomes over 185 
    percent of poverty.) These percentages were exactly opposite from the 
    percentages of income-eligible children participating in the program 
    before the means test was eliminated. Led by growth in the family day 
    care portion of the CCFP--renamed the Child and Adult Care Food Program 
    (CACFP) in 1989--Program expenditures increased from $300 million in 
    1983 to $1.44 billion by 1995.
        To illustrate the current difference between reimbursement in day 
    care homes and centers, in 1996, for example, if a child eligible for 
    paid meals and a child eligible for free meals both transferred from a 
    center to a day care home, reimbursement provided for lunches for the 
    paid child would change from $0.32 in the center to $1.54 in the day 
    care home. The change for the child eligible for free meals would 
    change from $1.94 in the center to $1.54 in the home. The rate 
    difference for the ``free'' child is largely due to administrative 
    costs, which are paid separately to sponsoring organizations of day 
    care homes, while center administration is included in the 
    reimbursement rate they receive.
        The goal of reducing overall Federal expenditures has prompted a 
    review of many programs and led to a decision to improve the targeting 
    of benefits to low-income children in the CACFP. To accomplish this 
    targeting, the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity 
    Reconciliation Act of 1996 establishes two ``tiers'' of day care homes 
    and reimbursement rates. Under the law, tier I homes are those that are 
    located in low-income areas or those in which the provider's household 
    income is at or below 185 percent of the Federal income poverty 
    guidelines. All meals served to enrolled children in tier I homes will 
    continue to be reimbursed at essentially the same rates that they 
    currently receive, adjusted for inflation. Tier II homes, in contrast, 
    are those which do not meet the location or provider income criteria 
    for a tier I home. The meals served in tier II homes are reimbursed at 
    lower rates, unless the provider elects to have the sponsor collect 
    free and reduced price applications from the households of children 
    enrolled for day care in the home. In that case, the meals served to 
    identified income-eligible children (i.e., children from households 
    with incomes at or below 185 percent of the Federal income poverty 
    guidelines) are reimbursed at the higher, tier I rates.
    
    [[Page 892]]
    
        These and other related provisions of the law are discussed in 
    greater detail in the preamble that follows.
    
    Tier I Family or Group Day Care Homes
    
    Definition
    
        Section 708(e)(1) of the Personal Responsibility and Work 
    Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 amended section 17(f)(3)(A) of 
    the National School Lunch Act (NSLA) (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1766(f)(3)(A)) by 
    defining a ``tier I family or group day care home'' as:
    
        [1] a family or group day care home that is located in a 
    geographic area, as defined by the Secretary based on census data, 
    in which at least 50 percent of the children residing in the area 
    are members of households whose incomes meet the income eligibility 
    guidelines for free or reduced price meals under section 9 [of the 
    NSLA]; [2] a family or group day care home that is located in an 
    area served by a school enrolling elementary students in which at 
    least 50 percent of the total number of children enrolled are 
    certified eligible to receive free or reduced price school meals 
    under this Act [the NSLA] or the Child Nutrition Act of 1966 (42 
    U.S.C. 1771 et seq.); or [3] a family or group day care home that is 
    operated by a provider whose household meets the income eligibility 
    guidelines for free or reduced price meals under section 9 [of the 
    NSLA] and whose income is verified by the sponsoring organization of 
    the home under regulations established by the Secretary.''
    
        Also, providers whose day care homes qualify as tier I day care 
    homes on the basis of the provider's household income may demonstrate 
    that they meet the criteria for free or reduced price meals by virtue 
    of their receipt of food stamp, Food Distribution Program on Indian 
    Reservation, or certain State programs for Temporary Assistance to 
    Needy Families (formerly Aid to Families with Dependent Children) 
    benefits.
        This rule amends section 226.2 of the CACFP regulations by adding a 
    definition of ``tier I day care home.''
    
    Provision of Data
    
        Except in cases in which a provider demonstrates its household 
    income meets the free or reduced price eligibility standards, the Act 
    requires that either elementary school eligibility data or census data 
    must be utilized in order for a day care home to qualify as a tier I 
    family or group day care home. Section 708(e)(3) of the Act further 
    amended section 17(f)(3) of the NSLA to set forth requirements 
    pertaining to the provision of this data to family or group day care 
    home sponsoring organizations.
    
    School Data
    
        Section 708(e)(3) of the Act added section 17(f)(3)(E)(ii) to the 
    NSLA to require that each State agency that administers either the 
    National School Lunch or School Breakfast Programs annually provide to 
    approved family or group day care home sponsoring organizations a list 
    of elementary schools in the State in which at least one-half of the 
    enrolled children are certified to receive free or reduced price meals. 
    That provision of the Act further stipulates that, when determining 
    whether a day care home qualifies as a tier I day care home, the CACFP 
    State agency and sponsors shall use the most current data available at 
    the time of the determination. Finally, the Act directs State agencies 
    which administer the school nutrition programs to collect on an annual 
    basis the data necessary to comply with these requirements.
        The Department considers that aggregate school data on the 
    percentage of enrolled children eligible for free and reduced price 
    meals is a highly effective way of determining whether or not day care 
    homes are located in low-income areas. To enable sponsors to obtain 
    this information, this interim regulation amends the National School 
    Lunch Program (NSLP) regulations to require school food authorities to 
    provide the State agency administering the NSLP with a list of all 
    elementary schools under their jurisdiction in which 50 percent or more 
    of the enrolled children are determined eligible for free or reduced 
    price meals as of the last operating day in October. Although the law 
    refers to both the State agency which administers the NSLP and the 
    State agency which administers the School Breakfast Program, in fact 
    there are no States in which the NSLP and School Breakfast Program are 
    operated by separate State agencies. Furthermore, in accordance with 
    section 301 of the Healthy Meals for Healthy Americans Act of 1994 
    (Pub. L. 103-448), we are planning to consolidate the regulations for 
    the NSLP and School Breakfast Program in the near future in order to 
    eliminate duplication and to streamline program requirements. 
    Therefore, the Department has determined that it is unnecessary to 
    amend 7 CFR Part 220, regulations for the School Breakfast Program, to 
    include the provision of data requirements discussed above.
        The Department notes that this information is already collected and 
    maintained at the local school food authority level. Section 210.8(c) 
    requires school food authorities to report the total number of enrolled 
    free, reduced price and paid children to the State agency on the 
    October claim for reimbursement. To submit this data, the school food 
    authority consolidates the enrollment data submitted by the individual 
    schools under its jurisdiction. Moreover, school food authorities are 
    required pursuant to section 210.9(a)(8) to analyze monthly meal counts 
    submitted by their schools for accuracy. This is generally done by 
    comparing the free, reduced price and paid meal counts to an attendance 
    factor developed using the October enrollment data. Therefore, this new 
    statutory requirement will not result in an additional information 
    collection burden at the local level.
        Likewise, there should be little, if any, increase in reporting 
    burden. While there is no Federal requirement for school food 
    authorities to report the names of participating schools to the State 
    agency, many States do collect this information. The Department also 
    notes that some school food authorities are accustomed to providing 
    individual school data for severe need reimbursement under the School 
    Breakfast Program. In most instances, these will be the same low-income 
    schools as those meeting the criteria for a tier I low-income area 
    determination. For these reasons, the increase in reporting burden 
    should not be large.
        The law directs the State agency administering the NSLP to provide 
    this information directly to sponsors that request it. However, the 
    Department is concerned that some sponsors, particularly smaller ones, 
    may not know whom to contact in the State agency administering the NSLP 
    to obtain this information. This would be especially true of sponsors 
    operating in States in which an agency other than the State education 
    agency administers the CACFP.
        Therefore, this interim regulation requires the NSLP State agency 
    to provide the CACFP State agency with a list of elementary schools in 
    which 50 percent or more of enrolled children have been determined 
    eligible for free or reduced price meals in addition to requiring NSLP 
    State agencies to provide the list to requesting sponsors. This will 
    facilitate sponsors' access to local school data while minimizing 
    confusion. The first list shall be submitted by school food authorities 
    to the NSLP State agency no later than March 1, 1997, from the NSLP 
    State agency to the CACFP State agency no later than March 15, 1997, 
    and by the CACFP State agency to sponsoring organizations by April 1, 
    1997. In subsequent years, this list must be provided by school food 
    authorities no later than December 31, and from the
    
    [[Page 893]]
    
    NSLP State agency to the CACFP State agency no later than February 1 of 
    each year. This schedule gives school food authorities 60 days after 
    the end of October to report this data to the NSLP agency, and the 
    February 1 deadline will provide that agency with one month in which to 
    compile the list and forward it to the CACFP State agency, which would 
    then make the information available to sponsors by February 15 each 
    year.
    Census Data
        Section 708(e)(3) of the Act amended section 17(f)(3)(E)(i) of the 
    NSLA to require that the Secretary provide each State agency 
    administering CACFP with appropriate census data showing the areas of 
    the State in which at least 50 percent of the children are from 
    households meeting the income standards for free or reduced price 
    meals. Each CACFP State agency, in turn, must provide the data to day 
    care home sponsoring organizations in the State.
        Section 708(e)(3) of the Act further provides that the sponsoring 
    organization's determination that a day care home is located in an 
    eligible low-income area be in effect for three years when such 
    determination is based on school data. When census data are used, the 
    determination remains in effect until such time as more recent census 
    data are available. Regardless of the type of data used, section 
    708(e)(3) of the Act further amended section 17(f)(3) of the NSLA to 
    give the State agency the discretion to change the determination if it 
    subsequently learns that the area in which a home is located no longer 
    qualifies as an eligible area. Since we believe that in order to ensure 
    program integrity all levels of program administration should have the 
    responsibility to amend tier I determinations based upon the benefit of 
    new information, this interim rule provides FCS and sponsors, as well 
    as State agencies, with this authority. This expanded authority is 
    being granted under the Department's general authority to issue 
    regulations necessary for the administration of the Program.
        The Department has experience in the Summer Food Service Program 
    with area eligibility determinations and the data available to document 
    area eligibility. Based on this experience, the Department believes 
    that census data should not be used when relevant, current information 
    on free and reduced price eligibility in local elementary schools is 
    available. Since census data are collected only once every ten years, 
    and release of the data by the Bureau of the Census typically does not 
    occur until several years after the data are collected, school data is 
    far more current and will, in most cases, more accurately represent 
    current economic conditions in a given area. However, we recognize that 
    there may be certain circumstances which warrant the use of census data 
    to establish a day care home's eligibility, even when current-year 
    school data are available. Therefore, when providing the required 
    census data, the Department will provide specific guidance as to the 
    use of such data to all State agencies for making determinations in 
    such situations.
        We also recognize that there may be situations in which census data 
    and school data provide conflicting results of an area's eligibility. 
    Our guidance accompanying the census data will outline very specific 
    instances in which using census data, instead of current-year school 
    data, is appropriate. Using this guidance, the Department expects State 
    agencies to exercise their oversight to resolve conflicts between the 
    data sources so as to ensure that decisions on classifying tier I homes 
    are appropriate. Of primary concern to the Department is that 
    sponsoring organizations use the data that is most reflective of the 
    socio-economic status of a given area when classifying homes as tier I 
    or tier II.
        Accordingly, this interim rule adds a new paragraph (b)(20) to 
    section 210.9 to require school food authorities to provide their NSLP 
    State agencies, by March 1, 1997, and by December 31 of each year 
    thereafter, with a list of all elementary schools under their 
    jurisdiction in which 50 percent or more of the enrolled children have 
    been determined eligible for free or reduced price meals as of the last 
    operating day of October. Furthermore, a new paragraph (f) is added to 
    section 210.19 requiring the State agency administering the NSLP to 
    provide by March 15, 1997, and by February 1 each year thereafter, to 
    the State agency administering the CACFP, and to sponsoring 
    organizations upon request, a list of all elementary schools 
    participating in the NSLP in which at least 50 percent of enrolled 
    children have been determined eligible for free or reduced price meals 
    as of the last operating day of October. In addition, this rule amends 
    section 226.6(f) by adding a new paragraph (9) to require that the 
    CACFP State agency provide all approved day care home sponsoring 
    organizations in the State the school and census data as described 
    above. For school data, this would require coordination with the NSLP 
    State agency. New section 226.6(f)(9) also requires that, when using 
    school or census data, the most recent available data be used in making 
    the determination of a home's eligibility as a tier I day care home; 
    that determinations of a home's eligibility as a tier I home will be 
    valid for one year if based on a provider's household income, three 
    years if based on school data, or until more current data are available 
    if based on census data; and that a sponsor, a State agency, or FCS may 
    change the determination if information becomes available indicating 
    that a home is no longer in a qualified area.
    
    Making Tier I Day Care Home Determinations
    
        Section 708(e)(3) of the Act amended section 17(f)(3)(E) of the 
    NSLA to require that school and census data ultimately be provided to 
    sponsoring organizations. Sponsoring organizations, consequently, will 
    be responsible for determining which day care homes are eligible as 
    tier I day care homes. As discussed above, this will be accomplished 
    applying the school or census data provided by the CACFP State agency, 
    or by determining that the households of day care home providers not 
    located in low-income areas are eligible for free or reduced price 
    meals by use of a free and reduced price application.
        Since there is a significant financial benefit associated with the 
    classification of a day care home as a tier I day care home, this rule 
    requires State agencies to establish overclaims against sponsors which 
    improperly classify a home as a tier I day care home. The Department 
    recognizes that, because day care home classification is a new process, 
    there are various circumstances which may result in the 
    misclassification of a day care home as a tier I day care home as 
    sponsors and State agencies begin these new procedures. Therefore, FCS 
    will issue guidance, in advance of the implementation of the two-tiered 
    reimbursement structure, to address circumstances under which a State 
    agency may decide not to assess overclaims for tier I 
    misclassifications.
        In addition, this rule requires that sponsoring organizations of 
    day care homes include in their annual management plans a description 
    of their system for making tier I day care home determinations. As is 
    the case with all items included in the management plans, State 
    agencies are required by section 226.6(f)(2) to review and approve the 
    system. For the initial implementation period, sponsors are required to 
    amend their plans to include this description by April 1, 1997. The 
    Department recognizes that this requirement will impose an additional
    
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    administrative burden on sponsors and State agencies during the 
    transition period to the two-tiered structure. However, given the 
    potential for significant financial liability for sponsors and State 
    agencies resulting from incorrect determinations, it is extremely 
    important to ensure that each sponsor's method for making tier I 
    determinations is appropriate and achieves the most accurate 
    determinations possible using the most current available data.
        Accordingly, this rule amends section 226.15 by redesignating 
    paragraphs (f) through (j) as paragraphs (g) through (k), respectively, 
    and by adding a new paragraph (f) to require sponsoring organizations 
    to make tier I day care home determinations. New paragraph (f) also 
    indicates, as discussed above and indicated in revised section 
    226.6(f)(9), that determinations of a home's eligibility as a tier I 
    day care home will be valid for one year if based on the provider's 
    household income, three years if based on school data, or until more 
    current data are available if based on census data. Additionally, as 
    discussed above, a sponsor, State agency, or FCS may change a 
    determination if information becomes available indicating that a home 
    is no longer in a qualified area. In addition, section 226.14(a) is 
    amended to require that State agencies establish overclaims against 
    sponsoring organizations of day care homes when they misclassify day 
    care homes as tier I day care homes unless the State agency determines, 
    in accordance with FCS guidance, that the misclassification was 
    inadvertent. Finally, section 226.6(f)(2) is amended to add the 
    requirement that the annual management plan include a description of 
    the sponsor's system for making tier I day care home determinations. 
    For initial implementation, each sponsoring organization of day care 
    homes shall amend its plan, subject to review and approval by the State 
    agency, to include this information by April 1, 1997.
    
    Reimbursement Factors for Tier I Homes
    
        Section 708(e)(1) of the Personal Responsibility and Work 
    Opportunity Reconciliation Act amended section 17(f)(3)(A) of the NSLA 
    to establish the reimbursement factors for meals served in tier I day 
    care homes as the factors in effect on July 1, 1996, with adjustments 
    made to the factors on July 1, 1997, and each July 1 thereafter. This 
    section of the Act further amended section 17(f)(3)(A) of the NSLA to 
    require that the factors be rounded to the nearest lower whole cent, 
    instead of to the nearest quarter-cent increment as previously 
    required. Subsequent adjustments must be based on the unrounded rate 
    from the preceding school year. In addition, annual adjustments, which 
    were previously based on changes in the Consumer Price Index for food 
    away from home, must now be made based on the Consumer Price Index for 
    food at home.
        Section 226.4(c) of the current regulations contains the base 
    reimbursement rates for day care homes. These rates are adjusted 
    annually on July 1 and announced in a notice in the Federal Register. 
    Since the base reimbursement rates become out-of-date as soon as they 
    are adjusted for inflation, including them in the regulation serves no 
    useful purpose. Therefore, this rule will not include the base 
    reimbursement rates established for tier I homes under Pub. L. 104-193. 
    A notice announcing the reimbursement rates will continue to be 
    published in the Federal Register each July 1, as provided for under 
    section 226.4(g).
        Accordingly, this rule amends section 226.4(c) to remove the base 
    reimbursement rates and to indicate that meals served in tier I day 
    care homes will be reimbursed at the current rates for such homes. 
    Also, section 226.4(g) is amended to incorporate the revised method of 
    making annual adjustments to the rates of reimbursement. Additional 
    discussion of reimbursement for meals served in day care homes may be 
    found in the next section of this preamble.
    
    Tier II Family or Group Day Care Homes
    
    Definition
    
        Section 17(f)(3)(A)(iii) of the NSLA, as amended by section 
    708(e)(1) of the Act, describes a ``tier II family or group day care 
    home'' as a day care home that does not meet the criteria set forth for 
    a tier I family or group day care home. Specifically, a tier II family 
    or group day care home would not be located in an area that meets the 
    50 percent free or reduced price eligibility criteria, based on 
    elementary school or census data, nor would the day care home 
    provider's household income be at or below 185 percent of the Federal 
    income poverty guidelines.
        Accordingly, this rule amends section 226.2 to add a definition of 
    ``tier II day care home'' which defines such a home as one which does 
    not meet the criteria for a tier I day care home.
    
