Court Opinion

ID: 6500335
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-15 15:08:19.284324+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:19:30.671046
License: Public Domain

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Kidzoo Child Care Center                        :
and Preschool,                                  :
                  Petitioner                    :
                                                :
               v.                               :
                                                :
Department of Human Services,                   :    No. 985 C.D. 2021
                 Respondent                     :    Argued: June 23, 2022

BEFORE:        HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
               HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
               HONORABLE LORI A. DUMAS, Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY
JUDGE COVEY                                                         FILED: July 15, 2022

               Kidzoo Child Care Center and Preschool (Kidzoo) petitions this Court
for review of the Department of Human Services (DHS), Bureau of Hearings and
Appeals’ (BHA) August 12, 2021 order denying Kidzoo’s appeal from DHS’ Office
of Child Development and Early Learning’s (Department) decision that revoked
Kidzoo’s certificate of compliance (Certificate/License) to operate a child care
center.1 Kidzoo presents two issues for this Court’s review:2 (1) whether the
Department failed to establish that Kidzoo acted with gross incompetence,
negligence, or misconduct under Section 1026(b) of the Human Services Code
(Code);3 and (2) whether the Department erred by failing to issue Kidzoo a

       1
         “A child day care license is referred to as a certificate of compliance.” Musheno v. Dep’t
of Pub. Welfare, 829 A.2d 1228, 1229 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2003).
       2
         This Court has changed the order of the issues for ease of discussion herein.
       3
          Act of June 3, 1967, P.L. 31, as amended, 62 P.S. § 1026(b) (relating to license
revocation).
provisional license under Section 1008(a) of the Code.4 After review, this Court
reverses.

                                              Facts
               Kidzoo is a child care center located at 800 Lombard Road, Red Lion,
Pennsylvania. On March 28, 2019, a Department representative (Representative)
conducted an unannounced monitoring inspection at Kidzoo. During that inspection,
the Representative observed a violation of Section 3270.25(a) of DHS’ Regulations.5
Specifically, Kidzoo’s Certificate was not “posted in a conspicuous location used by
parents.”6 Id. The Department notified Kidzoo of the regulatory violation and
requested an acceptable plan of correction. On April 5, 2019, the Department
accepted Kidzoo’s plan of correction.
               On June 27, 2019, a Representative conducted another unannounced
monitoring inspection at Kidzoo.             During that inspection, the Representative
observed violations of Sections 3270.76 and 3270.102(e) of DHS’ Regulations.7
Specifically, the Representative observed sharp, cracked plastic on the bottom
border of the white plastic fence and mulch on the toddler outdoor play space.8 The

       4
           62 P.S. § 1008(a).
       5
           55 Pa. Code § 3270.25(a).
         6
           Kidzoo’s owner, Janis Grimm (Grimm), testified that she had taken the Certificate off the
wall because she needed the identification number listed thereon to fill out paperwork relative to
the Pennsylvania Standards Training/Professional Development, Assistants, Resources and
Supports program. See Notes of Testimony, Feb. 17, 2021 (N.T.) at Ex. C-7 (Kidzoo’s Appeal
Letter).
         7
           55 Pa. Code §§ 3270.76 (“Floors, walls, ceilings[,] and other surfaces, including the
facility’s outdoor play space surfaces shall be kept clean, in good repair and free from visible
hazards.”), and 3270.102(e) (“Pea gravel and other materials with a diameter of less than [one]
inch may not be used in spaces where infants or toddlers receive care.”).
         8
           Grimm testified at the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) hearing that the bottom of the
fence became cracked when the lawn care service’s weed wacker got too close to it, and she has
since attached a wood piece to prevent further cracking. See N.T. at 116, 118. Regarding the
mulch, Grimm related that the mulch travels to the play area after it rains. See id. at 105. The
                                                 2
Department notified Kidzoo of the regulatory violations and requested an acceptable
plan of correction. On August 21, 2019, the Department accepted Kidzoo’s plan of
correction.
               On July 1, 2019, a Representative conducted an allocated unannounced
monitoring inspection at Kidzoo.               During that inspection, the Representative
observed violations of Sections 3270.31(e)(4)(iii) and (iv), 3270.32(a), 3270.151(a),
3270.181(c) and (e), and 3270.192(2)(ii), (3), (4), and (5) of DHS’ Regulations.9
Specifically, the lifeguard’s certification had expired on June 1, 2019, only one non-
family reference was in the lifeguard’s file, and her Federal Bureau of Investigation
background check request and clearance, and health assessment (other than her
Tuberculosis test) were not in her file;10 there was no documentation that the person
who provided water safety training for the staff was a certified lifeguard; and four
of the children’s emergency contact information had not been updated in the last six
months. The Department notified Kidzoo of the regulatory violations and requested

