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Types of Regulated Programs
Child Care and Youth Residential Licensing Child Care Licensing Child care centers provide care for six or more children below 13 years of age who attend less than 24 hours a day. Child care centers are required by State law to be licensed. Family child care homes (also known as family day care homes) provide care for five or fewer children below 13 years of age in the provider's private residence. Family child care providers may choose to become voluntarily registered through Child Care Resource and Referral Centers under contract with the Department of Human Services. For information about children’s summer camp programs, please contact the New Jersey Department of Health and Senior Services, Public Health, Sanitation and Safety Programs HERE. Youth Residential Licensing Children's residential treatment centers provide 24-hour care for 13 or more children placed or financed by DCF. Residential treatment centers under contract with the Department, both in New Jersey and in other states, must be approved by the Office of Licensing. Children's group homes provide 24-hour care for 12 or fewer children placed or financed by DCF. Group homes include children's group homes, teaching family homes, treatment homes, supervised transitional living homes and alternative care homes. Group homes under contract with DCF must be approved by the Office of Licensing. Children's shelter facilities, juvenile-family-crisis shelters and shelter homes provide temporary 24-hour care for non-adjudicated children including children who are dependent, neglected, abandoned or runaways. Shelter facilities and shelter homes under contract with DCF must be approved by the Office of Licensing. Psychiatric community residences for youth provide food, shelter and personal guidance on a 24-hour basis under such supervision as required, to not more than 15 mentally ill youth that require assistance. These residences are for youth who have received or may be at risk of inpatient care in an inpatient facility and who may benefit from psychiatric treatment within a community residence setting so as to avert more intensive treatment or to facilitate their return home or placement in a longer term residential facility. Adoption agencies place children for adoption or provide other adoption services in New Jersey. Adoption agencies are required by State law to be licensed. Resource Family Licensing Resource family homes are private residences in which board, lodging, care and temporary out-of-home placement services are provided by a resource family parent on a 24-hour basis to a child under the auspices of the Division of Youth and Family Services (DYFS), including a home approved by DYFS for the placement of a child for the purpose of adoption.
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