    Election by Providers
    
        In contrast to tier I day care homes, the law provides that meals 
    served in tier II day care homes may be eligible for two levels of 
    reimbursement--the tier I day care home rates for meals served to 
    income-eligible children and tier II rates for meals provided to all 
    other children. The Act further amended section 17(f)(3)(A)(iii) of the 
    NSLA to give providers operating tier II homes three options with 
    regard to how meals served in such homes are reimbursed.
        While the law does not specifically require sponsors to provide 
    notification to tier II homes of their reimbursement options, section 
    17(f)(3)(A)(iii)(II), as amended by the Act, clearly gives day care 
    homes, not their sponsoring organizations, the authority to elect the 
    reimbursement option. Therefore, this rule requires sponsors to provide 
    such notification.
        Under the first option, a day care home provider may elect to have 
    its sponsoring organization distribute income applications to the 
    households of all children enrolled in the home. In that case, for all 
    meals served to enrolled children who are determined to meet the 
    criteria for free or reduced price meals, the home would receive the 
    tier I reimbursement rates. Meals served to enrolled children who are 
    not eligible for free or reduced price meals, or children from whose 
    households completed income applications are not received, would be 
    reimbursed at the tier II reimbursement rates.
        These free and reduced price eligibility determinations could be 
    made in several ways. First, as with the current method, families may 
    document their child's eligibility for tier I reimbursements by 
    completing an application which shows that their household income is at 
    or below 185 percent of poverty. The categorical eligibility options at 
    current section 226.23(e), which are based on section 9(d)(2) of the 
    NSLA would continue to be available to all households submitting 
    applications. In addition, section 17(f)(3)(A)(iii)(III)(bb) of the 
    NSLA, as amended by section 708(e)(1) of the Act, provides other 
    categorical eligibility options for households applying for tier I meal 
    reimbursements on behalf of children in tier II homes. Such households 
    may demonstrate eligibility if the child or parent participates in, or 
    is subsidized under, any ``federally or State supported child care or 
    other benefit program with an income eligibility limit that does not 
    exceed'' 185 percent of poverty. As quickly as possible, the Department 
    will issue a list of Federal programs which meet this criterion, and 
    then each State will be required to do the same for its own State-
    funded programs. The Department wishes to emphasize that the process of 
    providing these lists will be ongoing, and that both the
    
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    Department and the States will be updating the lists at least annually, 
    or more often if necessary.
        Alternatively, under the second option, if a day care home provider 
    does not want to have income applications collected from the households 
    of enrolled children, section 17(f)(3)(A)(iii)(III)(cc), as amended by 
    the Act, provides that the provider may elect to have the sponsor 
    identify only those children in tier II homes who are considered 
    categorically eligible by virtue of their participation, or their 
    parent's participation, in a Federally or State supported program with 
    an income eligibility limit that does not exceed the standard for free 
    or reduced price meals. In this situation, the day care home would 
    receive the tier I reimbursements for meals served to the categorically 
    eligible children, and the tier II rates of reimbursement for meals 
    served to all other children.
        It is the Department's position that the above option is only 
    possible in those limited situations where the provider knows which 
    enrolled children are categorically eligible, or when the sponsoring 
    organization has direct access to eligibility information for other 
    qualifying programs. For example, a day care home sponsoring 
    organization which is also a school food authority would be able to 
    identify, without applications being collected from households, 
    children in tier II homes who are categorically eligible based on their 
    or a sibling's receipt of free or reduced price school meals. 
    Similarly, a provider may be able to identify as categorically eligible 
    those children in tier II homes whose care is paid through State child 
    care vouchers that are issued based on equivalent eligibility 
    guidelines (assuming that programs permit the provider to share the 
    eligibility information with the sponsor). In these cases, the sponsor 
    would distribute income applications only to the households of the 
    children identified as participating in programs making them 
    categorically eligible for tier I rates. The households would have the 
    option of completing the information relating to the qualifying program 
    rather than the income information.
        In most situations, however, providers and/or sponsors will only be 
    able to identify children whose meals are eligible for tier I 
    reimbursement by having income applications distributed to the 
    households of all enrolled children, a fact that the Act does not 
    explicitly recognize. Therefore, we envision that, when the provider 
    elects this option, the process will most often operate as it does now 
    in child care centers and as under the first option discussed above: 
    applications will be distributed to all households of children in the 
    care of the tier II day care provider in order to identify all income-
    eligible children in that home. These applications will gather 
    information on participation in other qualifying programs, or will 
    request family size and income information.
        Though direct certification of eligibility can be a more 
    streamlined, less burdensome method of determining eligibility, it also 
    raises issues related to access to information and household 
    confidentiality. The Department is interested in receiving comments on 
    the merits of permitting direct certification of eligibility for 
    sponsoring organizations of day care homes. Depending on the nature of 
    these comments, we may issue a proposed rule on such a provision in the 
    future.
        Finally, as a third option set forth in the Act, a provider may 
    elect to receive tier II reimbursements for meals served to all 
    children in the home, regardless of income. In this case, the 
    sponsoring organization would not be required to collect any income 
    applications, nor would it need to attempt to identify categorically 
    eligible children.
        The law is deliberately structured to give the provider in a tier 
    II day care home, rather than the sponsor, the choice as to whether or 
    not income applications will be collected from households of children 
    enrolled in the home since this choice will have an effect on the 
    amount of reimbursement received by the provider. When a provider 
    elects to have income applications collected, however, it is the 
    responsibility of the sponsoring organization to collect them, to 
    determine the eligibility of the children, and to maintain the 
    confidentiality of the information collected.
        Sponsors also will now have the responsibility of informing 
    providers of their reimbursement options under the law. It is important 
    for States to assist sponsors in carrying out this responsibility. 
    Therefore, in addition to amending the regulations to incorporate the 
    above-discussed provisions, the Department encourages State agencies 
    during the implementation phases of this regulation to utilize a 
    portion of the grant money provided under section 17(f)(3)(D) of the 
    NSLA, as amended by section 708(e)(2) of Pub. L. 104-193, to further 
    the efforts of sponsors in informing and educating day care home 
    providers of their options.
        It is the Department's opinion that in making the sponsoring 
    organization, rather than the day care home provider, responsible for 
    eligibility determinations, Congress recognized the need to provide an 
    extra level of confidentiality to the households of children attending 
    day care homes. Therefore, this rule also prohibits sponsoring 
    organizations of day care homes from making free and reduced price 
    eligibility information concerning individual households available to 
    day care homes and otherwise limits the use of such information to 
    persons directly connected with the administration and enforcement of 
    the Program. Although sponsors are prohibited from releasing 
    eligibility information concerning individual households, this rule 
    will permit sponsors to inform providers in tier II homes of the 
    numbers (not names) of identified income-eligible enrolled children. 
    This will afford providers in tier II homes with more precise 
    information concerning the accuracy of the reimbursement being paid to 
    them by their sponsors, while protecting the confidentiality of 
    individual households, as the law intended. In addition, the Department 
    notes that section 9(b)(2)(C)(iii) of the NSLA was amended by section 
    108 of the Healthy Meals for Healthy Americans Act (Pub. L. 103-448) to 
    clarify the permissible uses of free and reduced price information. The 
    Department is currently developing regulations concerning this 
    provision, and will make any necessary changes to the CACFP regulations 
    at that time.
        In addition, there is a concern that a provider in a tier II home 
    will be unable to precisely calculate reimbursement without knowing the 
    income eligibility status of each enrolled child in the home. The 
    Department believes that allowing sponsoring organizations to inform 
    providers in tier II homes of the numbers of identified income-eligible 
    children, as discussed above, addresses this concern to a great extent, 
    while at the same time protecting the confidentiality of the households 
    of enrolled children. However, the Department is interested in 
    receiving public comment on how best to balance the confidentiality of 
    households with the needs of tier II day care home providers. Any 
    comments that we receive will be addressed in a future rulemaking.
        Accordingly, this rule amends sections 226.2, 226.6(f)(2), 
    226.18(b) and 226.23(e)(1) to incorporate the above provisions and to 
    help ensure that providers are informed of their reimbursement options 
    under the law. Specifically, the definition of Documentation in section 
    226.2 is amended to incorporate the expanded categorical eligibility 
    provided in the law for use by tier II day care homes.
    
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    Section 226.6(f)(2) is further amended to require that the annual 
    management plan submitted to the State agency by sponsoring 
    organizations include a description of the sponsor's system of 
    notifying tier II day care home providers of their options for 
    reimbursement. For the implementation period, this rule requires that 
    sponsors submit a plan amendment describing this system by April 1, 
    1997. Section 226.6(f) is further amended by adding a new paragraph, 
    (10), which requires State agencies to annually provide sponsoring 
    organizations with a list of State-funded programs which meet the 
    special categorical eligibility requirements for children in tier II 
    homes. Section 226.18(b) is amended to require that the agreement 
    between the sponsoring organization and the day care home specify the 
    responsibility of the sponsoring organization, upon the request of a 
    tier II day care home, to collect applications and to determine the 
    income eligibility of enrolled children, and/or to identify 
    categorically eligible children. In addition, section 226.18(b) is 
    further amended to require that the agreement include the sponsor's 
    responsibility to inform providers of their options for reimbursement 
    under the law. Finally, sections 226.23(e)(1)(i) and (iv) are amended 
    by deleting the language exempting sponsoring organizations of day care 
    homes from distributing income applications; by adding language to 
    clarify that sponsors, at the request of the provider, must collect 
    applications, determine the income eligibility of children in tier II 
    day care homes, and maintain the information in a confidential manner; 
    by adding language to indicate that sponsoring organizations may inform 
    providers in tier II homes of the numbers of income-eligible enrolled 
    children; and by clarifying the categorical eligibility procedures that 
    apply to households of children in tier II day care homes, as discussed 
    above.
    
    Meal Counting and Reporting Procedures
    
        Under this rule, all meals served in tier I homes or in tier II 
    homes without any identified income-eligible children will be 
    reimbursed at one rate--all tier I or all tier II, respectively. In 
    such homes, meals can continue to be counted and reported to the 
    sponsor as required by current regulations. However, for those tier II 
    homes with a mix of income-eligible and non-income-eligible children, 
    the introduction of two levels of reimbursement for meals necessitates 
    a change in the way meals are counted and reported.
        The following sections of the preamble discuss the various options 
    available under the law for meal counting and reporting in tier II day 
    care homes with a mix of income-eligible and nonincome-eligible 
    children. It is important to consider the options in the context of the 
    affected population. In the Department's opinion, it is likely that a 
    relatively small percentage of day care homes participating in the 
    program will contain a mix of income-eligible and non-income-eligible 
    children, and therefore, be eligible for two levels of reimbursement. 
    The majority of homes will likely be either tier I day care homes 
    (i.e., those located in low-income areas or operated by a low-income 
    provider) or tier II day care homes without any income-eligible 
    children. The Department also recognizes that the mix of participating 
    homes may vary significantly from one sponsor to another, thus making 
    it important to provide as much flexibility as possible to sponsors in 
    their meal counting and claiming options, while at the same time 
    continuing to maintain program integrity.
    Actual Meal Counts
        Though it is a common current method of meal counting and 
    reporting, taking actual meal counts is not currently required by 
    regulations, and under a two-tiered reimbursement rate structure could 
    impose an additional burden on some providers and sponsoring 
    organizations. Under an actual counts system, for all tier II homes 
    which elect to have income-eligible children identified, sponsors would 
    have to collect and evaluate additional income applications, and/or 
    identify new categorically eligible children, each time the enrollment 
    of such a tier II home changes, or reimburse meals served to newly 
    enrolled children whose income status has not been determined at the 
    lower tier II rates. Because of the potential financial benefit, it is 
    likely that providers under an actual meal count system will expect 
    their sponsoring organizations to take immediate action to determine 
    the income status of newly enrolled children.
        Since only sponsors have access to the income eligibility 
    information for each enrolled child in each of their day care homes, 
    providers under an actual count system would now be required to record 
    meal counts by each enrolled child's name. [Though we understand that a 
    number of sponsoring organizations currently require providers to 
    record meal counts by each enrolled child's name for monitoring 
    purposes, it is not currently required by regulation.] Recording meal 
    counts by each enrolled child's name is necessary under an actual count 
    system because providers will not have access to income eligibility 
    information or income status. Then, each provider would submit the meal 
    count records, by child's name, to the sponsor. Finally, using the 
    information collected and maintained by the sponsor on the income 
    status of each enrolled child, the sponsor would identify and aggregate 
    the total number of meals served which are eligible for tier I 
    reimbursements, and the total number of meals served which are eligible 
    for tier II reimbursements. This process would be performed for each 
    ``mixed'' tier II home under a sponsor which uses actual meal counts in 
    order to prepare the sponsoring organization's monthly claim for 
    reimbursement.
        One benefit of an actual count system is that reimbursements are 
    more precisely targeted, as is the intention of the Act. However, the 
    management sophistication of the sponsoring organization, the number of 
    ``mixed'' tier II homes under a particular sponsorship, and the 
    stability or instability of day care home enrollment in a sponsorship 
    are also factors which must be considered when assessing the merits of 
    various counting and claiming systems. The Act recognizes the potential 
    burden on some sponsors and providers of performing actual meal counts, 
    and includes a provision for simplified meal counting and reporting 
    procedures, which is discussed below.
    ``Simplified'' Meal Counts
        In addition to the usual method of recording and reporting actual 
    meal counts, section 708(e)(1) of the Act added section 
    17(f)(3)(A)(iii)(IV) to the NSLA to require that the Department 
    establish simplified meal counting and reporting procedures for tier II 
    day care homes that receive two levels of reimbursement for meals 
    served to enrolled children. The Act sets forth two possible 
    alternatives that may be used, and also gives the Department the 
    authority to develop its own simplified procedures.
        The first simplified alternative set forth in the Act involves the 
    sponsor setting, for each tier II day care home, annual percentages of 
    the number of meals served that are to be reimbursed at the tier I and 
    tier II reimbursement rates. The percentages would be based on the 
    number of enrolled children identified as being from income-eligible 
    households, and the number not from such households, in a specified 
    month or other period. This procedure is currently an option for State 
    agencies
    
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    for providing reimbursement in CACFP child care centers, adult day care 
    centers, and outside-school-hours care centers, and is referred to in 
    section 226.9(b)(2) of the regulations as ``claiming percentages.''
        For example, under the ``claiming percentages'' alternative, if in 
    the month of September a tier II day care home had 5 enrolled children, 
    2 of whom were determined by the sponsor to be eligible for free or 
    reduced price meals, the home's claiming percentage for the coming year 
    would be set at 40 percent tier I reimbursement and 60 percent tier II 
    reimbursement. To receive reimbursement, the provider would only need 
    to submit total meal counts by type (breakfast, lunch/supper, and 
    supplements) each month, as is currently the case. The sponsor would 
    apply the established claiming percentage to determine the home's 
    reimbursement: 40 percent of all meals served in the month would 
    receive the tier I reimbursement rates; 60 percent would receive the 
    tier II rates.
        A variation of ``claiming percentages'' is the ``blended rates'' 
    method, also used by child care centers, adult day care centers, and 
    outside-school-hours care centers, and contained in section 226.9(b)(3) 
    of current regulations. Using the circumstances from the above example, 
    by multiplying the tier I rate for lunches by 0.40 (40 percent), the 
    tier II rate by 0.60 (60 percent), and then adding the products 
    together, a ``blended rate'' would be derived. If the tier I rate for 
    lunches is $1.5750 (the current rate through June 30, 1997), and the 
    tier II rate is $0.95, this would result in a blended reimbursement 
    rate of $1.20. All lunches served to enrolled children in the home 
    would be reimbursed at this single rate. Again, the day care home would 
    only need to submit total meal counts by type (breakfast, lunch/supper, 
    supplements) to the sponsor. The total reimbursement paid to the home 
    would be the same using either claiming percentages or blended rates.
        The other alternative, presented in new section 
    17(f)(3)(A)(iii)(IV)(bb) of the NSLA, would annually place a tier II 
    home into one of two or more ``reimbursement categories'' based on the 
    percentage of income-eligible children in the home. Each reimbursement 
    category would ``carry [ ] a set of reimbursement factors'' (i.e., the 
    tier I rate, the tier II rate, or some other rate(s) within the range 
    defined by tier I and tier II rates).
        One example of the second alternative could involve establishing 
    multiple reimbursement rates within the range defined by the tier I and 
    tier II rates, and then assigning a home a rate based on the percentage 
    of income-eligible children in the home. For example, four lunch rates 
    could be established as follows: at $0.95 (the tier II rate), $1.5750 
    (the tier I rate for FY 1997), and two approximately equal points 
    between the tier I and tier II rates--$1.16 and $1.36. Tier II homes 
    with no income-eligible children would, of course, receive $0.95 for 
    each lunch served to enrolled children, while tier II homes with all 
    income-eligible children would receive the maximum rate (i.e., $1.5750) 
    for each lunch served. However, homes with a mix of income-eligible and 
    non-income-eligible children would be assigned one of the intermediate 
    lunch rates ($1.16 or $1.36) based on the percentage of income-eligible 
    children served. Homes with more than zero and up to 33.3 percent 
    income-eligible children would receive $1.16 per lunch; homes with more 
    than 33.3 percent and less than 66.7 percent income-eligible children 
    would receive $1.36 per lunch; and homes with 66.7 percent or more 
    income-eligible children would receive the maximum tier I rate of 
    $1.5750. Again using the previous example, a home in which 40 percent 
    of the children were income-eligible would receive $1.36 per lunch, an 
    amount which is 16 cents per lunch higher than that derived with 
    claiming percentages or blended rates.
        Another variation of the ``reimbursement categories'' alternative 
    set forth in the law would also involve assigning a home a rate based 
    on the percentage of income-eligible children in the home. However, in 
    this variation, only the tier I and tier II rates would be used. Any 
    home with 50 percent or more income-eligible children would receive the 
    tier I rates for all meals served; a home with less than 50 percent 
    income-eligible children would receive the tier II rates for all meals 
    served. In the above example, a home with 2 of 5 enrolled children 
    identified as income-eligible (40 percent), would receive the tier II 
    reimbursement rate of $0.95 for all lunches served.
        Given the small number of children enrolled in the typical family 
    day care home, any method other than actual counts would be especially 
    sensitive to changes in enrollment. Any change in enrollment which 
    results in a different mix of eligibility categories will change the 
    actual percentage of income-eligible children in the home, thus skewing 
    the reimbursements above or below the level which the home would 
    receive under an actual meal count system. Again using the above 
    example, if one income-eligible child is withdrawn from care, the 
    home's actual percentage of children eligible for tier I meal 
    reimbursements would decline from 40 percent to 25 percent. Under most 
    of the simplified methods described above, the provider would then 
    receive more reimbursement than would be the case if actual meal counts 
    by category of reimbursement were used.
    Counting and Claiming Methods Permitted by This Regulation
        Based on its analysis of the relative advantages and disadvantages 
    of each of the methods discussed above, the Department has decided to 
    allow actual meal counts, claiming percentages, or blended rates for 
    counting, reporting, and reimbursement of meals served in tier II day 
    care homes serving children eligible for both tier I and tier II rates. 
    In order to provide maximum flexibility, and recognizing the diversity 
    and varying levels of management sophistication of sponsoring 
    organizations, this interim rule provides sponsoring organizations the 
    option of which of the methods to use for their day care homes. 
    However, each sponsor must use only one method for all of its homes, 
    and will be permitted to change this method no more frequently than 
    annually. This limitation will minimize the potential for 
    administrative confusion and allow State agencies to track each 
    sponsor's system for oversight and claims edit purposes. Further, to 
    mitigate the effects of enrollment changes when using the simplified 
    methods, we are exercising the discretion provided to the Department 
    under new section 17(f)(3)(A)(iii)(IV)(cc) of the NSLA, which permits 
    ``such other simplified procedures as the Secretary may prescribe,'' by 
    requiring that claiming percentages or blended rates for each home be 
    adjusted at least semiannually by the sponsor, rather than annually as 
    is the case for centers.
        At this time, we are not adopting the use of the ``reimbursement 
    categories'' approach described in the law and in two examples above. 
    The above example involving multiple rates makes clear that at this 
    time such an approach is potentially a far more complicated and 
    unfamiliar method that does not offer any distinct advantages over 
    claiming percentages or blended rates. Further, the option of 
    reimbursing at the tier I rates for all meals served in a tier II home 
    with 50 percent or more income-eligible children is far less precise in 
    targeting benefits. The Department is also concerned that there is 
    potential for abuse with this method, since a provider would gain 
    substantial financial benefit when there are 50 percent or more income-
    eligible
    