teachers make sure it is clean and free from debris before the children go out to play. See id. at
106.
          9
            55 Pa. Code §§ 3270.31(e)(4)(iii) (“Lifeguard training.”), and (e)(4)(iv) (“Water safety
instruction.”); 3270.32(a) (“The operator shall comply with the [Child Protective Services Law
(]CPSL[), 23 Pa.C.S. §§ 6301-6388.]”); 3270.151(a) (“A facility person providing direct care who
comes into contact with the children . . . shall have a health assessment conducted within 12 months
prior to providing initial service in a child care setting . . . .”); 3270.181(c) (“A parent is required
to review and update the emergency contact information . . . at least once in a [six]-month period
. . .”), and (e) (“If emergency information is updated in a master file, it shall be updated accordingly
in other facility records.”); and 3270.192(2)(ii) (A record shall include a copy of a “[v]erification
of child care experience, education[,] and training prior to service at the facility[,]”), (3) (“[a]
written report of initial and subsequent health assessments,”) (4) (“[a] copy of requests for the
criminal history record and child abuse registry clearance information,”) and (5) (“[t]wo written,
nonfamily references . . . .”).
          10
              Representative Leann Goodling testified at the ALJ hearing that the pool owner
employed the lifeguard, but acknowledged it was Kidzoo’s responsibility to have the paperwork
on file. See N.T. at 64. The pool owner also keeps the documentation. See id. Grimm explained
that, in this particular instance, Kidzoo’s regular lifeguard was on vacation and the pool owner had
informed Grimm that her replacement had all the proper certifications. See N.T. at 107-109.
                                                   3
an acceptable plan of correction. On August 9, 2019, the Department accepted
Kidzoo’s plan of correction.
               On November 8, 2019, between 5:55 a.m. and 5:58 a.m., a 9-year-old
child left Kidzoo and walked home. A Kidzoo staff person noticed the child was
missing and searched for the child between 5:57 a.m. and 6:00 a.m. The child’s
whereabouts were unknown to Kidzoo staff for approximately 30 minutes. The
child’s mother called Kidzoo at approximately 6:30 a.m. to inform Kidzoo that the
child had walked home, which was approximately two miles from the facility.11
               From November 12 to November 27, 2019, a Representative conducted
an investigation relative to the November 8, 2019 incident.                         During that
investigation, the Representative verified that Kidzoo violated Section 3270.113(a)
and (a)(1) of DHS’ Regulations.12 The Department notified Kidzoo of the regulatory
violations and requested an acceptable plan of correction. On November 14, 2019,
a Representative conducted an unannounced monitoring inspection at Kidzoo in
connection with the November 8, 2019 incident.                   During that inspection, the
Representative verified violations of Sections 3270.52 and 3270.124(f) of DHS’
Regulations.13 The Department notified Kidzoo of the regulatory violations and
requested an acceptable plan of correction.