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    children in the home during the month of the ``category'' 
    determination. Finally, the use of the ``reimbursement categories'' 
    approach could significantly reduce the Federal cost savings attributed 
    to this provision.
        To further alleviate the potential burden on sponsors of the meal 
    counting and reporting provisions being implemented, this interim rule 
    will not establish any specific dates for recalculation of claiming 
    percentages or blended rates for homes, or for determining the income 
    eligibility of enrolled children when utilizing either the simplified 
    methods or actual counts. Rather, by requiring changes to the 
    percentages/rates at each home no less frequently than every six 
    months, and redeterminations of individual eligibility at least 
    annually (as discussed below), sponsors will be able to implement a 
    system to more evenly distribute the work load associated with these 
    options over the course of the year.
        The claiming percentages/blended rates alternative set forth in 
    section 708(e)(1) of the Act indicates that the claiming percentage or 
    blended rate be established based on the percentage of identified 
    income-eligible children enrolled in a home ``in a specified month or 
    other period.'' Although this interim regulation does not prescribe a 
    specific time period for the enrollment determination, the Department 
    believes it may be appropriate to consider methods which more 
    accurately capture the income status of children enrolled in the home. 
    Therefore, we are interested in receiving comments on two potential 
    alternatives which would provide greater accuracy. The first 
    alternative would involve a sponsor calculating the claiming percentage 
    or blended rate based on a home's enrollment for an entire month using 
    a list of enrolled children submitted by the day care home. The sponsor 
    would assess the income eligibility status of each of the children 
    enrolled in the home during the month and, using the enrollment list, 
    derive the appropriate claiming percentage or blended rate. For 
    example, if a home's enrollment list for the month of January indicates 
    that 10 children were enrolled during the month, the home's claiming 
    percentage or blended rate would be based on the number of identified 
    income-eligible children, divided by 10. The second alternative would 
    involve the day care home submitting an attendance list for the 
    specified month. In contrast to the enrollment list, the sponsor using 
    an attendance list would determine the claiming percentage or blended 
    rate for the home using a weighted average of each enrolled child's 
    level of participation during the month. The Department believes that 
    both of these methods achieve greater accuracy in reimbursement 
    payments, though, especially in the case of the attendance list, may 
    impose an additional burden on the sponsor and day care homes.
        Under the claiming percentages/blended rates option, for all tier 
    II homes which elect to have the sponsor determine the income 
    eligibility of enrolled children, the sponsor would make individual 
    income eligibility determinations for enrolled children on an annual 
    basis. The claiming percentage or blended rate would be set for the 
    home at least every six months, taking into account any changes in 
    enrollment that occurred in the six-month period. For example, for a 
    tier II day care home that enters the program in January, the sponsor 
    would take applications and determine the income eligibility of all 
    enrolled children prior to the beginning of program operations. Based 
    on the income status of the children enrolled in the home, a claiming 
    percentage or blended rate would be established for the home. That 
    percentage or rate would be used to reimburse meals served in the home 
    for the next six months, regardless of changes in the home's enrollment 
    during that period. By July, the sponsor would have assessed the income 
    eligibility of those children new to the home since the January 
    calculation, and would calculate a new claiming percentage or blended 
    rate, to be used for the next six months, based on the income 
    eligibility of each child enrolled in the home. Any child whose income 
    status has not been determined at the time of the recalculation would 
    be figured in the calculation at the tier II rate. The status of all 
    children whose income eligibility had been determined in January would 
    remain the same for the July calculation; redeterminations for these 
    children would occur the following January.
        The Department has some concerns about the potential for abuse of 
    the claiming percentage/blended rates method; for example, low-income 
    children who will not be in care on a regular basis could be enrolled 
    by the provider during the month of the calculation so that the 
    claiming percentage or blended rate is more favorable to the provider. 
    Therefore, in an attempt to minimize potential abuse, this rule 
    provides State agencies the authority to require a sponsoring 
    organization to recalculate the claiming percentage or blended rate of 
    any of its homes before the required semiannual calculation if a State 
    agency has reason to believe that a home's percentage of income-
    eligible children has changed significantly or was incorrectly 
    established in the previous calculation. State agencies and sponsors 
    should be aware of and look for such potential abuse when conducting 
    their monitoring activities. The Department is especially interested in 
    receiving comments on ways to further minimize this potential abuse. 
    This issue will be considered further and may be addressed in future 
    guidance or in a future rulemaking concerning the overall management 
    and integrity of the Program.
        Although the claiming percentages/blended rates method will be 
    adopted by this interim rule as the ``simplified meal counting and 
    reporting procedures'' required by law, the Department is especially 
    interested in receiving public comment on the second possible 
    alternative in the law, described above as the ``reimbursement 
    categories'' method, which is not being included in this interim rule. 
    The Department is also interested in suggestions on other systems of 
    meal counting and reporting that would not place undue burden on day 
    care home providers or sponsors, but would provide for reimbursement 
    payments that accurately reflect the income level of the households of 
    enrolled children.
        Accordingly, this rule amends section 226.13(c) to require that 
    State agencies reimburse sponsoring organizations of day care homes 
    based on the number of meals served to enrolled children, by meal type 
    (breakfast, lunch/supper, and supplements) and by category (tier I and 
    tier II), multiplied by the appropriate rates of reimbursement as 
    established in the law. For the reasons discussed previously in this 
    preamble, section 226.13(c) will no longer include the specific base 
    reimbursement rates. The rule also adds a new section, 226.13(d), to 
    set forth the meal counting requirements for day care homes, and to 
    allow sponsoring organizations to select the reimbursement method 
    (either actual counts, claiming percentage, or blended rates) that they 
    will use to pay providers in tier II day care homes with a mix of 
    incomeeligible and non-income-eligible children. If a sponsoring 
    organization elects to use claiming percentages or blended rates, this 
    rule requires in section 226.13(d) that they be recalculated at least 
    every six months, unless the State agency requires the sponsor to 
    recalculate a home's claiming percentage or blended rate before the 
    required semiannual calculation if it has reason to believe that a 
    home's percentage of income-eligible children has changed
    
    [[Page 899]]
    
    significantly or was incorrectly established in the previous 
    calculation. The claiming percentages or blended rates are based on 
    individual income eligibility determinations made on an annual basis in 
    accordance with section 226.23(e)(1).
        For a detailed discussion of the implementation phases of this 
    regulation, please refer to the Implementation section in the preamble 
    below.
    
    Implementation
    
        In order to comply with the Act and implement the provisions of 
    this regulation on July 1, 1997, sponsoring organizations will have to 
    undertake several duties in advance of that date. First, using census 
    data provided to the CACFP State agency by the Department, school data 
    provided by the CACFP State agency by the State agency that administers 
    the NSLP, or day care home providers' income information, all day care 
    homes must be determined to be either tier I or tier II day care homes. 
    As discussed above, once a home is designated as a tier I day care 
    home, all meals served to enrolled children in the home are eligible 
    for tier I rates of reimbursement (except for providers' own children, 
    who must be income eligible). All tier II homes, unless they elect 
    otherwise, will receive the tier II rates of reimbursement for all 
    meals served to enrolled children.
        For all tier II homes in which the provider elects to have income-
    eligible children identified, however, the sponsor must: (1) Collect 
    applications and/or identify categorically eligible children; and (2) 
    elect to use either actual meal counts, claiming percentages or blended 
    rates as the method of reimbursement for all of its homes. If the 
    information is not collected in order to separate actual meal counts by 
    incomeeligible and non-income-eligible children, or to calculate a 
    claiming percentage or blended rate for a tier II day care home by the 
    July 1 implementation date, such a home must receive the lower tier II 
    reimbursement rates for all meals served until the claiming percentage 
    or blended rate is calculated, or the income status of children in an 
    ``actual counts'' home is determined.
    
    Reimbursement Factors for Tier II Homes
    
        Section 708(e)(1) of the Act amended section 17(f)(3)(A)(iii)(I) of 
    the NSLA to establish the reimbursement factors for meals served in 
    tier II day care homes at 95 cents for lunches and suppers, 27 cents 
    for breakfasts, and 13 cents for supplements, with adjustments made to 
    the rates on July 1, 1997, and each July 1 thereafter. As is the case 
    with tier I day care home reimbursement factors, the Act further 
    amended section 17(f)(3)(A)(iii)(I)(bb) of the NSLA to require that 
    these factors be rounded to the nearest lower cent increment, and that 
    adjustments be based on changes to the Consumer Price Index for ``food 
    at home'' instead of ``food away from home.'' As provided for in the 
    Act, adjustments to the rates in subsequent years will be based on the 
    unrounded rate from the preceding school year. As discussed in the 
    preamble above, the base reimbursement rates will not be included in 
    the regulatory language.
        Accordingly, this rule further amends section 226.4(c) to indicate 
    that, except for meals served to children identified as income 
    eligible, as discussed above, all meals served in tier II day care 
    homes will be reimbursed at the rates established in the law for tier 
    II day care homes. Section 226.4(g) is also further amended to 
    incorporate the revised method of adjusting the rates of reimbursement 
    for tier II day care homes.
    
    General Requirements for State Agencies, Sponsors and Homes
    
    State Agency Program Reviews
    
        Section 226.6(l) currently requires State agencies to maintain 
    documentation of reviews of sponsoring organizations conducted, 
    corrective actions prescribed, and follow-up efforts. This section 
    further indicates that State agency reviews shall assess sponsoring 
    organizations' compliance with regulations and Departmental and FCS 
    instructions. Due to the significant financial benefit associated with 
    classification of a day care home as a tier I home, this interim rule 
    specifically requires that State agency reviews of sponsoring 
    organizations of day care homes include an evaluation of the 
    documentation used by sponsors to classify homes as tier I homes. 
    Furthermore, due to the potentially significant financial liability to 
    a State agency if homes are misclassified as tier I homes by sponsors, 
    the Department strongly encourages--but will not require--State 
    agencies to review the documentation supporting classification of tier 
    I day care homes which qualify on the basis of school or census data at 
    the time the sponsor initially makes the determination. Verification 
    requirements for tier I homes qualifying on the basis of the provider's 
    household income are addressed in this preamble below.
        Accordingly, this rule amends section 226.6(l) to require that 
    State agency reviews include the provision discussed above.
    
    Documentation
    
        In addition to changing the method by which sponsoring 
    organizations reimburse meals served in day care homes, the amendments 
    made to the CACFP by the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity 
    Reconciliation Act of 1996 also necessitate changes in the records that 
    day care home sponsors and providers are required to maintain. Section 
    226.15(e) sets forth the recordkeeping requirements for institutions, 
    including sponsoring organizations of day care homes. In addition to 
    documentation of the enrollment of each child in day care, and income 
    eligibility information for enrolled providers' children, sponsors will 
    now be required to maintain income eligibility information for children 
    enrolled in tier II day care homes that have elected to have sponsors 
    collect free or reduced price information. This includes family size 
    and income information and/or evidence of categorical eligibility for 
    children who participate in, or who have a parent participating in, a 
    Federally or State supported child care or other benefit program with 
    an income eligibility limit that does not exceed the standard for free 
    or reduced price meals. Finally, sponsors will also be required to 
    maintain documentation of information used to classify day care homes 
    as tier I day care homes. This would include the appropriate school or 
    census data, and/or applications from providers whose households have 
    been verified as eligible for free or reduced price meals.
        Sections 226.18 (e) and (f) set forth similar recordkeeping 
    requirements for day care homes. These provisions include the 
    requirement that day care home providers maintain daily records of the 
    number of children in attendance and the number of meals, by type 
    (breakfast, lunch/supper, supplements), served to enrolled children. In 
    addition, sponsors are required to submit family size and income 
    information only for providers' own children, and day care homes must 
    maintain documentation of this information. Under this rule, tier II 
    day care homes in which the provider elects to have the sponsoring 
    organization identify enrolled children who are eligible for free or 
    reduced price meals, and whose sponsor employs ``actual counts'' 
    claiming methods, will now be required to maintain and submit to the 
    sponsor the number and types of meals (breakfast, lunch/supper, 
    supplements) served each day to each enrolled child by name.
    
    [[Page 900]]
    
        Accordingly, this rule amends section 226.15(e)(3) to add the above 
    requirements for documentation for sponsoring organizations of day care 
    homes. In addition, section 226.18(f) is amended by removing the second 
    sentence, which restricts the collection and maintenance of family size 
    and income information to that used to determine the eligibility of 
    providers' own children, since this information may now also be 
    collected from the households of children in tier II homes. Finally, 
    section 226.18(e) is amended to add the recordkeeping requirements for 
    tier II day care homes in which actual meal counts are used, as 
    discussed above.
    
    Verification
    
        Section 17(f)(3)(A)(iii)(V) of the NSLA, as amended by section 
    708(e)(1) of Pub. L. 104-193, authorizes the Secretary to establish any 
    necessary minimum verification requirements for tier II day care homes. 
    In addition, the definition of tier I day care home in section 
    17(f)(3)(A)(ii)(I) of the NSLA requires that a day care home that 
    qualifies as a tier I home on the basis of the provider's household 
    income must have this income ``verified by the sponsoring organization 
    of the home under regulations established by the Secretary,'' as 
    mentioned earlier in this preamble.
        Current requirements for conducting verification of eligibility of 
    participants in various types of institutions, which include sponsoring 
    organizations of day care homes, are contained in section 226.23(h). 
    Because day care homes are considered ``nonpricing programs,'' State 
    agencies currently follow the provisions of section 226.23(h)(1), for 
    ``nonpricing programs,'' to verify the applications of day care home 
    providers' own children. This section requires that State agencies 
    review all applications on file to ensure that (1) the application has 
    been correctly and completely executed by the household; (2) the 
    institution (i.e., sponsoring organization) has correctly determined 
    and classified the eligibility of enrolled participants; and (3) the 
    institution (i.e., sponsoring organization) has accurately reported to 
    the State agency the number of enrolled participants meeting the 
    criteria for free or reduced price eligibility and the number that do 
    not. This section also permits States to conduct additional 
    verification to determine the validity of information provided by 
    households on the application, in accordance with section 226.23(h)(2), 
    the verification procedures for ``pricing programs.''
        Now that applications will be collected from the households of some 
    children enrolled in tier II day care homes, the amount of verification 
    activity required to be conducted by State agencies will increase. 
    However, this interim rule is not making any change to the current 
    regulations for verification by State agencies, which will continue to 
    follow the requirements set forth in sections 226.23(h)(1)-(2). 
    Therefore, under this interim rule, State agencies will have the option 
    of conducting the more extensive verification of applications under 
    section 226.23(h)(2), which would include parental contact to verify 
    the information provided on the applications, but are not required to 
    do so. The Department recognizes the importance of verification to 
    reduce the potential for fraud and abuse in the program and is 
    considering what amount of additional verification is appropriate. The 
    Department is considering the possibility of addressing the broad 
    subject of verification of applications in a future proposed rulemaking 
    concerning the overall management and integrity of the Program.
        However, as required by the law, this rule adds the requirement 
    that sponsoring organizations conduct verification of the provider's 
    income, prior to approving the application, for all day care homes that 
    qualify as tier I homes on the basis of the provider's income. Since 
    the information provided on the application results in a large direct 
    benefit to the provider, in the form of higher reimbursements (tier I) 
    for meals served to all children in care, sponsors will be required to 
    perform the more extensive verification of the provider's eligibility 
    as described for pricing programs in current section 226.23(h)(2)(i). 
    This involves verifying the income and other information provided on 
    the approved application through collection of information from the 
    household.
        Accordingly, this rule amends section 226.23(h) by adding a new 
    paragraph, (6), that contains these new requirements for verification 
    by sponsors of family day care homes.
    
    Annual Requirements for Sponsoring Organizations
    
        Section 226.6(f) sets forth requirements that institutions, 
    including sponsoring organizations of day care homes, must comply with 
    on an annual basis. In addition to the current requirements, this rule 
    also adds a requirement that sponsors annually submit current 
    information on the total number of tier I and tier II day care homes, 
    and a breakdown showing the total number of children enrolled in tier I 
    homes, the total number of children enrolled in tier II homes, and the 
    number of identified income-eligible children in tier II homes (i.e., 
    those for whom tier I reimbursements would be claimed). Submission of 
    these data will provide States with information necessary to help 
    ensure that the reimbursement claims subsequently submitted by sponsors 
    accurately reflect enrollment by reimbursement category. In addition, 
    this information will be necessary to conduct the study of the tiering 
    system's impact mandated by section 708(l) of the Act and will provide 
    information regarding the characteristics of program beneficiaries.
        Accordingly, this rule further amends section 226.6(f) by adding 
    new paragraph (11) to require that the above described information on 
    tier I and tier II day care homes and enrolled children be provided by 
    sponsoring organizations to State agencies on an annual basis.
    
    Monthly Reporting by Sponsoring Organizations
    
        Section 226.13(b) requires that each sponsoring organization 
    report, on a monthly basis to the State agency, the total number of 
    meals, by type (breakfast, lunch/supper, supplements), served to 
    children enrolled in day care homes. Due to the changes made to the 
    reimbursement structure for day care homes by Pub. L. 104-193, 
    sponsoring organizations will now be required to report the number of 
    meals served by type and by category (i.e., tier I and tier II). This 
    information will enable State agencies to pay claims to sponsoring 
    organizations at the appropriate levels of reimbursement.
        Accordingly, this rule amends section 226.13(b) to add the 
    requirement that sponsoring organizations of day care homes report to 
    the State agency on a monthly basis the number of meals served by type 
    and by category.
    
    Free and Reduced Price Policy Statements
    
        Section 226.23 of the regulations requires that each institution, 
    including a day care home sponsoring organization, submit when it 
    applies for participation in the Program, a written policy statement 
    concerning free and reduced price meals for use in all facilities under 
    its jurisdiction. Under section 226.23(b), the policy statement for 
    sponsoring organizations of day care homes must consist of an assurance 
    to the State agency that all participants are served the same meals at 
    no separate charge, and that there is no discrimination in the course 
    of food
    
    [[Page 901]]
    
    service. With the establishment of tier I and tier II day care homes 
    under the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation 
    Act, different meal reimbursements may now be received for children in 
    the same day care home. Therefore, the Department believes it is 
    important for the sponsoring organization's policy statement to also 
    include an assurance that there will be no identification of tier I and 
    tier II recipients in day care homes, and that sponsoring organizations 
    will not share income eligibility information concerning individual 
    households with the day care homes and will limit the use of the 
    information to persons directly connected with the administration and 
    enforcement of the Program.
        The Department notes that section 703 of Pub. L. 104-193 amended 
    section 9(b)(2)(D) of the NSLA to prohibit the requirement of annual 
    submission of free and reduced price policy statements once the initial 
    policy has been submitted unless there are substantive changes to the 
    original statement. However, it is the Department's position that a 
    change of the magnitude of the institution of the tiering system for 
    day care homes in the CACFP constitutes a ``substantive change'' in the 
    free and reduced price policy, and thus the revised free and reduced 
    price policy statement must be submitted to the State agency for 
    approval. Accordingly, this rule amends section 226.23(b) to add the 
    above requirement.
    
    Providers' Own Children
    
        The Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act 
    did not make any changes to the current requirements concerning 
    providers' own children. In order to receive reimbursement for meals 
    served to providers' own children, the provider's household must meet 
    the income eligibility guidelines for free or reduced price meals. The 
    definitions of tier I and tier II homes in the law are such that meals 
    served to providers' own children could only be eligible for 
    reimbursement in tier I day care homes. Any provider in a non-needy 
    area whose own children are eligible for reimbursement would, by virtue 
    of being low income, meet the definition of a tier I home. It should be 
    noted, however, that income eligibility still must be determined for 
    providers' own children in homes that sponsors approve as tier I homes 
    based on census or school data. Since current regulations already 
    reflect the requirements of the law, this rule does not make any 
    changes to the regulatory language concerning providers' own children.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    7 CFR Part 210
    
        Breakfast, Children, Food assistance programs, Grant programs--
    Social programs, Lunch, Meal Supplements, Nutrition, Reporting and 
    recordkeeping requirements, School Nutrition Program, Surplus 
    agricultural commodities.
    
    7 CFR Part 226
    
        Day care, Food assistance programs, Grant programs-health, infants 
    and children, Records, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, 
    Surplus agricultural commodities.
    
        Accordingly, 7 CFR Parts 210 and 226 are amended as follows:
    
    PART 210--NATIONAL SCHOOL LUNCH PROGRAM
    
        1. The authority citation for 7 CFR Part 210 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1751-1760, 1779.
    
        2. In Sec. 210.9, a new paragraph (b)(20) is added to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 210.9  Agreement with State agency.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Annual agreement. * * *
        (20) No later than March 1, 1997, and no later than December 31 of 
    each year thereafter, provide the State agency with a list of all 
    elementary schools under its jurisdiction in which 50 percent or more 
    of enrolled children have been determined eligible for free or reduced 
    price meals as of the last operating day of the preceding October.
    * * * * *
        3. In Sec. 210.19, a new paragraph (f) is added to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 210.19  Additional responsibilities
    
    * * * * *
        (f) Cooperation with the Child and Adult Care Food Program. No 
    later than March 15, 1997, and no later than February 1 each year 
    thereafter, the State agency shall provide the State agency which 
    administers the Child and Adult Care Food Program with a list of all 
    elementary schools in the State participating in the National School 
    Lunch Program in which 50 percent or more of enrolled children have 
    been determined eligible for free or reduced price meals as of the last 
    operating day of the preceding October. In addition, the State agency 
    shall provide the current list, upon request, to sponsoring 
    organizations of day care homes participating in the Child and Adult 
    Care Food Program.
    
    PART 226--CHILD AND ADULT CARE FOOD PROGRAM
    
        1. The authority citation for Part 226 continues to read as 
    follows:
        Authority: Secs. 9, 11, 14, 16, and 17, National School Lunch 
    Act, as amended (42 U.S.C. 1758, 1759a, 1762a, 1765, and 1766).
    
        2. In Sec. 226.2:
        a. The definition of Documentation is amended by redesignating 
    paragraph (c) as paragraph (d), and by adding a new paragraph (c); and
        b. definitions of Tier I day care home and Tier II day care home 
    are added.
        The additions read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 226.2  Definitions.
    
    * * * * *
        Documentation means * * *
        (c) For a child in a tier II day care home who is a member of a 
    household participating in a Federally or State supported child care or 
    other benefit program with an income eligibility limit that does not 
    exceed the eligibility standard for free and reduced price meals:
        (1) the name(s), appropriate case number(s) and name of the 
    qualifying program(s) for the child(ren); and
        (2) the signature of an adult member of the household.
    * * * * *
        Tier I day care home means (a) a day care home that is operated by 
    a provider whose household meets the income standards for free or 
    reduced-price meals, as determined by the sponsoring organization based 
    on a completed free and reduced price application, and whose income is 
    verified by the sponsoring organization of the home in accordance with 
    Sec. 226.23(h)(6);
        (b) a day care home that is located in an area served by a school 
    enrolling elementary students in which at least 50 percent of the total 
    number of children enrolled are certified eligible to receive free or 
    reduced price meals; or
        (c) a day care home that is located in a geographic area, as 
    defined by FCS based on census data, in which at least 50 percent of 
    the children residing in the area are members of households which meet 
    the income standards for free or reduced price meals.
        Tier II day care home means a day care home that does not meet the 
    criteria for a Tier I day care home.
    * * * * *
        3. In Sec. 226.4:
        a. Paragraph (c) is revised; and
        b. Paragraph (g)(1) is revised.
        The revisions read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 226.4  Payments to States and use of funds.
    
    * * * * *
    
    [[Page 902]]
    
        (c) Day care home funds. For meals served to children in day care 
    homes, funds shall be made available to each State agency in an amount 
    no less than the sum of products obtained by multiplying:
        (1) The number of breakfasts served in the Program within the State 
    to children enrolled in tier I day care homes by the current tier I day 
    care home rate for breakfasts;
        (2) The number of breakfasts served in the Program within the State 
    to children enrolled in tier II day care homes that have been 
    determined eligible for free or reduced price meals by the current tier 
    I day care home rate for breakfasts;
        (3) The number of breakfasts served in the Program within the State 
    to children enrolled in tier II day care homes that do not satisfy the 
    eligibility standards for free or reduced price meals, or to children 
    from whose households applications were not collected, by the current 
    tier II day care home rate for breakfasts;
        (4) The number of lunches and suppers served in the Program within 
    the State to children enrolled in tier I day care homes by the current 
    tier I day care home rate for lunches/suppers;
        (5) The number of lunches and suppers served in the Program within 
    the State to children enrolled in tier II day care homes that have been 
    determined eligible for free or reduced price meals by the current tier 
    I day care home rate for lunches/suppers;
        (6) The number of lunches and suppers served in the Program within 
    the State to children enrolled in tier II day care homes that do not 
    satisfy the eligibility standards for free or reduced price meals, or 
    to children from whose households applications were not collected, by 
    the current tier II day care home rate for lunches/suppers;
        (7) The number of supplements served in the Program within the 
    State to children enrolled in tier I day care homes by the current tier 
    I day care home rate for supplements;
        (8) The number of supplements served in the Program within the 
    State to children enrolled in tier II day care homes that have been 
    determined eligible for free or reduced price meals by the current tier 
    I day care home rate for supplements; and
        (9) The number of supplements served in the Program within the 
    State to children enrolled in tier II day care homes that do not 
    satisfy the eligibility standards for free or reduced price meals, or 
    to children from whose households applications were not collected, by 
    the current tier II day care home rate for supplements.
    * * * * *
        (g) * * *
        (1) The rates for meals served in tier I and tier II day care homes 
    shall be adjusted annually, on July 1 (beginning July 1, 1997), on the 
    basis of changes in the series for food at home of the Consumer Price 
    Index for All Urban Consumers published by the Department of Labor. 
    Such adjustments shall be rounded to the nearest lower cent based on 
    changes measured over the most recent twelve-month period for which 
    data are available. The adjustments shall be computed using the 
    unrounded rate in effect for the preceding school year.
    * * * * *
        4. In Sec. 226.6:
        a. The second sentence of paragraph (f)(2) is revised;
        b. Paragraphs (f)(9), (f)(10), and (f)(11) are added; and
        c. A new sentence is added after the third sentence of paragraph 
    (l) introductory text.
        The additions and revision read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 226.6  State agency administrative responsibilities.
    
    * * * * *
        (f) * * *
        (2) * * * Such a plan shall include: detailed information on the 
    organizational administrative structure; the staff assigned to Program 
    management and monitoring; administrative budget; procedures which will 
    be used by the sponsoring organization to administer the Program in and 
    disburse payments to the child care facilities under its jurisdiction; 
    and, for sponsoring organizations of day care homes, a description of 
    the system for making tier I day care home determinations, and a 
    description of the system of notifying tier II day care homes of their 
    options for reimbursement. For initial implementation of the two-tiered 
    reimbursement structure for day care homes, by April 1, 1997, each 
    sponsoring organization of day care homes shall submit an amendment to 
    its plan, subject to review and approval by the State agency, 
    describing its systems for making tier I day care home determinations 
    and for notifying tier II day care homes of their options for 
    reimbursement.
    * * * * *
        (9) Coordinate with the State agency which administers the National 
    School Lunch Program to ensure the receipt of a list of elementary 
    schools in the State in which at least one-half of the children 
    enrolled are certified eligible to receive free or reduced price meals. 
    The State agency shall provide the list to sponsoring organizations by 
    April 1, 1997, and by each February 15 thereafter. The State agency 
    also shall provide each sponsoring organization with census data, as 
    provided to the State agency by FCS upon its availability on a 
    decennial basis, showing areas in the State in which at least 50 
    percent of the children are from households meeting the income 
    standards for free or reduced price meals. In addition, the State 
    agency shall ensure that the most recent available data is used if the 
    determination of a day care home's eligibility as a tier I day care 
    home is made using school or census data. Determinations of a day care 
    home's eligibility as a tier I day care home shall be valid for one 
    year if based on a provider's household income, three years if based on 
    school data, or until more current data are available if based on 
    census data. However, a sponsoring organization, the State agency, or 
    FCS may change the determination if information becomes available 
    indicating that a home is no longer in a qualified area.
        (10) Provide all sponsoring organizations of day care homes in the 
    State with a listing of State-funded programs, participation in which 
    by a parent or child will qualify a meal served to a child in a tier II 
    home for the tier I rate of reimbursement.
        (11) Require each sponsoring organization of day care homes to 
    submit the total number of tier I and tier II day care homes that it 
    sponsors; a breakdown showing the total number of children enrolled in 
    tier I day care homes; the total number of children enrolled in tier II 
    day care homes; and the number of children in tier II day care homes 
    that have been identified as eligible for free or reduced price meals.
    * * * * *
        (1) * * * Program reviews shall include State agency evaluation of 
    the documentation used by sponsoring organizations to classify their 
    day care homes as tier I day care homes. * * *
    * * * * *
        5. In Sec. 226.13:
        a. Paragraph (b) is revised;
        b. Paragraph (c) is revised; and
        c. New paragraph (d) is added.
        The addition and revisions read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 226.13  Food service payments to sponsoring organizations for day 
    care homes.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Each sponsoring organization shall report each month to the 
    State agency the total number of meals, by type (breakfasts, lunches, 
    suppers, and
    
    [[Page 903]]
    
    supplements) and by category (tier I and tier II), served to children 
    enrolled in approved day care homes.
        (c) Each sponsoring organization shall receive payment for meals 
    served to children enrolled in approved day care homes at the tier I 
    and tier II reimbursement rates, as applicable, and as established by 
    law and adjusted in accordance with Sec. 226.4. However, the rates for 
    lunches and suppers shall be reduced by the value of commodities 
    established under Sec. 226.5(b) for all sponsoring organizations for 
    day care homes which have elected to receive commodities. For tier I 
    day care homes, the full amount of food service payments shall be 
    disbursed to each day care home on the basis of the number of meals 
    served, by type, to enrolled children. For tier II day care homes, the 
    full amount of food service payments shall be disbursed to each day 
    care home on the basis of the number of meals served to enrolled 
    children by type, and by category (tier I and tier II) as determined in 
    accordance with paragraphs (d)(2) and (d)(3) of this section. However, 
    the sponsoring organization may withhold from Program payments to each 
    home an amount equal to costs incurred for the provision of Program 
    foodstuffs or meals by the sponsoring organization on behalf of the 
    home and with the home provider's written consent.
        (d) As applicable, each sponsoring organization for day care homes 
    shall:
        (1) Require that tier I day care homes submit the number of meals 
    served, by type, to enrolled children.
        (2) Require that tier II day care homes in which the provider 
    elects not to have the sponsoring organization identify enrolled 
    children who are eligible for free or reduced price meals submit the 
    number of meals served, by type, to enrolled children.
        (3) Not more frequently than annually, select one of the methods 
    described in paragraphs (d)(3) (i)-(iii) of this section for all tier 
    II day care homes in which the provider elects to have the sponsoring 
    organization identify enrolled children who are eligible for free or 
    reduced price meals. In such homes, the sponsoring organization shall 
    either:
        (i) Require that such day care homes submit the number and types of 
    meals served each day to each enrolled child by name. The sponsoring 
    organization shall use the information submitted by the homes to 
    produce an actual count, by type and by category (tier I and tier II), 
    of meals served in the homes; or
        (ii) Establish claiming percentages, not less frequently than 
    semiannually, for each such day care home on the basis of the number of 
    enrolled children determined eligible for free or reduced-price meals. 
    The State agency may require a sponsoring organization to recalculate 
    the claiming percentage for any of its day care homes before the 
    required semiannual calculation if the State agency has reason to 
    believe that a home's percentage of income-eligible children has 
    changed significantly or was incorrectly established in the previous 
    calculation. Under this system, day care homes shall be required to 
    submit the number of meals served, by type, to enrolled children; or
        (iii) Determine a blended per-meal rate of reimbursement, not less 
    frequently than semiannually, for each such day care home by adding the 
    products obtained by multiplying the applicable rate of reimbursement 
    for each category (tier I and tier II) by the claiming percentage for 
    that category. The State agency may require a sponsoring organization 
    to recalculate the blended rate for any of its day care homes before 
    the required semiannual calculation if the State agency has reason to 
    believe that a home's percentage of income-eligible children has 
    changed significantly or was incorrectly established in the previous 
    calculation. Under this system, day care homes shall be required to 
    submit the number of meals served, by type, to enrolled children.
        6. In Sec. 226.14, the introductory text of paragraph (a) is 
    amended by adding a sentence after the first sentence to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 226.14  Claims against institutions.
    
        (a) * * * State agencies shall assert overclaims against any 
    sponsoring organization of day care homes which misclassifies a day 
    care home as a tier I day care home unless the misclassification is 
    determined to be inadvertent under guidance issued by FCS. * * *
    * * * * *
        7. In Sec. 226.15:
        a. Paragraph(e)(3) is revised;
        b. Paragraphs (f) through (j) are redesignated as paragraphs (g) 
    through (k), respectively; and
        a. A new paragraph (f) is added.
        The addition and revision read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 226.15  Institution provisions.
    
    * * * * *
        (e) * * *
        (3) Documentation of: the enrollment of each child at day care 
    homes; information used to determine the eligibility of enrolled 
    providers' children for free or reduced price meals; information used 
    to classify day care homes as tier I day care homes; and information 
    used to determine the eligibility of enrolled children in tier II day 
    care homes that have been identified as eligible for free or reduced 
    price meals in accordance with Sec. 226.23(e)(1).
    * * * * *
        (f) Day care home classifications. Each sponsoring organization of 
    day care homes shall determine which of the day care homes under its 
    sponsorship are eligible as tier I day care homes. A sponsoring 
    organization may use current school or census data provided by the 
    State agency or free and reduced price applications collected from day 
    care home providers in making a determination for each day care home. 
    Determinations of a day care home's eligibility as a tier I day care 
    home shall be valid for one year if based on a provider's household 
    income, three years if based on school data, or until more current data 
    are available if based on census data. However, a sponsoring 
    organization, State agency, or FCS may change the determination if 
    information becomes available indicating that a home is no longer in a 
    qualified area.
    * * * * *
        8. In Sec. 226.18:
        a. Paragraphs (b)(11) and (b)(12) are added;
        b. Paragraph (e) is amended by adding a new sentence after the 
    first sentence; and
        c. Paragraph (f) is amended by removing the second sentence.
        The additions and revision read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 226.18  Day care home provisions.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (11) The responsibility of the sponsoring organization to inform 
    tier II day care homes of all of their options for receiving 
    reimbursement for meals served to enrolled children.
        (12) The responsibility of the sponsoring organization, upon the 
    request of a tier II day care home, to collect applications and 
    determine the eligibility of enrolled children for free or reduced 
    price meals.
    * * * * *
        (e) * * * Each tier II day care home in which the provider elects 
    to have the sponsoring organization identify enrolled children who are 
    eligible for free or reduced price meals, and in which the sponsoring 
    organization employs a meal counting and claiming system in accordance 
    with Sec. 226.13(d)(3)(i), shall maintain and submit each month to the 
    sponsoring organization daily records of the
    
    [[Page 904]]
    
    number and types of meals served to each enrolled child by name. * * *
    * * * * *
        9. In Sec. 226.23:
        a. Paragraph (b) is amended by adding a sentence at the end of the 
    paragraph;
        b. Paragraph (e)(1)(i) is revised;
        c. Paragraph (e)(1)(iv) is revised; and
        d. Paragraph (h)(6) is added.
        The additions and revisions read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 226.23  Free and reduced price meals.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * * This statement shall also contain an assurance that there 
    will be no identification of children in day care homes in which meals 
    are reimbursed at both the tier I and tier II reimbursement rates, and 
    that the sponsoring organization will not make any free and reduced 
    price eligibility information concerning individual households 
    available to day care homes and will otherwise limit the use of such 
    information to persons directly connected with the administration and 
    enforcement of the Program.
    * * * * *
        (e)(1) * * *
        (i) For the purpose of determining eligibility for free and reduced 
    price meals, institutions shall distribute applications for free and 
    reduced price meals to the families of participants enrolled in the 
    institution. Sponsoring organizations of day care homes shall 
    distribute applications for free and reduced price meals to day care 
    home providers who wish to enroll their own eligible children in the 
    Program. At the request of a provider in a tier II day care home, 
    sponsoring organizations of day care homes shall distribute 
    applications for free and reduced price meals to households of all 
    children enrolled in the home, or, if the provider in a tier II day 
    care home so elects, shall distribute such applications only to 
    households identified as being categorically eligible for tier I meals. 
    These applications, and any other descriptive material distributed to 
    such persons, shall contain only the family-size income levels for 
    reduced price meal eligibility with an explanation that households with 
    incomes less than or equal to these levels are eligible for free or 
    reduced price meals. Such forms and descriptive materials may not 
    contain the income standards for free meals. However, such forms and 
    materials distributed by child care institutions other than sponsoring 
    organizations of day care homes shall state that, if a child is a 
    member of a food stamp household or AFDC assistance unit, the child is 
    automatically eligible to receive free Program meal benefits, subject 
    to the completion of the application as described in paragraph 
    (e)(1)(ii) of this section; such forms and materials distributed by 
    sponsoring organizations of day care homes shall state that, if a child 
    or a child's parent is participating in or subsidized under a Federally 
    or State supported child care or other benefit program with an income 
    eligibility limit that does not exceed the eligibility standard for 
    free or reduced price meals, meals served to the child are 
    automatically eligible for tier I reimbursement, subject to the 
    completion of the application as described in paragraph (e)(1)(ii) of 
    this section, and shall list any programs identified by the State 
    agency as meeting this standard; such forms and materials distributed 
    by adult day care centers shall state that, if an adult participant is 
    a member of a food stamp household or is a SSI or Medicaid participant, 
    the adult participant is automatically eligible to receive free Program 
    meal benefits, subject to the completion of the application as 
    described in paragraph (e)(1)(iii) of this section. Sponsoring 
    organizations of day care homes shall not make free and reduced price 
    eligibility information concerning individual households available to 
    day care homes and shall otherwise limit the use of such information to 
    persons directly connected with the administration and enforcement of 
    the Program. However, sponsoring organizations may inform tier II day 
    care homes of the number of identified income-eligible enrolled 
    children.
    * * * * *
        (iv) If they so desire, households applying on behalf of children 
    who are members of food stamp households or AFDC assistance units may 
    apply for free meal benefits under this paragraph rather than under the 
    procedures described in paragraph (e)(1)(ii) of this section. In 
    addition, households of children enrolled in tier II day care homes who 
    are participating in a Federally or State supported child care or other 
    benefit program with an income eligibility limit that does not exceed 
    the eligibility standard for free and reduced price meals may apply 
    under this paragraph rather than under the procedures described in 
    paragraph (e)(1)(ii) of this section. Households applying on behalf of 
    children who are members of food stamp households, AFDC assistance 
    units, or, for children enrolled in tier II day care homes, other 
    qualifying Federal or State programs, shall be required to provide:
        (A) The names and food stamp, AFDC, or for tier II homes, other 
    case number of the child(ren) for whom automatic free meal eligibility 
    is claimed; and
        (B) the signature of an adult member of the household as provided 
    for in paragraph (e)(1)(ii)(G) of this section. In accordance with 
    paragraph (e)(1)(ii)(F) of this section, if a case number is provided, 
    it may be used to verify the current certification for the child(ren) 
    for whom free meal benefits are claimed. Whenever households apply for 
    benefits for children not receiving food stamp, AFDC, or for tier II 
    homes, other qualifying Federal or State program benefits, they must 
    apply in accordance with the requirements set forth in paragraph 
    (e)(1)(ii) of this section.
    * * * * *
        (h) * * *
        (6) Verification procedures for sponsoring organizations of day 
    care homes. Prior to approving an application for a day care home that 
    qualifies as tier I day care home on the basis of the provider's 
    household income, sponsoring organizations of day care homes shall 
    conduct verification of such income in accordance with the procedures 
    contained in paragraph (h)(2)(i) of this section.
    