       11
           Darrell Snyder (Snyder), a Kidzoo teacher, explained that the child admitted that after
asking to use the restroom he waited until Snyder turned his back and went out the front door. See
N.T. at 78-79.
        12
           55 Pa. Code § 3270.113(a) (“Children on the facility premises and on facility excursions
off the premises shall be supervised by a staff person at all times. Outdoor play space used by the
facility is considered part of the facility premises.”), and (a)(1) (“Each staff person shall be
assigned the responsibility for supervision of specific children. The staff person shall know the
names and whereabouts of the children in his assigned group. The staff person shall be physically
present with the children in his group on the facility premises . . . .”).
        13
           55 Pa. Code §§ 3270.52 (“When children are grouped in mixed age levels, the age of the
youngest child in the group determines the staff[.]”), and 3270.124(f) (“The parent shall update in
writing emergency contact information once in a [six]-month period or as soon as there is a change
in the information.”).
                                                4
               On January 23, 2020, the Department revoked Kidzoo’s License.
Kidzoo appealed to the BHA and, following a hearing, an administrative law judge
(ALJ) recommended the denial of Kidzoo’s appeal. The ALJ concluded that the
Department may revoke Kidzoo’s License based on a single violation, Kidzoo did
not dispute the violations, and Kidzoo was not entitled to a provisional license. On
August 12, 2021, the BHA adopted the ALJ’s recommendation and denied Kidzoo’s
appeal. Kidzoo appealed to this Court.14 Kidzoo filed an application for stay
pending appeal which this Court granted on October 20, 2021.15 Accordingly,
Kidzoo has remained open pending this Court’s decision on the merits of Kidzoo’s
appeal.

                                           Discussion
               Preliminarily, in its brief to this Court, Kidzoo argues, inter alia, that
the closure of Kidzoo during the COVID-19 pandemic was contrary to the
Department’s stated objectives of providing safe child care facilities. DHS asserts
that Kidzoo has waived this argument by not raising it in its Petition for Review
(Petition) filed with this Court.
               Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure 1513(d)(5) provides that an
appellate jurisdiction petition for review shall contain “a general statement of the
objections to the order or other determination, but the omission of an issue from the
statement shall not be the basis for a finding of waiver if the court is able to address
the issue based on the certified record[.]” Pa.R.A.P. 1513(d)(5) (emphasis added).

       14
          “Our scope of review in an appeal of an adjudication of [DHS] is limited to determining
whether constitutional rights were violated, whether an error of law was committed or whether
necessary findings of fact were supported by substantial evidence.” Lil Shining Stars, Inc. v. Dep’t
of Hum. Servs., 140 A.3d 83, 92 n.5 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2016).
       15
          See Kidzoo Child Care Ctr. & Preschool v. Dep’t of Hum. Servs. (Pa. Cmwlth. No. 985
C.D. 2021, filed Oct. 20, 2021).
                                                 5
Kidzoo contends that it raised the COVID-19 pandemic issue in Paragraph 5 of its
Petition. However, a review of Petition paragraph five belies this assertion. Petition
Paragraph 5 states:

             [The] BHA erred by applying a “Zero-Tolerance” Policy
             that does not match the Department’s real-world actions.
             The Department has allowed Kidzoo to continue operating
             for two and a half years since the November 8, 2019
             incident, without making any effort to seek an injunction
             or otherwise halt its services. Moreover, the Department
             erred as a matter of law by revoking Kidzoo’s [C]ertificate
             . . . rather than placing Kidzoo on a provisional license.
             “When there has been substantial but not complete
             compliance with all the applicable statutes, ordinances and
             regulations and when the applicant has taken appropriate
             steps to correct deficiencies, the [D]epartment shall issue
             a provisional license.” 62 P.S. [§] 1008(a) (emphasis
             added). “Upon full compliance by the facility, the
             [D]epartment shall issue a regular license immediately.”
             62 P.S. § 1008(d).