        Dated: December 30, 1996.
    Ellen Haas,
    Under Secretary for Food, Nutrition, and Consumer Services.
    
    Appendix to the Preamble
    
        Note: This appendix will not appear in the Code of Federal 
    Regulations
    
    ECONOMIC IMPACT ANALYSIS
    
    1. Title: Child and Adult Care Food Program: Improved Targeting of Day 
    Care Home Reimbursements
    
    2. Statutory Authority: Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity 
    Reconciliation Act of 1996 (P.L. 104-193)
    
    3. Background
    
        This interim rule amends the Child and Adult Care Food Program 
    (CACFP) regulations governing reimbursement rates for meals served 
    in family or group day care homes by incorporating provisions of the 
    Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 
    1996 (P.L. 104-193); these provisions reduce the reimbursement rates 
    for meals served to children who do not qualify for low-income 
    subsidies. Specifically, this rule develops a two tier reimbursement 
    structure for meals served to children enrolled in family or group 
    day care homes. Under this structure, the level of reimbursement for 
    meals served to enrolled children will be determined by: (1) the 
    location of the day care home; (2) the income of the day care 
    provider; or (3) the income of each enrolled child's household.
    
    [[Page 905]]
    
    This interim rule targets CACFP meal reimbursement payments to low-
    income children and the day care home providers who serve them, 
    where low-income is defined as not exceeding 185 percent of the 
    Federal income poverty guidelines. This interim rule retains near-
    current reimbursement rates for meals served to children by 
    providers residing in low-income areas or served by providers who 
    are low-income. Near-current reimbursements will also be retained 
    for meals served to children who are identified as low-income even 
    if the provider neither resides in a low-income area nor is low-
    income. Meals served to all other children will be reimbursed at the 
    lower rates. These changes will be effective July 1, 1997.
    
    4. Cost/Benefit Assessment of Economic and Other Effects
    
    Benefits
    
        The need to reduce overall Federal expenditures has prompted a 
    review of many programs and led to the legislative decision to 
    improve the targeting of CACFP benefits to low-income children. To 
    accomplish targeting of benefits, the Personal Responsibility and 
    Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 establishes two tiers of 
    day care homes and reimbursement rates. Under tiering, any CACFP 
    participating day care home (DCH) located in a low-income area or 
    operated by a low-income provider is eligible for tier I status, 
    where low-income areas are determined by local school or census 
    data. All meals served in tier I DCHs are reimbursed at the higher 
    set of reimbursement rates. All DCHs not qualifying for tier I are 
    tier II DCHs. Meals served in tier II DCHs are reimbursed at the 
    lower set of rates, with the exception that meals served to 
    documented low-income children are reimbursed at the higher set of 
    rates.
        The initial establishment of the Child Care Food Program (CCFP) 
    in November, 1975 required both types of CCFP providers, day care 
    centers and DCHs, to make individual eligibility determinations 
    based on each participating child's household size and income. Meal 
    reimbursement rates paid to sponsors for meals served in DCHs were 
    based on each enrolled child's documented eligibility for free, 
    reduced price or paid meals. In order to be a DCH, which denotes a 
    CCFP participating home in this analysis, a home has always had to 
    (1) meet State licensing requirements, or be approved by a State or 
    local agency and (2) be sponsored by an organization that assumes 
    responsibility for ensuring the DCH's compliance with Federal and 
    State regulations (these licensing and sponsorship requirements are 
    still in effect).
        In the years following establishment of the program, concerns 
    were raised that the paperwork and recordkeeping requirements were 
    creating barriers to DCH participation in the CCFP. In 1978, P.L. 
    95-627 eliminated free and reduced price eligibility determinations 
    for individual children in DCHs (but left unchanged day care 
    centers' individual eligibility determination requirements), and 
    established a single reimbursement rate for each type of meal served 
    in DCHs (lunches/suppers, breakfasts), and such changes encouraged 
    day care providers' participation in the CCFP by reducing their 
    administrative paperwork burden. The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation 
    Act of 1981 added the requirement of a means test for providers to 
    claim reimbursements for meals served to their own children in care. 
    With this sole exception, all DCHs continued to receive the same 
    reimbursements for all meals served to children in care, regardless 
    of each child's income.
        The day care portion of the CCFP (The CCFP was renamed the Child 
    and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) in 1989 when an adult day care 
    component was added.) has experienced dramatic growth in both DCH 
    participation and Federal government costs. From fiscal year 1986 to 
    fiscal year 1995, the number of participating DCHs increased from 
    82,000 to 193,000, an increase of 134 percent. During the same 
    period, meal reimbursements in nominal dollars increased from around 
    $190 million to about $730 million, a 280 percent increase.1,2 
    Program growth has occurred primarily among non-low-income children: 
    table 1 shows that the proportion of low-income DCH participants 
    decreased rapidly after individual eligibility determinations were 
    eliminated in 1978. The table shows the proportion of DCH children 
    with household incomes below 130 percent of the Federal income 
    poverty guidelines decreased by 33 percentage points between 1977 
    and 1982 and by an additional 9 between 1982 and 1986. During the 
    same periods the percentage of non-low-income children (above 185 
    percent of poverty) increased 46 and 7 percentage points, 
    respectively. While empirical data is unavailable, it is believed 
    that the income status of children in DCHs in 1996 was comparable to 
    that in 1986. The growth in DCHs among non-low-income children is 
    the impetus for P.L. 104-193's targeting of DCH benefits to low-
    income children.
    
                             Table 1.--Income Eligibility Status of Children in DCHs by Year                        
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                        Percent of DCH children in poverty strata by year(s)        
                                               ---------------------------------------------------------------------
                Percent of poverty                                             Change                      Change   
                                                    1977a         1982b     between 1977-     1986c     between 1982-
                                                                                1982                        1986    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    130............................           58            25           -33            16            -9 
    131-185...................................           24            11           -13            13            +2 
    185............................           18            64           +46            71            +7 
                                               ---------------------------------------------------------------------
          Total...............................          100           100           N/A           100           N/A 
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    a Percentage represent the proportion of meals served by category: free (to children from hoseholds with income 
      130% of Federal income poverty guidelines), reduced price (131-185% of poverty), and paid (185% of poverty). Since most DCHs operating in 1977 were non-pricing, that is did not charge separately for
      each meal served, it is assumed children in care of different income strata have equal propensitives consume  
      meals, which implies the proportion of meals served by category in 1977 is a reasonable proxy for children's  
      income eligibility percentages (assuming children eligible for free or reduced-price benefirts generally      
      became approved to receive them).                                                                             
    b Taken from a citation of the Evaluation of Child Care Food Program: Results of the Child Care Food Program:   
      Results of the Child Impact Study Telephone Survey and Pilot Study in the Study of the Child Care Food Program
      \1\ report.                                                                                                   
    c Taken from Study of the Child Care Food Program.\1\                                                           
    
        The 1986 Study of the Child Care Food Program (CCFP Study) \1\ 
    that was conducted by Abt. and sponsored by USDA Food and Nutrition 
    Service, found that approximately 70 percent of the children 
    enrolled in DCHs in 1986 would not have been eligible for free or 
    reduced price meals had a means test been performed on them. The 
    establishment of a two tier reimbursement system focuses Federal 
    child care benefits on children who are low-income.
        The two tier reimbursement rate structure is expected to effect 
    significant Federal budgetary savings. The six year projected 
    savings (fiscal years 1997-2002) are approximately $2.2 billion (see 
    table 4). The savings would result from 1) a reduction in the 
    reimbursement rates for meals served in tier II (non-low-income) 
    DCHs and 2) a decrease in the rate of growth of day care home 
    participation in the CACFP and savings in sponsor administrative 
    payments and audit expenditures resulting from this slower rate of 
    growth. The estimated savings assume that in fiscal years 1997-2002 
    approximately 70 percent of the children in care will be ineligible 
    for the higher reimbursement rates. This 70 percent assumption 
    follows from the income levels of the children who participated in 
    1986.1
        The reduction in reimbursement rates for meals served to 
    children in tier II DCHs who are not documented income-eligible 
    would result in savings of approximately $1.9 billion over the next 
    six years (fiscal years
    
    [[Page 906]]
    
    1997-2002). Rates for all meals served to these children-lunches/
    supper, breakfasts, and supplements-would decrease as shown in table 
    2. The rate change would result in a savings of about $0.63 for 
    every lunch or supper served during fiscal year 1998, the first full 
    fiscal year in which the new two tier system will be in effect. The 
    savings would increase to about $0.70 per meal by fiscal year 2002. 
    Breakfast savings would range from almost $0.61 per meal served in 
    fiscal year 1998 to almost $0.66 in fiscal year 2002, and supplement 
    savings would range from about $0.35 cents in fiscal year 1998 to 
    almost $0.39 cents in fiscal year 2002.
    
                        Table 2.--Changes in Tier II DCH Meal Reimbursement Rates Due to Tiering                    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                    Projected meal reimbursement rates              
                                                     ---------------------------------------------------------------
              Fiscal year               Meal type                        Tier II DCH rates                          
                                                       DCH rates before   after P.L. 104-    Difference    Percent  
                                                         P.L. 104-193           193                         change  
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    1998..........................  Lunch/Supper....            $1.6175            $0.9900      $0.6275        -38.8
                                    Breakfast.......             0.8850             0.2800       0.6050        -68.4
                                    Supplement......             0.4825             0.1300       0.3525        -73.1
    1999..........................  Lunch/Supper....             1.6600             1.0100       0.6500        -39.2
                                    Breakfast.......             0.9050             0.2900       0.6150        -68.0
                                    Supplement......             0.4950             0.1400       0.3550        -71.7
    2000..........................  Lunch/Supper....             1.7050             1.0400       0.6650        -39.0
                                    Breakfast.......             0.9275             0.3000       0.6275        -67.7
                                    Supplement......             0.5075             0.1400       0.3675        -72.4
    2001..........................  Lunch/Supper....             1.7500             1.0700       0.6800        -38.9
                                    Breakfast.......             0.9525             0.3100       0.6425        -67.5
                                    Supplement......             0.5225             0.1400       0.3825        -73.2
    2002..........................  Lunch/Supper....             1.7975             1.1000       0.6975        -38.8
                                    Breakfast.......             0.9750             0.3200       0.6550        -67.2
                                    Supplement......             0.5350             0.1500       0.3850        -72.0
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The growth of day care home participation in the CACFP is 
    projected to slow as a result of the two tier rate structure, as 
    some would-be providers are expected to perceive the program as 
    offering insufficient financial incentive and/or being more 
    administratively burdensome, relative to the financial benefits, 
    than under prior law. This slowing in homes' participation is 
    projected to cause a slowing in the rate of growth of sponsor 
    administrative payments and meals served. As shown in table 3, it is 
    estimated that in fiscal year 1998, the first full year of tiering, 
    27 million fewer meals will be served than would have been served 
    under the current reimbursement rate structure (due to a slower 
    growth rate in day care home participation). The six year effect 
    (fiscal years 1997-2002) of this projected slowing of growth is a 
    decrease in the number of meals served by 376 million, which is 
    measured relative to the number projected under pre-July 1, 1997 
    reimbursement rates. The six year (fiscal years 1997-2002) projected 
    savings from this slowing of program growth is approximately $300 
    million, measured in nominal dollars.
    
                                Table 3.--Changes in DCH Meal Growth Rate Due to Tiering                            
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                           Projected meals (in thousands) b                         
                                 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
             Fiscal year                                   After P.L. 104-193                                       
                                   Before P.L. ------------------------------------------  Difference      Percent  
                                     104-193       Tier I        Tier II        Total        (total)       change   
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    1997 a......................       817,177       243,528       568,232       811,760        -5,417          -0.7
    1998........................       860,488       249,982       583,290       833,272       -27,216          -3.2
    1999........................       904,372       256,356       598,164       854,520       -49,852          -5.5
    2000........................       948,687       262,637       612,819       875,456       -73,231          -7.7
    2001........................       993,275       268,809       627,221       896,029       -97,246          -9.8
    2002........................     1,039,959       275,126       641,960       917,086      -122,873         -11.8
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    1997-2002...................     5,563,958     1,556,437     3,631,687     5,188,124      -375,834          -6.8
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    a Tiering does not become effective until the beginning of the fourth quarter (July 1, 1997) of fiscal year     
      1997.                                                                                                         
    b In fiscal year 1995, national DCH meal counts imply the average DCH served 19 breakfasts, 31 lunches/suppers, 
      and 31 supplements in an average week.                                                                        
    
    Costs
    
        This interim rule promulgates the two tier CACFP meal 
    reimbursement system specified in P.L. 104-193. This system was 
    designed to reduce Federal child care subsidies to providers and 
    parents who are non-low-income. Tiering will reap a projected $2.2 
    billion in Federal savings over the next six fiscal years through 
    (1) lower meal reimbursement payment rates for non-low-income DCH 
    providers and non-low-income children and (2) secondary savings 
    stemming from the lower rates, including the decrease in DCH growth 
    rate. The non-low-income providers will likely pass some of their 
    revenue loss on to their clientele (primarily non-low-income 
    parents) through higher child care fees. Non-low-income providers 
    and parents will thus bear most of ing from the projected $2.2 
    billion reduction in Federal expenditures--as was the intent of P.L. 
    104-193. In addition to these fiscal costs, operating the two tier 
    system will place new
    
    [[Page 907]]
    
    administrative burdens (costs) on DCH sponsors, State CACFP and 
    State National School Lunch Program (NSLP) agencies, and NSLP school 
    food authorities. The following analysis will show these 
    administrative costs are minor in comparison with the costs to non-
    low-income providers and parents.
    
                                                                     Table 4.--Federal CACFP DCH Costs Before and After P.L. 104-193                                                                
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                            Before P.L. 104-193                             After P.L. 104-193                                           Change                     
                                                   -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                                   Meal                                     Total DCH                               
                      Fiscal year                                  Total    Admin. and             ------------------------------------ Admin. and --------------------------    Meal     Admin. and
                                                     Total DCH     meals       audit     Total DCH    Tier I      Tier II      Total       audit                               (percent)     audit  
                                                                                                       meal        meal        meal                    Dollars      Percent                (percent)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    1997 a........................................    $952,099    $809,639    $142,460    $871,012    $242,083    $487,300    $729,383    $141,630      -$81,087        -8.5        -9.9        -0.6
    1998..........................................   1,026,020     875,034     150,986     693,686     257,400     289,518     546,918     146,768      -332,324       -32.4       -37.5        -2.8
    1999..........................................   1,104,105     943,294     160,810     727,323     270,711     305,178     575,950     151,374      -376,781       -34.1       -38.9        -5.9
    2000..........................................   1,186,699   1,015,754     170,945     758,701     284,903     321,110     606,013     152,688      -427,998       -36.1       -40.3       -10.7
    2001..........................................   1,273,343   1,091,954     181,389     796,114     299,951     337,907     637,858     158,256      -477,229       -37.5       -41.6       -12.8
    2002..........................................   1,365,473   1,173,027     192,446     835,559     315,070     356,536     671,607     163,952      -529,913       -38.8       -42.7       -14.8
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    1997-2002.....................................   6,907,739   5,908,702     999,035   4,682,396   1,670,179   2,097,550   3,767,729     914,667    -2,225,342       -32.2       -36.2       -8.4 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    a Tiering does not become effective until the beginning of the fourth quarter (July 1, 1997) of fiscal year 1997.                                                                               
    
        The costs of tiering for DCH providers will be addressed first 
    and then followed by a discussion of the costs for families with 
    children in tier II DCHs. The new administrative burdens that 
    tiering imposes on DCH sponsors will be discussed next and then 
    followed by an examination of the administrative costs for CACFP 
    State agencies, NSLP State agencies, and NSLP school food 
    authorities.
        Implementation and use of the tiering system will have both 
    implementation and periodically recurring costs for the entities 
    discussed above. The implementation costs will depend highly on the 
    specifics of the State and local CACFP procedures currently in place 
    and on the reimbursement procedures selected under the new rule, and 
    will therefore vary greatly across States and localities. Because of 
    the lack of information on these current practices, quantification 
    of the implementation costs, within a reasonable degree of accuracy, 
    is precluded. It is recognized that these costs may be significant, 
    especially for State CACFP agencies (sponsors will need more 
    technical assistance). The recurring costs are more evident and 
    quantifiable, and what follows is a discussion of the recurring 
    costs the affected entities will incur.
    I. Costs to Providers
        For CACFP providers the costs of tiering will have an 
    administrative burden component, but will be primarily financial, 
    due to the lower meal reimbursement rates, and will fall on 
    providers operating tier II DCHs tier II DCHs will experience a 
    decrease in CACFP reimbursements; the majority of the $2.2 billion 
    in projected savings is due to lower reimbursements to non-mixed 
    tier II DCHs (a mixed tier II DCH is a tier II DCH where at least 
    one child in care is documented income-eligible; meals served to 
    such children are reimbursed at the higher rates). Non-mixed tier II 
    DCHs comprise an estimated 64 percent of all DCHs (see Costs to 
    Sponsors for explanation). For the average non-mixed tier II DCH, 
    the July 1, 1997 tier II rate decrease will cause weekly CACFP 
    revenues to decline 51 percent, from $82 to $402, which follows 
    directly from the average DCH's weekly meal mix footnoted in table 3 
    and the meal reimbursements shown in table 2. Since the average DCH 
    has about 6 children in care,\6\ this $42 decrease ($82-$40) 
    represents about $7 per child.
    
    a. Potential Tier II Provider Responses to Lower CACFP Reimbursements
    
        Providers of tier II DCHs will most likely respond to decreased 
    CACFP revenues through some combination of raising fees, absorbing 
    the loss, providing care for more children, and reducing operating 
    costs. Studies of the day care market corroborate this. They find 
    that in general providers will not try to pass all of the CACFP loss 
    on to the families they serve,3,4 but rather employ some of 
    these other options as well.
        The amount which non-low-income providers can pass on through 
    higher fees will depend on the character of their local day care 
    market. Tier II providers in markets that are competitive on the 
    basis of fee will be discouraged from passing all of the loss on to 
    parents, as they need to keep fees approximately in line with the 
    local going rate to retain their customers.\4\ Providers in less 
    competitive markets, such as those where there is a child care 
    shortage, will be able to raise fees and pass most of their loss 
    along to parents. An example of a fee competitive market is one 
    where there are several day care homes operating in a moderate 
    income neighborhood, all having nearly equal appeal to parents and 
    nearly equal fees, but with only a few of the homes being tier II 
    DCHs (the rest being non-CACFP homes or tier I DCHs). Although the 
    tier II DCH providers would be tempted to raise fees in response to 
    the CACFP reimbursement rate decrease, the non-CACFP and tier I DCHs 
    would probably leave their fees unchanged; their doing so may cause 
    the tier II DCHs to leave their fees unchanged as well. Empirical 
    data on the relative extent of these two market scenarios is 
    unavailable. However, because the markets affected by tiering serve 
    mostly non-low-income families who, if fees are raised, would 
    probably choose to pay higher fees to stay with their current 
    provider, fee competitive markets may be the less common variety.
        Data from the 1990 Profile of Child Care Settings Study \3\ 
    (PCCS) and the 1976 National Day Care Home Study \3\ (NDCH) provide 
    information on the likelihood that providers will respond to 
    decreased CACFP reimbursements by absorbing the loss or providing 
    care for more children. The PCCS and NDCH studies indicate that most 
    tier II CACFP providers are not in a position to completely absorb a 
    significant portion of the reduction in meal reimbursements. The 
    1976-80 NDCH study found that homes like DCHs (sponsored and 
    regulated) do not make even moderate operating surpluses (profits)-
    the mean net hourly wage for providers in regulated, sponsored homes 
    was $1.92 (in 1976 dollars), 83 percent of the 1976 minimum wage 
    rate of $2.30 per hour (all DCHs are sponsored and regulated, but 
    not all sponsored, regulated homes are DCHs, i.e., participate in 
    the CACFP). The PCCS study suggests that providers' economic 
    situation may have even worsened since the NDCH study: PCCS found 
    that in real dollars, fees for regulated, sponsored homes decreased 
    between the period 1976-80 and 1990. Thus, the PCCS data suggests 
    that providers in sponsored homes, such as DCHs, do not have much of 
    an operating surplus to buffer a cut in subsidies. Other PCCS 
    findings indicate that most providers will not consider taking more 
    children into care as a means of increasing revenues to offset the 
    decrease in CACFP reimbursements. PCCS found that most providers of 
    sponsored, regulated homes are operating near their legal capacity 
    and that over half of all such providers surveyed indicated they are 
    unwilling to take more children into care.
    
    b. Most Probable Provider Responses to Lower CACFP Reimbursements
    
        The PCCS and NDCH data, and the data suggesting that some day 
    care markets may discourage the raising of fees4 imply that in 
    general tier II providers will respond to decreased meal 
    reimbursements by reducing operating costs; absorbing a small 
    portion of the decrease; and raising fees a modest amount, but will 
    not respond by providing care for more children.
    
    c. Effects on Non-Mixed Tier II Providers
    
        Tier II providers who respond to decreased CACFP revenues by 
    noticeably reducing operating costs or sharply raising fees may, 
    however, only exacerbate their income shortage, as parents may be 
    unwilling to accept the providers' decreased child care expenditures 
    (reduced operating costs) or higher fees and could respond by moving 
    their children to other providers, which would decrease the original 
    provider's income until replacement children could be found. 
    However, given that fees for DCHs (i.e., regulated and sponsored 
    providers) tend to be higher than those found in unregulated
    
    [[Page 908]]
    
    day care homes,5,6 parents who patronize DCHs have demonstrated 
    a willingness to pay a premium for regulated care and are therefore 
    less likely to be sensitive to an increase in provider fees.
        The new reimbursement rates will have a significant economic 
    impact on non-mixed tier II DCHs. Based on FCS program data \2\ and 
    projected increases in the food at home series of the Consumer Price 
    Index, when DCH reimbursement rates are first tiered on July 1, 1997 
    the weighted average per meal rate for non-mixed tier II DCHs will 
    drop from the tier I level of $1.01 down to $0.49, a 51 percent 
    decrease. The July 1, 1997 rate cut will cause the average non-mixed 
    tier II DCH's weekly CACFP revenues to decline from $82 to $40, a 
    $42 decrease (a 51 percent decline), where the average DCH serves an 
    average weekly meal mix of 19 breakfasts, 31 lunches/suppers, and 31 
    supplements \2\ to six children.\6\ These estimates incorporate the 
    dynamic nature of the regulated day care market, where the annual 
    provider turnover rate is approximately 20 percent \1\: they assume 
    that lowering the meal reimbursement rates will decrease the 
    incentive for day care homes to join the CACFP and also increase the 
    rate of departure for existing DCHs. Numerically, this translates 
    into the expectation that the lower rates will cause the annual rate 
    of growth in DCHs to decrease from around 5 percent to about 2.5 
    percent.
    
    d. Effects on Mixed Tier II Providers
    
        Although minor in comparison with non-mixed tier II CACFP 
    revenue decreases, tiering's actual meal count system will place a 
    new administrative burden on some portion of the sub-group of mixed 
    tier II providers (an estimated 10 percent of DCHs are mixed tier 
    II) whose sponsors require them to use an actual meal counts system 
    (some providers already keep such counts). There will be no new 
    burden for providers using either of the ``simplified'' meal counts 
    systems (as explained in the Costs to Sponsors, Sponsor Meal 
    Claiming Burden section). In an actual counts system, the mixed tier 
    II DCHs would provide the sponsor, for each child in care, the 
    number of reimbursable meals the child was served, by meal type and 
    would also identify each child by name. This reporting requirement 
    represents an increase in burden over the current system where some 
    providers only record and provide sponsors with the total number of 
    reimbursable meals served, by meal type. Few DCHs are expected to 
    incur this burden, however, as this system is burdensome for the 
    sponsors; it is being assumed that only 5 percent of sponsors will 
    choose an actual count system, and that in addition, all such 
    sponsors will be small-serving no more than 50 DCHs, on average only 
    30 (see the Costs to Sponsors, Sponsor Meal Claiming Burden 
    section). The estimated weekly provider burden associated with an 
    actual count system in an average DCH (serving 6 children \6\ and 
    operating 5 days a week \1\) is 30 minutes, which assumes a burden 
    of 1 minute per child per day. The estimated annual burden for such 
    a home is therefore 25 hours. This translates into an annual fiscal 
    er provider. This calculation assumes that providers of regulated, 
    sponsored care are making about $5.30 per hour for their services 
    ($5.30 is an inflation adjusted version of the NDCH study \5\ 
    finding that providers of sponsored, regulated homes earned an 
    average of $1.92 per hour in 1976).
    
    II. Costs to Families
    
        Tiering imposes few costs on low-income families. One cost, 
    limited to low-income families with children in mixed tier II DCHs, 
    is their being asked to provide household income information. 
    Although the families are not obligated to provide this information, 
    based on NSLP data,\7\ it is expected that 90 percent will (see 
    Costs to Sponsors section for explanation). Providing this 
    information consumes time and could lessen a family's privacy. 
    Sponsors have the authority to verify the income information at a 
    later time, in which case the family would be contacted and asked to 
    submit supporting documentation for the income figures provided, 
    representing a second burden and further intrusion on family 
    privacy. Despite being authorized to conduct income verifications, 
    few sponsors are expected to do so in light of the associated 
    burden. As explained below, there may also be a limited number of 
    low-income families with children in non-mixed tier II DCHs; these 
    families will experience costs similar to those described below for 
    non-low-income families.
        Tiering is intended to reduce subsidies to non-low-income 
    families, which as previously stated, is the intent of P.L. 104-193. 
    This reduction has potential cost implications for these families. 
    The Costs to Providers section explained that providers will likely 
    respond to the decrease in CACFP reimbursements through some 
    combination of reducing operating expenses, raising fees, and 
    absorbing the loss. At one extreme of the day care market, an area 
    not fee-competitive in which DCH providers have the freedom to 
    increase fees to completely offset the reduced reimbursements, fees 
    could increase by about $7 a week per child. This would recent 
    increase over the average weekly fees, $70, that parents of non-low-
    income children currently pay for care ($70 is an inflation-adjusted 
    version of the CCFP Study's figure of $49).\1\ At the other extreme 
    of the day care market, a highly fee competitive setting, fees would 
    remain unchanged. Although empirical data on the relative extent of 
    these market types is unavailable, data from the Costs to Providers 
    section suggest that the former market type may be more common: 
    first, the markets affected by tiering are serving non-low-income 
    families who, if fees are raised, would probably choose to pay the 
    higher fees to stay with their current provider; and second, 
    families patronizing DCHs, which tend to charge higher fees than 
    unregulated providers, have demonstrated a willingness to pay more 
    for the higher quality of regulated care.
    
    a. Competitive Markets
    
        In child care markets where providers need to hold fees down to 
    retain customers, providers are constrained to react to the rate 
    decrease through some mixture of absorbing the cut and cutting 
    operating costs. The providers being considered here are primarily 
    those operating non-mixed tier II DCHs, the group that will 
    experience the greatest tiering related CACFP revenue drop. To cut 
    costs, these tier II providers may change their management practices 
    relating to food service and developmental opportunities and 
    materials, among other potential changes. Although intended as cost 
    cutting measures, some of these changes could have effects on the 
    children in care. In the area of developmental opportunities and 
    materials, lower reimbursements may leave providers somewhat less 
    able to afford the non-essential games, books, audio or video tapes, 
    etc. that were attainable when CACFP reimbursements were covering a 
    greater proportion of food expenses. There are also a number of 
    areas in food service where providers could reduce costs, and these 
    would impact children in tier II DCHs. One way to reduce costs would 
    be deciding that certain snacks under the old, higher CACFP 
    reimbursements will not be served under the new, lower rates, such 
    as an afternoon snack. Providers might also respond by decreasing 
    meal portions, although by specifying minimum serving sizes, CACFP 
    regulations limit the extent to which this could be done. Other 
    means of cutting food service costs could include replacing more 
    expensive ingredients and food items with less expensive ones. While 
    purchasing lower quality items and ingredients may have detrimental 
    nutritional implications, substituting something more affordable 
    could also represent a nutritional improvement if wise choices are 
    made. The CACFP study mandated by P.L. 104-193 will compare the 
    nutritional quality of meals served in post-tiering tier II DCHs 
    with the quality of meals served in those DCHs before tiering, among 
    other pre/post-tiering comparisons.
        Should a tier II provider choose to cut operating costs, a 
    family may find the resulting conditions unacceptable and seek out 
    another provider. The search for a new provider entails costs in the 
    time spent finding a new provider, the potential for lost wages, and 
    the potential for subsequent transportation and added inconvenience 
    costs if the more suitable providers are not as conveniently located 
    as the original caregiver. It is also possible that providers 
    constrained to hold fees down will exit the DCH market, which would 
    also require a family to find another provider.
        Under the fee competitive market scenario just considered, which 
    primarily affect non-low-income families, there is the potential 
    that some of the low-income children in mixed tier II DCHs will 
    experience some of the same costs the children in non-mixed tier II 
    DCHs will experience. Although some of the meals served in a mixed 
    tier II DCH will be eligible for the higher reimbursement rates, 
    others will not. If the provider is constrained to not raise fees to 
    recoup the decreased reimbursements for the non-low-income families, 
    the provider will experience a net decrease in revenue as discussed 
    above, the provider will likely respond to this net decrease by 
    either reducing operating costs or absorbing the loss. Reducing 
    operating costs would affect the low-income children in care. 
    However, USDA believes only 10 percent of all DCHs will be mixed and 
    that only a portion of these mixed homes are in competitive fee 
    markets; under these conditions, few low-income children would be 
    affected.
    
    [[Page 909]]
    
    b. Non-Competitive Markets
    
        In the other child care market being considered, where providers 
    are not as constrained to hold fees down, providers will likely 
    respond to the rate decrease primarily through increased fees. As 
    suggested earlier in this section, because tiering mainly affects 
    non-low-income families who will likely choose to pay increased 
    provider fees, this type of market may be more common than the 
    competitive fee variety. In non-fee competitive markets, families 
    can respond to increased fees by either paying the higher fees, 
    moving their children to more affordable providers, or dropping out 
    of the labor force (fully or in part) to care for their children. 
    Each choice has different costs for families. In cases where the 
    parents elect not to move the child, the parents will be assuming 
    greater responsibility for food costs than under the previous system 
    where the Federal government was performing that function (the 
    intent of P.L. 104-193). In the case where the provider raises fees 
    enough to completely offset the reduced reimbursements, fees could 
    increase by about $7 a week per child, representing a 10 percent 
    increase over pre-tiering average fees.1 In the second case, where 
    the parents move a child to achieve lower fees, the child may have 
    to break established relationships with the current provider and 
    other children in care. The third alternative, dropping out of the 
    labor force, would presumably occur rarely, as the raising of fees 
    will primarily affect higher income families who will probably 
    choose to absorb the increase.
    
    c. Effects of Tiering on Child Care Choices
    
        Studies show that child care regulations enforce practices 
    beneficial to childhood development,\5\ but the preceding discussion 
    on the relationship between lower meal reimbursements and higher 
    fees implies that under tiering the number of families choosing 
    sponsored, regulated care may decrease. The 1976-80 NDCH Study 
    compared fees among unregulated providers; regulated but unsponsored 
    providers; and providers who are both regulated and sponsored. The 
    study found that providers who are both regulated and sponsored had 
    the highest fees. In the years since that study, fees charged by 
    regulated and sponsored providers have decreased until equaling the 
    fees charged by regulated but unsponsored providers.\3\ This 
    equaling of fees in regulated homes coincided with the post-1978 
    rapid growth of DCHs. CACFP reimbursements--available only to 
    sponsored, regulated homes--may have played a role in bringing down 
    fees charged by regulated, sponsored providers to equal fees of 
    regulated, unsponsored providers, which suggests that tiering's 
    lowering of CACFP rates may cause regulated, sponsored fees to rise. 
    Even if the post-1978 decline in regulated, sponsored provider fees 
    is attributable to other factors, it is likely (as discussed in the 
    Costs to Providers section) that decreased CACFP reimbursements will 
    cause regulated, sponsored providers to raise fees, at least in some 
    markets, which may shift children into more affordable, possibly 
    unregulated homes. Similarly, the decreased CACFP reimbursements 
    might cause some currently regulated and sponsored providers to 
    consider moving out of regulated care. Therefore, the possibility 
    that CACFP rates will no longer encourage the placement of children 
    in regulated care is another cost that tiering may bring to non-low-
    income children and even some low-income children.
    
    d. Intended Effect of Tiering
    
        An important fact, worth reiterating, is that tiering primarily 
    affects families with incomes above 185 percent of the Federal 
    income poverty guidelines (non-low-income), as intended by P.L.104-
    193 The only low-income families potentially affected by tiering 
    will be those with children in tier II DCHs. This presumably 
    encompasses few families, as it is believed, as mentioned earlier, 
    that (1) only 10 percent of all DCHs will be mixed (having both non-
    low-income and documented low-income children in care) and that only 
    40 percent of the children in an average mixed DCH will be low-
    income (see Tier II Household Income-Eligibility Determination 
    Burden under Costs to Sponsors); and (2) that the clear majority of 
    all other low-income children will be in tier I DCHs. Similarly, the 
    providers affected by tiering will presumably be all non-low-income, 
    since providers with incomes below 185 percent of the Federal income 
    poverty guidelines are eligible for tier I status. The Federal 
    income poverty guidelines are designed to take into account family 
    size, so that a given household will qualify for low-income status 
    at a lower income level than will a household that has more 
    children.
    
    III. Costs to Sponsors
    
        The two tier structure will impose several new administrative 
    burdens on organizations that sponsor DCHs, including determining 
    and documenting which DCHs and children are entitled to receive the 
    higher set of reimbursement rates; verifying the income of all 
    providers who qualify for tier I status based on provider income; 
    and collecting and reporting separate tier I and tier II meal, 
    enrollment, and provider counts.
    
    a. Tiering Determination Burden
    
        All sponsors will be responsible for determining whether each of 
    their DCHs is tier I or II. A sponsor can approve a DCH for tier I 
    status if the DCH is located in a low-income area or the provider is 
    low-income. A low-income area is defined as one in which the local 
    elementary school has at least one-half of its enrollment approved 
    for free or reduced price NSLP lunches, or an area in which at least 
    one-half of the resident children are low income, according to the 
    most recent census data. A sponsor can also approve a DCH for tier I 
    status if sponsor can demonstrate low-income status (income no more 
    than 185 percent of the Federal income poverty guidelines). If a 
    sponsor finds a provider to be low-income, the sponsor must verify 
    the provider's income before formally approving the DCH for tier I 
    status. Sponsors must annually re-determine every Tier I eligibility 
    determination based on a provider's income. Because verification is 
    a non-trivial burden to sponsors, it is expected that whenever 
    possible sponsors will approve providers for tier I on the basis of 
    area eligibility. Area eligibility determinations offer sponsors the 
    added benefit of being valid for three years when school data is 
    used and until more recent data is available, when census data is 
    used, at most ten years.
        The verification that sponsors will perform on income-approved 
    tier I providers consists of obtaining pay stubs, tax returns, or 
    some other form of independent income documentation to establish 
    that the information provided on providers' tier I income 
    applications is accurate. The proposed rule mandates this 
    verification to protect the government against providers' financial 
    incentive to qualify for tier I; the average tier I provider would 
    receive 42 more dollars a week in CACFP meal reimbursements in 1998 
    than would the average non-mixed tier II provider (as was explained 
    in the Costs to Providers section). Collecting corroborating income 
    documentation from providers for tier I income eligibility 
    determinations represents an increase over the current CACFP DCH 
    application review requirements, which were established by the 
    Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1981, P.L. 97-35. P.L. 93-35 
    eliminated CACFP DCH meal reimbursements for providers' own children 
    in care, unless a provider submits an application demonstrating low-
    income status. Sponsors are not required to obtain supporting income 
    information for these applications and typically make eligibility 
    determinations based on the application information alone. After 
    P.L. 104-193 providers will submit enrollment applications, which 
    have different sponsor verification requirements. The first type 
    will be submitted by providers seeking to qualify for tier I, so 
    that, if approved for tier I, all meals served in the applying 
    provider's home, including those to the provider's own children in 
    care, would be reimbursed at the higher rates. The second type of 
    application would be submitted by providers approved for tier I by 
    area eligibility seeking to claim meals served to their own children 
    in care. P.L. 104-193 does not supersede P.L. 97-35, so the 
    requirement that a DCH provider demonstrate low-income status in 
    order to claim meals served to the provider's own children will 
    remain in effect. For income applications for tier I status, P.L. 
    104-193 requires that income verification (collection of 
    substantiating income documentation) be performed. For applications 
    from area-approved tier I providers seeking to claim meals served to 
    their own children, sponsors will continue to approve these 
    applications based on application content alone, which entails no 
    new burden for sponsors.
        Provider income data from special tabulations of PCCS data \6\ 
    together with data on average household sizes \8\ indicate that 
    about 20 percent of all DCH providers are low-income and are 
    therefore eligible for tier I on the basis of income. Empirical data 
    on the percentage of DCHs that qualify for tier I on the basis of 
    area eligibility is unavailable. An estimate for this percentage was 
    derived using (1) the finding from the CCFP Study that 30 percent of 
    all enrolled DCH children are low-income and (2) the assumption that 
    DCH children are equally
    
    [[Page 910]]
    
    distributed across all DCHs, i.e., 10 percent of DCHs provide care 
    for 10 percent of total DCH enrollment, regardless of the DCH's 
    tiering status. Applying this distribution assumption to income-
    eligible tier I DCHs (20 percent of all DCHs) implies they enroll 20 
    percent of total DCH enrollment. Applying the distribution 
    assumption to mixed tier II DCHs, which comprise 10 percent of all 
    DCHs implies they enroll 10 percent of total DCH enrollment. Then, 
    taking the assumption that 40 percent of mixed tier II DCH 
    enrollment is low-income and applying it to the mixed tier II 
    enrollment percentage (10 percent of total DCH enrollment) implies 
    the low-income children in mixed tier II DCHs comprise 4 percent of 
    total DCH enrollment (4% is 40% of 10%). Therefore, the enrollment 
    in income-eligible tier I DCHs and mixed tier II DCHs, whose meals 
    are all reimbursed at the higher rates, represents 24 percent of 
    total DCH enrollment. The CCFP Study's finding that 30 percent of 
    total DCH enrollment is low-income was then used as a basis for 
    assuming that approximately 30 percent of all DCH meals will be 
    reimbursed at the higher rates. When the 30 percent assumption is 
    compared to the 24 percent of DCH enrollment receiving higher rates 
    (in income-eligible tier I and mixed tier II DCHs), it implies that 
    the residual percentage of enrollment whose meals are reimbursed at 
    higher rates, 6 percent of total (30-24), is receiving care in area-
    eligible tier I DCHs. Since 6 percent of total DCH enrollment 
    resides in area-eligible tier I DCHs, the enrollment distribution 
    assumption implies area-eligible tier I DCHs represent 6 percent of 
    all DCHs. With 20 percent of all DCHs being income-eligible for tier 
    I and another 6 percent being area-eligible for tier I, a total of 
    26 percent of all DCHs are expected to become tier I DCHs.m
        It is assumed that a substantial proportion of low-income, 
    income-eligible tier I providers reside in low-income areas, thereby 
    making them area-eligible also. The burden associated with verifying 
    incomes for income-eligible providers will presumably cause sponsors 
    to approve DCHs for tier I on the basis of area eligibility whenever 
    possible. It was therefore assumed that one-half of the income-
    eligible DCHs (10 percent of total) will be approved for tier I on 
    the basis of area eligibility rather than income, which together 
    with the 6 tier I by area eligibility. The remaining one-half of 
    tier I income-eligible DCHs, 10 percent of total, will be approved 
    on the basis of income.
        The dynamic nature of the DCH market will increase sponsors' 
    tiering determination burdens. Data from the CCFP Study indicates 
    the DCH market has an annual provider turnover rate of approximately 
    20 percent.\1\ This volatility will lead sponsors to make more 
    tiering determinations than would be necessary for a stable DCH 
    population. See section e: Quantification of New Burdens for 
    Sponsors for the quantification of sponsors' tiering determination 
    burden.
    
    b. Household Income-Eligibility Determination Burden on Sponsors
    
        This interim rule mirrors P.L. 104-193 in the method it 
    prescribes for approving low-income children in tier II DCHs for the 
    higher meal reimbursement rates. Tier II DCHs wishing to secure 
    higher reimbursements for their low-income children (``mixed'' tier 
    II DCHs) are to direct their sponsor to collect income information 
    from the households of the children in care. Sponsors so directed 
    must request information from every household served by the 
    requesting DCH. Sponsors have the responsibility of determining the 
    income-eligibility for each responding household. Meals served to 
    children with household incomes not exceeding 185 percent of the 
    Federal income poverty guidelines--income-eligible/low-income 
    children--are eligible to receive the higher reimbursement rates. 
    Also eligible for the higher rates are meals served to children who 
    participate in or live in households that participate in any Federal 
    or State means tested program with an equivalent income eligibility 
    standard-at or below 185 percent of the Federal income poverty 
    guidelines.
        Sponsors must maintain supporting documentation for all children 
    approved for higher meal reimbursement rates. At least annually, 
    sponsors must re-determine the eligibility of all children 
    previously deemed income-eligible and also give all children 
    previously deemed not income-eligible another opportunity to 
    demonstrate low-income status. For the purposes of this analysis, it 
    is assumed that sponsors will meet the annual re-determination 
    requirement by cycling through each of their mixed DCHs once a year 
    and making income-eligibility determinations on all children 
    currently enrolled at that time. Sponsors must also make income-
    eligibility determinations for children who enter a mixed tier II 
    DCH after the sponsor has made its annual income-eligibility 
    determinations for that DCH. The schedule that sponsors will use to 
    perform these latter income determinations is determined by the 
    sponsor's choice of meal claiming system. Although it is providers 
    who decide whether the sponsor must make income-eligibility 
    determinations, sponsors decide which meal count system the sponsor 
    and all its DCHs will use. The meal count system chosen determines 
    the schedule on which income-eligibility determinations are made for 
    children who enter mixed DCHs after the annual eligibility re-
    determination review has occurred. Sponsors can choose between an 
    actual counts system and a ``simplified'' counts version. Each of 
    these systems and its associated income-eligibility determination 
    schedule is described below.
        The interim rule does not prescribe any additional income 
    eligibility determination requirements, beyond annual re-
    determinations, for sponsors using an actual counts system. Rather, 
    the provider's incentive structure under this system will determine 
    the income-eligibility determination schedule used. In this system, 
    providers of mixed tier II DCHs must report the number of meals 
    served to each child by type and identify each child by name. 
    Sponsors then use income-eligibility information to determine which 
    set of reimbursements each child's meals are entitled to, with meals 
    served to documented income-eligible children entitled to 
    reimbursement at the higher rates. With reimbursements being 
    determined on a per-child basis in actual meal count systems, 
    providers of mixed tier II DCHs have the incentive to maximize the 
    number of documented income-eligible children in their care. A 
    provider can do this by directing its sponsor to make an eligibility 
    determination on each new child upon the child's entering the 
    provider's DCH. Assuming that most providers in actual count systems 
    will behave in this manner, sponsors in these systems will be making 
    income-eligibility determinations on an irregular, ongoing basis.
        The interim rule prescribes the income-eligibility determination 
    schedule that sponsors employing simplified counting must use to 
    determine the income-eligibility of children who enter mixed tier II 
    DCHs outside the sponsor's annual income-eligibility determination 
    cycle. The schedule requires that at least semi-annually, sponsors 
    make income-eligibility determinations on all children who enter a 
    mixed DCH in the prior 6 months. Given that sponsors are already 
    required to annually re-determine eligibility, sponsors using a 
    simplified counting system will likely perform income-eligibility 
    determinations twice a year: annual re-determinations at the 
    beginning of the year and a second determination at mid-year for 
    those children who entered a mixed DCH sometime in the preceding 6 
    months.
        The two meal count systems will require sponsors to make near 
    equal numbers of eligibility determinations; the burdens are 
    expected to be equal. See section e: Quantification of Burdens for 
    the burden estimates.
    
    c. Data Collection and Reporting Burden for Sponsors
    
        Tiering will place several new, although minor, reporting 
    requirements on sponsors. Sponsors will now have to annually collect 
    and report to their State CACFP agency separate enrollment counts 
    for tier I and tier II DCHs and an enrollment count for documented 
    income-eligible children in mixed tier II DCHs (those DCHs serving 
    at least one documented low-income child). Sponsors must also 
    annually report the number of tier I and tier II DCHs they sponsor. 
    Finally, in the management plan that every sponsor submits to its 
    agency, the sponsor will now have to include a description of how it 
    will make DCH tiering determinations.
    
    d. Sponsor Meal Claiming Burden
    
        Under tiering, sponsors will have new burdens related to meal 
    counting and claiming. Before tiering, sponsors were only required 
    to claim meals by meal type. Under tiering, sponsors will have to 
    claim meals both by reimbursement category and, within each 
    category, by meal type. The claiming of meals served in tier I and 
    tier II DCHs remains straightforward. It simply entails separating 
    claims submitted by tier I and tier II DCHs, which amounts to 
    categorizing the meals, and then, within each category, summing meal 
    counts by type. In contrast, claiming for mixed DCHs requires that 
    for each mixed DCH sponsors split out the meals by reimbursement 
    category, which will typically be a more time consuming process than 
    that for non-mixed DCHs. After the
    
    [[Page 911]]
    
    meals from mixed DCHs are separated by category, the meals are 
    summed, within each category, by meal type, just as was done for 
    claims from tier I and tier II DCHs. The method that sponsors use to 
    split out mixed DCH claims depends on whether the sponsor is using 
    an actual or simplified meal counting system, as described below.
        As previously noted, in an actual count system, mixed tier II 
    DCHs record the number of meals served to each enrolled child, by 
    meal type, and provide the sponsor with a claim that lists the meals 
    served to each child by type and identifies each child by name. In 
    such a system, the sponsor splits the meals into reimbursement 
    categories by determining the appropriate reimbursement category for 
    each child's meals based on the child's income eligibility status--
    the reason each child is identified by name. In contrast, in a 
    simplified count system, the sponsor splits the counts into the two 
    reimbursement categories by applying either blended rates or 
    claiming percentages to the provider's aggregated counts (both 
    blended rates and claiming percentages produce identical claims). In 
    the case of claiming percentages, a sponsor computes, for each DCH, 
    the number of meals of each type entitled to the higher 
    reimbursements by multiplying the total number of meals claimed of 
    that type by the proportion of children in that DCH who have been 
    determined income-eligible (all other meals are reimbursed at the 
    lower reimbursements). The procedure for blended rates is 
    essentially the same. In simplified count systems, the semi-annual 
    collection of income information described in section b: Household 
    Income-Eligibility Determination Burden is used to update the 
    claiming percentages/blended rates for each DCH every six months. 
    The updated claiming percentages/blended rates reflect the current 
    proportion of income eligible children in the DCH.
        Simplified counting is less burdensome to sponsors than an 
    actual count system. Actual counts require the sponsor to compare 
    the provider's meal claim against a list of the DCH's income-
    eligible children to identify which children's meals are entitled to 
    the higher rate. The sponsor then groups meals by reimbursement 
    category and finally, sums by type within each category to produce 
    an aggregated count of meals by category and by type. In contrast, 
    to reach the same result in a simplified system, the sponsor need 
    only multiply the aggregate meal counts by the DCH's claiming 
    percentages/blended rates. Because of the relative ease of meal 
    claiming in a simplified counts system, it is expected that only 5 
    percent of all sponsors will opt for actual counts and that all will 
    be small sponsors (serving no more than 50 DCHs).
    
    e. Quantification of New Burdens for Sponsors
    
        To quantify the effects of this interim rule on sponsors, a 
    framework of estimates and assumptions, based on previous studies of 
    the program and current program data, was constructed. Creating this 
    framework, which enables the scaling of burden estimates according 
    to sponsor size, produces more precise burden estimates. The first 
    step in creating it, was dividing the approximately 1,240 current 
    sponsors into three groups, as shown in table 5: (1) small sponsors 
    which serve no more than 50 DCHs, on average about 30 DCHs; (2) 
    medium sponsors which serve between 51 and 300 DCHs, on average 
    about 200; (3) large sponsors which serve more than 300 DCHs, on 
    average about 400.1,2
    
                    Table 5.--Sponsor and DCH Characteristies               
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       Sponsor size         
            Sponsor characteristics         --------------------------------
                                               Small      Medium     Large  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Percent of all Sponsors................        50%        30%        20%
    Percent of all DCHs Served.............         9%        40%        51%
    Average Number of DCHs Served per                                       
     Sponsor...............................         30        200        400
    Number of Sponsors (Total = 1,240) in                                   
     Category..............................        620        372        248
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Based on these definitions, 50 percent of all sponsors are small 
    in size and account for 9 percent of all DCHs; 30 percent are of 
    medium size and account for 40 percent of all DCHs; and 20 percent 
    are large and account for 51 percent of all DCHs.\1\,\2\ Next, based 
    on DCH providers' and enrolled children's income data, respectively 
    from special PCCS tabulations \6\ and the CCFP Study \1\ and other 
    assumptions discussed above under Tiering Determination Burden, it 
    was estimated that 26 percent of all DCHs will be approved for tier 
    I; 64 percent will be tier II, and 10 percent will be mixed tier II, 
    as shown in table 6.
    
                          Table 6.--DCH Characteristics                     
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                     Percent
                                DCH Type                              of All
                                                                       DCHs 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Tier I.........................................................       26
      Area Eligible Only...........................................        6
      Income Eligible Only.........................................       10
      Area & Income Eligible.......................................       10
                                                                    --------
        Sum........................................................       26
    ========================================================================
      Approved by Area.............................................       16
      Approved by Income...........................................       10
                                                                    --------
        Sum........................................................       26
    ========================================================================
    Tier II........................................................       74
      Mixed........................................................       10
      Non-Mixed....................................................       64
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Finally, it was assumed that 40 percent of sponsors will serve 
    at least one mixed tier II DCH. This last assumption is rooted in 
    the finding from the CCFP study \1\ that almost 70 percent of DCH 
    children are non-low-income. When this finding is coupled with the 
    assumption that smaller sponsors are more likely to serve 
    economically homogeneous DCHs, by virtue of their limited geographic 
    coverage, the implication is that small sponsors are less likely 
    than medium or large sponsors to serve mixed tier II DCHs. This 
    conclusion, together with the CCFP Study \1\ data that indicates 
    nearly 50 percent of all sponsors are small, is the basis for 
    assuming 40 percent of sponsors will serve at least one mixed tier 
    II DCH. Based on these estimates and assumptions, the approximately 
    193,000 DCHs in operation \2\ were distributed across the three size 
    categories of sponsors based on the number of mixed tier II DCHs 
    predicted for the average sponsor in each sponsor category and the 
    relative sizes of the tier I and tier II DCH populations.
        The estimates for new sponsor burden contained in the interim 
    rule are presented in table 7. Shown are estimates for the annual 
    burden hours imposed on each sponsor category, and the percentage of 
    sponsors affected within each sponsor category. Of the listed 
    burdens, only Meal Claiming recurs periodically (monthly). The other 
    burdens occur only once or twice a year (with the exception of 
    household income determinations in an actual meal count system, but 
    the number of sponsors involved is minimal, 5 percent of total, 
    i.e., 60). The estimates make the assumption that economies of scale 
    are realized only for Meal
        Claiming burdens, where the recurring nature of the burden would 
    presumably give larger sponsors a sufficient incentive to establish 
    efficient meal claiming systems.
    
    [[Page 912]]
    
    
    
                           Table 7.--Estimated Annual Sponsor Burden From Two Tier DCH System                       
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                          Estimated Annual Sponsor Burden by       Estimated Percent of Sponsors    
                                                 Sponsor Size (Hours)              Affected in Each Size Category   
                  Burden               -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                           Small        Medium       Large        Small        Medium       Large   
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Tiering Determinations:                                                                                         
        1. Low income Providers                                                                                     
         (Includes Verification)......            4           52           96          100          100          100
        2. Area Eligibility...........            2           28           51          100          100          100
        Tier II Household Income-                                                                                   
         Eligibility Determinations...            9           40           80           27           53           50
        Data Collection and Reporting                                                                               
         a............................            4           15           28          100          100          100
    Meal Claiming:                                                                                                  
        1. Actual Counts System (with                                                                               
         mixed tier II DCHs)..........           20        N/A b        N/A b           10        N/A b        N/A b
        2. Simplified Counts System                                                                                 
         (with mixed tier II DCHs)....           10           45           67           16           52           50
        3. No Mixed Tier II DCHs......            5           22           34           74           48           50
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    a Includes tier I, tier II, and tier II low-income enrollment counts; tier I and tier II DCH counts; and        
      description of tiering determination method in sponsor management plan.                                       
    b Due to the burden associated with actual meal counts systems, it is expected that only small sponsors will    
      choose actual counts.                                                                                         
    
        The tiering determinations burden estimates were calculated 
    using data from the CCFP Study \1\ and special tabulations from PCCS 
    \6\, which indicate that 26 percent of all DCHs are eligible for 
    tier I and the assumption that sponsors will choose to approve 
    providers for tier I on the basis of area eligibility whenever 
    possible. Thus, it is assumed that 16 percent of all DCHs will be 
    approved for tier I using area eligibility information, while the 
    remaining tier I eligible DCHs (10 percent) will be approved using 
    provider income information. For the burden estimate, these 
    percentages were assumed to hold for the average sponsor in each 
    sponsor category so that, for example, the average small sponsor 
    (serving 30 DCHs) with its 4.8 tier I homes would approve 3.0 of the 
    4.8 on the basis of area eligibility (4.8 * 16% / 26%) and the 
    remaining 1.8 DCHs on the basis of the provider's income (4.8 * 10% 
    / 26%). The estimates incorporate the dynamic nature of the DCH 
    market, which has an annual provider turnover rate estimated to be 
    between 18 and 25 percent.\1\ This volatility will require sponsors 
    to make more tiering determinations than would be necessary for a 
    stable DCH population. Finally, the estimates for area eligibility 
    assume that sponsors identify income-eligible DCHs using sponsors' 
    preexisting knowledge of economic conditions in areas where DCHs 
    reside and that sponsors are thereby able to easily identify DCHs 
    lying far outside all income-eligible areas. This approach would 
    allow sponsors to focus their efforts on DCHs with reasonable 
    probabilities of qualifying for tier I by area eligibility. This 
    analysis assumes such an approach will be taken and that the average 
    sponsor will consider 3 homes for low-income area eligibility for 
    every 2 it finds eligible and approves.
        The tier II household income-eligibility determinations 
    estimates were calculated by estimating the income-eligibility 
    burden associated with the average DCH and then multiplying that 
    figure by the average number of DCHs a sponsor in each of the three 
    categories oversees.\1\ The number of children in care in an average 
    DCH was used as the starting point.\6\ This figure was then inflated 
    to account for the fact that on average, there is a 30 percent 
    turnover of children every 6 months in the average day care home.\9\ 
    This inflated figure represents the number of children who could 
    potentially submit an application over a year's time. From this 
    group of potential applicants, the number of submitted applications 
    was calculated using an assumed 90 percent application response rate 
    (based on the NSLP's 80 percent rate) \7\ and the assumption that on 
    average about 40 percent of the children in mixed tier II DCHs are 
    income-eligible. There is a clear financial incentive for providers 
    to encourage their low-income families to submit income information 
    to sponsors. This incentive and providers' close relationships with 
    parents suggest that providers will attempt to persuade parents to 
    provide the income information and will thereby achieve a response 
    rate greater than the NSLP's 80 percent; ninety percent was chosen. 
    The assumption that 40 percent of children in mixed tier II DCHs are 
    income-eligible. There is a clear financial incentive for providers 
    to encourage their low-income families to submit income information 
    to sponsors. This incentive and providers' close relationships with 
    parents suggest that providers will attempt to persuade parents to 
    provide the income information and will thereby achieve a response 
    rate greater than the NSLP's 80 percent; ninety percent was chosen. 
    The assumption that 40 percent of children in mixed tier II DCHs are 
    income eligible is based on two assumptions: (1) most DCHs with more 
    than 60 percent of their enrollment income-eligible will be tier I 
    and 2) some tier II DCH providers that serve one or two income-
    eligible children will not realize or avail themselves of the 
    children's low-income status and therefore will not ask their 
    sponsor to determine the children's income-eligibility (placing the 
    DCH in the non-mixed tier II category). The two preceding 
    assumptions suggest a percentage below 50 percent; forty percent was 
    chosen.
        The data collection and reporting burden was calculated assuming 
    that the average sponsor will spend about 12 hours complying with 
    the new requirements in this area, with 10 of these hours for the 
    new data related requirements and the remaining 2 for the 
    requirement that each sponsor now provide a description of its plan 
    for making DCH tiering determinations in its management plan. The 12 
    hour burden implies annual burdens of 4, 15, and 28 hours for small, 
    medium, and large sponsors, respectively. These estimates are 
    consistent with this burden being an expansion on the current CACFP 
    requirement that sponsors report quarterly the number of DCHs served 
    and the DCHs' enrollment and submit annually a sponsor management 
    plan.
        The meal claiming burden was calculated assuming that the 
    monthly burden resulting from the new meal claiming requirements 
    will be 2 hours for the average sponsor. This weighted average 
    implies a burden that increases with sponsor size and the number of 
    mixed tier II DCHs being served. The estimates make the assumption 
    that an actual counts system will impose twice the meal claiming 
    burden of a simplified counts system due to the relative difficulty 
    that sponsors using actual counts are expected to have in producing 
    meal claims broken down by reimbursement category and meal type 
    (relative to the effort required under a simplified counts system). 
    The estimates further assume that among sponsors using a simplified 
    count system, the average meal claiming burden for sponsors without 
    any mixed DC one-half the average burden for sponsors serving mixed 
    DCHs. This assumption is consistent with the lower level of effort 
    required to process meal claims from non-mixed DCHs. In addition, as 
    described above, the estimates assume economies of scale so that the 
    burdens are not directly proportional to the number of DCHs a 
    sponsor serves.
        Table 8 translates the burdens displayed in table 7 into fiscal 
    costs. The fiscal costs were produced assuming that wage rates for 
    employees of child care centers3, $8.00 per hour in 1997 dollars 
    (which has been adjusted for inflation), are reasonable proxies for 
    the wage rates of workers in DCH sponsors. The table implies that 
    the annual increase in administrative costs due to tiering, for the 
    average small, medium, and large sponsor, are about $160, $1,200, 
    and $2,100 (in 1997 dollars), respectively. These costs represent 
    less than one percent of the total annual administrative payments 
    the average small, medium, and large sponsor would receive from USDA 
    (in 1997 dollars):
    
    [[Page 913]]
    
    $27 thousand, $150 thousand, and $270 thousand (in 1997 dollars), 
    respectively.
    
                        Table 8 a.--Estimated Annual Sponsor Fiscal Cost From Two Tier DCH System                   
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                         Estimated Annual Sponsor Fiscal Cost      Estimated Percent of Sponsors    
                                          by Sponsor Size (In 1997 Dollars)        Affected in Each Size Category   
                  Burden               -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                           Small        Medium       Large        Small        Medium       Large   
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Tiering Determinations:                                                                                         
    1. Low Income Providers (Includes                                                                               
     Verification)....................          $32         $416         $768          100          100          100
    2. Area Eligibility...............           16          224          408          100          100          100
    Tier II Household Income-                                                                                       
     Eligibility Determinations.......           72          320          640           27           53           50
    Data Collection and Reporting b...           32          120          224          100          100          100
    Meal Claiming:                                                                                                  
    1. Actual Counts System (with                                                                                   
     mixed tier II DCHs)..............          160         cN/A         cN/A           10         cN/A         cN/A
    2. Simplified Counts System (with                                                                               
     mixed tier II DCHs)..............           80          360          536           16           52           50
    3. No Mixed Tier II DCHs..........           40          176          272           74           48           50
    Weighted Average Cost.............          158        1,201        2,124                                       
    Average USDA Administrative                                                                                     
     Payments, Annual.................       27,000      150,000      270,000                                       
    Wght. Avg. Cost as Percent of                                                                                   
     Admin. Payments..................          0.6          0.8          0.8                                       
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    a The sponsor costs shown in table 8 equal the burden hours multiplied by a wage rate of $8.00/hour, as         
      described in the text.                                                                                        
    b Includes tier I, tier II, and tier II low-income enrollment counts; tier I and tier II DCH counts; and        
      description of tiering determination method in sponsor management plan.                                       
    c Due to the burden associated with actual counts systems, it is expected that only small sponsors will choose  
      actual counts.                                                                                                
    
    IV. Costs to CACFP State Agencies
    
        The costs to CACFP State agencies consist of their being 
    required to provide sponsors with low-income area eligibility data; 
    increased requirements related to sponsor review, particularly the 
    auditing of the documentation for income-eligible children; and 
    their obligation to provide sponsors with technical assistance. In 
    terms of area eligibility data, these agencies will be responsible 
    for providing (1) census data identifying all State census blocks 
    where at least 50 percent of the children are from low-income 
    households (no more than 185 percent of the Federal income poverty 
    guidelines) and (2) an annually updated list of all State elementary 
    schools that have more than 50 percent of their enrollment certified 
    to receive free or reduced-price lunches under the NSLP (implies hof 
    no more than 185 percent of Federal income poverty guidelines). The 
    agencies' other responsibility relating to area eligibility data is 
    determining in which instances census data should be used over NSLP 
    information: The interim rule states that sponsors are in general 
    supposed to use the most recent school data available in making 
    tiering determinations, but that the State CACFP agency should 
    determine when census data should supersede it, by following 
    instructions in forthcoming guidance from USDA. For the average 
    State CACFP agency, it is estimated that its obligation to provide 
    sponsors with elementary school data annually and providing census 
    data as it becomes available represents an average annual burden of 
    23 hours, which assumes each instance of data transmittal and 
    subsequent follow-up takes 1 hour. This estimated burden is 
    equivalent to $184 using the same wage assumptions used in table 8.
        Tiering will also increase State agencies' sponsor review 
    requirements. When reviewing sponsors, State agencies will now have 
    to review the documentation used to deem children in tier II DCHs 
    income-eligible for the higher meal reimbursements as well as the 
    documentation for tier I providers approved on the basis of income. 
    However, the agency is only held responsible for ensuring that the 
    application form is completed correctly and that the stated income 
    actually falls below 185 percent of the Federal income poverty 
    guidelines. The state is given the option to verify the 
    documentation, but because of the amount of time involved in 
    verification, it is expected that very few will routinely do so. The 
    agencies are also responsible for ensuring that the most current 
    data available was used in making area eligibility determinations (a 
    negligible burden), but are not required to verify the 
    determinations. For the average State CACFP agency, it is estimated 
    that performing these reviews amounts to an annual burden of 23 
    hours, with some States expending much less than this amount and 
    others much more, depending on the size and number of sponsors in 
    the State. This estimated burden is equivalent to $184 using the 
    same wage assumptions used in table 8.
        State CACFP agencies will likely see an appreciable increase in 
    their training and technical assistance burden as the transition to 
    the new two tier system is made. Under the new system, State 
    agencies will have to provide new guidance and training on all new 
    aspects of CACFP introduced by tiering, for example, DCH tiering 
    determinations, new meal counting and claiming procedures, and new 
    data reporting requirements. This burden will likely persist for the 
    first several years the new system is in place. It is believed that 
    the new training and technical assistance burdens represents about 
    10-20 hours of new burden per sponsor per year for a State agency. 
    For the average State, this implies an annual burden of between 230 
    and 460 hours (between $1,840 and $3,680) for the first several 
    years of tiering and presumably abating thereafter. The Personal 
    Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 (P.L. 
    104-193) provides some funds to help State CACFP agencies make the 
    transition. It directs the Secretary of Agriculture to set aside $5 
    million of fiscal year 1997 CACFP funds for one-time grants to State 
    CACFP agencies. These grants must be used to aid States, sponsors, 
    and DCHs with making the transition to the new system. P.L. 104-193 
    allows each of the 54 State agencies to retain up to 30 percent of 
    its total grant for State agency use. If all States agencies 
    retained the maximum allowable, a total of approximately $1.5 
    million would be retained at the State level, with the remaining 
    $3.5 million going to DCHs and their sponsors.
        The interim rule adds a new requirement to the management plans 
    that sponsors must submit annually. Now, each sponsor must describe 
    the approach it will use to make DCH tiering determinations. 
    Reviewing this component of the plan will presumably place minimal 
    additional burden on the State agency.
        There is the potential that in some States the decreased CACFP 
    reimbursements will lead to an increase in the State-wide average 
    fee charged by providers. This increase may have the effect of 
    increasing State expenditures for subsidized child care, as a 
    State's subsidized care payments are often based on the average fee 
    that providers in the State are charging. Being unable to predict a 
    numerical value for the effect the reimbursement rate cut will have 
    on provider fees, as discussed previously under Costs to Providers, 
    quantifying this potential cost to States is precluded. However, 
    this interim rule does not require States to increase their payments 
    for subsidized child care.
    
    V. Costs to NSLP State Agencies and NSLP School Food Authorities
    
        Under P.L. 104-193, State NSLP agencies are required to annually 
    provide a list of all State elementary schools in which at least 50 
    percent of the enrollment is certified to receive free or reduced-
    price NSLP lunches. However, these agencies do not currently collect 
    school-level information. NSLP School Food Authorities (SFAs), which 
    are generally school districts, are the only
    
    [[Page 914]]
    
    entities other than the schools that collect this data. SFAs are 
    also more able than schools to provide the data to the NSLP State 
    agency. The interim rule accommodates this situation by directing 
    SFAs to inform their State NSLP agency of the elementary schools 
    that have at least 50 percent of their enrollment certified to 
    receive free or reduced-price NSLP lunches. It is estimated \10\ 
    that roughly 5,000 SFAs will contain the approximately 11,000 
    elementary schools meeting this criterion, and that the annual 
    average reporting burden on an SFA will be roughly 1.5 hours ($12). 
    The NSLP State agencies will receive the lists of elementary schools 
    from their SFAs, compile and presumably do basic error checking on 
    them, and pass the compiled listings on to the State CACFP agencies. 
    It is estimated that the average NSLP State agency burden associated 
    with this work will be 2.5 hours.
    
    Comparison of Costs and Benefits
    
        The analysis presented here finds that the DCH tiering structure 
    established by P.L. 104-193 and promulgated by this interim rule 
    will accomplish its objective of targeting Federal child care 
    benefits to low-income children. This targeting will save a 
    projected $2.2 billion in Federal tax revenues over the next 6 years 
    (fiscal years 1997-2002). Non-low-income providers (tier II DCHs 
    providers) and non-low-income families with children in tier II DCHs 
    will bear most of the costs resulting from the Federal government's 
    $2.2 billion savings. Low-income families with children in tier II 
    DCHs may also bear some costs, but States may offset this by opting 
    to increase child care subsidies. The analysis further found that 
    while targeting will place new administrative burdens on sponsors, 
    State CACFP and NSLP agencies, and NSLP school food authorities, 
    these burdens are relatively modest.
    
    5. Requirements for Regulatory Analyses Established by Regulatory 
    Flexibility Act
    
        The Regulatory Flexibility Act (P.L. 96-354) establishes 
    requirements for analyses of regulatory actions that are expected to 
    have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
    entities. P.L. 96-354 was enacted at the urging of small businesses 
    after repeated claims that uniform application of regulations 
    regardless of business size was disproportionately damaging to small 
    entities. It is expected that this rule will have an economically 
    significant impact on tier II DCH providers due to the large 
    decrease in reimbursement rates for meals served in those DCHs. This 
    rule will also affect sponsoring organizations, considered to be 
    ``small organizations'' by P.L. 96-354, although the economic impact 
    on them is expected to be minimal. The specific effects for sponsors 
    and tier II providers were discussed under the Costs to Providers 
    and Costs to Sponsors sections of the Cost/Benefit Assessment.
        The Act also requires that analyses estimate the type of 
    professional skills necessary to reporting or record keeping 
    requirements. The new reporting and record keeping required by this 
    rule require no skills beyond those necessary for current program 
    reporting and record keeping requirements.
        Another P.L. 96-354 requirement is that analyses describe the 
    steps taken by the promulgating agency (Food and Consumer Service, 
    FCS) to minimize the economic impact on small entities. 
    Specifically, the ``analysis shall also contain a description of any 
    significant alternatives to the interim rule which accomplish the 
    stated objectives of applicable statutes and which minimize any 
    significant economic impact of the proposed rule on small 
    entities.'' There are no significant alternatives available to FCS 
    that both (1) accomplish the stated objectives of P.L. 104-193 AND 
    (2) minimize any significant economic impact on small entities.
        The interim rule implements, in accordance with statute and with 
    the statutory intent to target benefits, the programmatic changes 
    mandated by the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity 
    Reconciliation Act of 1996 (P.L. 104-193). The rule's only 
    economically significant impacts are the decreased meal 
    reimbursements for meals served in tier II DCHs; FCS cannot mitigate 
    this effect other than by making targeting less accurate, which 
    would be contrary to the spirit of P.L. 104-193. The only other 
    class of small entities affected by this regulatory action are 
    sponsors. The analysis finds that the costs that sponsors will incur 
    in meeting the new program requirements established by this interim 
    rule will be less than one percent of the payments each sponsor 
    receives from USDA for operating the CACFP in its DCHs. The small 
    size of this burden implies that this interim rule's economic impact 
    on sponsors is minimal and that in the few areas where FCS had 
    discretion, it made choices free from deleterious economic effects 
    for sponsors. For example, FCS considered several alternatives for 
    how often sponsors using simplified meal counting systems must re-
    determine the claiming percentage or blended reimbursement rate for 
    each of their mixed DCHs using the income-status of currently 
    enrolled children. P.L. 104-193 required that these re-
    determinations be made at least annually. FCS considered annual, 
    semi-annual, and quarterly re-determinations and chose, for the 
    interim rule, to require semi-annual re-determinations, having 
    decided semi-annual represents the best compromise between effective 
    targeting of benefits and limiting sponsor burden. The interim rule 
    places no reporting requirements on homes or sponsors beyond those 
    mandated by P.L. 104-193.
        FCS is soliciting comments on the less-economically significant, 
    burden related provisions of this rule and will consider all 
    received comments when crafting the final rule and when revising the 
    burden estimates for the final economic impact analysis.
    
    6. References
    
    1. Glantz, Frederic, Judith Layzer, and Michael Battaglia. Study of 
    the Child Care Food Program. Alexandria, VA: U.S. Department of 
    Agriculture, Food and Nutrition Service, Office of Analysis and 
    Evaluation, August 1988.
    2. Department of Agriculture, Food and Consumer Service Program 
    Information Division, ``Program Information Report.'' August 26, 
    1996.
    3. Kisker, Ellen E., Sandra L. Hofferth, Deborah A. Phillips, and 
    Elizabeth Farquhar. A Profile of Child Care Settings: Early 
    Education and Care in 1990, Volume I. Princeton, NJ: Mathematica 
    Policy Research, Inc., 1991.
    4. Glantz, Frederic. ``Family Day Care Myths and Realities.'' 
    October 1989, Paper Presented at the October 1989 meeting of the 
    Association for Public Policy Analysis and Management, Washington, 
    DC.
    5. Fosburg, Steven, Judith D. Singer, Barbara Dillon Goodson, Donna 
    Warner, Nancy Irwin, Lorelei R. Brush, Janet Grasso. Family Day Care 
    in the United States: National Day Care Home Study Summary of 
    Findings. DHHS Publication No. (OHDS) 80-30282. Washington, D.C.: 
    U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 1981.
    6. Kisker, Ellen Eliason, Valarie A. Piper. Participation in the 
    Child and Adult Care Food Program: New Estimates and Prospects for 
    Growth. Alexandria, VA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Food and 
    Nutrition Service, Office of Analysis and Evaluation, April 1993.
    7. Burghardt, John, Anne Gordon, Nancy Chapman, Philip Gleason, and 
    Thomas Fraker. The School Nutrition Dietary Assessment Study: School 
    Food Service, Meals Offered, and Dietary Intakes. Alexandria, VA: 
    U.S. Department of Agriculture, Food and Nutrition Service, Office 
    of Analysis and Evaluation, October 1993.
    8. Heiser, Nancy. Characteristics of Food Stamp Households, Summer 
    1990. Alexandria, VA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Food and 
    Nutrition Service, Office of Analysis and Evaluation, July 1992.
    9. Hoffereth, Sandra L., April Brayfield, Sharon Deich, and Pamela 
    Holcomb. National Child Care Survey, 1990. Washington, DC: Urban 
    Institute, 1991.
    10. Mathematica Inc., Special Tabulations of the School Nutrition 
    Dietary Assessment Study data. Alexandria, VA: U.S. Department of 
    Agriculture, Food and Consumer Service, Office of Analysis and 
    Evaluation, February 1995.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        This analysis is consistent with the possibility that a limited 
    number of non-low-income children will be in tier I DCHs, and that a 
    similar limited number of low-income children will be in non-mixed 
    tier II DCHs.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Approved:
    
    
    [[Page 915]]
    
    
        Dated: December 5, 1996.
    
    William E. Ludwig,
    
    Administrator, Food and Consumer Services.
    
        Dated: December 20, 1996.
    
    Stephen B. Dewhurst,
    
    Director, Office of Budget and Program Analysis.
    
        Dated: December 20, 1996.
    
    Keith Collins,
    Chief Economist.
    
        Dated: December 23, 1996.
    Dan Dager,
    Acting Executive Assistant to the Under Secretary for Food, Nutrition, 
    and Consumer Services.
    [FR Doc. 97-116 Filed 1-6-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3410-30-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
7/1/1997
Published:
01/07/1997
Department:
Food and Consumer Service
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Interim rule with request for comments.
Document Number:
97-116
Dates:
Effective July 1, 1997, except for sections 210.9(b)(20), 210.19(f), 226.6(f)(2) and 226.6(f)(9), which are effective March 10, 1997. To be assured of consideration, comments must be postmarked on or before April 7, 1997, except for comments on the information collection which must be received by March 10, 1997.
Pages:
889-915 (27 pages)
RINs:
0584-AC42: Improved Targeting of Day Care Home Reimbursements in the Child and Adult Care Food Program
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/0584-AC42/improved-targeting-of-day-care-home-reimbursements-in-the-child-and-adult-care-food-program
PDF File:
97-116.pdf
CFR: (11)
7 CFR 226.23(h)(6)
7 CFR 210.9
7 CFR 210.19
7 CFR 226.2
7 CFR 226.4
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