Petition ¶ 5. Similarly, this Court’s review of the certified record reveals that there
are no references to the issue of whether closing Kidzoo during the COVID-19
pandemic was contrary to the Department’s stated objectives. Because Kidzoo did
not raise the COVID-19 pandemic issue in its Petition, and this Court cannot address
it based on the certified record, Kidzoo has waived that issue. See Pa.R.A.P.
1513(d)(5). Accordingly, this Court will not consider Kidzoo’s argument relative to
the COVID-19 pandemic issue.

                Gross Incompetence, Negligence, or Misconduct
             Kidzoo argues that the Department failed to establish that it acted with
gross incompetence, negligence, or misconduct under Section 1026(b) of the Code.
Kidzoo cites Gibbs v. Department of Public Welfare, 947 A.2d 233 (Pa. Cmwlth.
2008), to support its position. DHS rejoins that the facts herein more aptly align

                                          6
with Aa to Zz Childcare & Learning Center v. Department of Human Services (Pa.
Cmwlth. No. 651 C.D. 2018, filed May 1, 2019),16 and, thus, Aa to Zz controls.
               Initially, Section 1026(b) of the Code provides:

               [DHS] shall refuse to issue a license or shall revoke a
               license for any of the following reasons:
               (1) Violation of or non-compliance with the provisions
               of [the Code] or of [R]egulations pursuant thereto;
               (2) Fraud or deceit in obtaining or attempting to obtain a
               license;
               (3) Lending, borrowing or using the license of another, or
               in any way knowingly aiding or abetting the improper
               granting of a license;
               (4) Gross incompetence, negligence or misconduct in
               operating the facility;
               (5) Mistreating or abusing individuals cared for in the
               facility.
62 P.S. § 1026(b) (bold and underline emphasis added).

               In Gibbs, Gibbs held a certificate to operate a day care facility in her
home that allowed her to care for her own children and up to six other children. In
May 2006, the children were playing in the back yard under Gibbs’ supervision.
When Gibbs went in the house to have a private conversation with the parent of one
of the day care children, she instructed her 20-year-old son who worked at the day
care center to watch the children. Three minutes later, a two-year-old child left the
yard and crossed the street to a neighbor’s house. The neighbor called Gibbs. Until
she received that phone call, Gibbs was not aware that the child had left the yard.
The street that the child crossed is an untraveled, dead-end street located

       16
           Pursuant to Section 414(a) of this Court’s Internal Operating Procedures, 210 Pa. Code
§ 69.414(a), an unreported panel decision of this Court issued after January 15, 2008, may be cited
for its persuasive value, but not as binding precedent.

                                                7
approximately one-quarter mile from a busier street. The Department revoked
Gibbs’ license based on Gibbs’ violations of DHS’ Regulations and Gibbs’ gross
incompetence, negligence, or misconduct in operating the facility. This Court
determined that there were no DHS Regulation violations and, therefore, examined
the above incident to determine whether Gibbs acted with gross incompetence,
negligence, or misconduct.
             The Gibbs Court held that, in order for Gibbs’ actions to constitute
gross incompetence, negligence, or misconduct, the Department had to produce
evidence that entrusting supervision to an adult for a short time was itself grossly
incompetent, negligent, or willful misconduct. The Gibbs Court reasoned that if
Gibbs’ son was known to be untrustworthy or unreliable, Gibbs’ decision might have
been negligent or incompetent. However, because there was no such evidence, the
Gibbs Court ruled that Gibbs did not act with gross incompetence, negligence, or
misconduct and reversed the license revocation.
             In Aa to Zz, the incident that precipitated the revocation occurred when
an employee of the day care center took a group of children downstairs at 4:20 p.m.
and when they returned upstairs one hour later, the employee left an apparently
sleeping 5-year-old autistic child (Child) behind without staff supervision for 41
minutes. During the transition, the employee also left a second child without
supervision for one minute. At 5:50 p.m., staff members turned off the lights, locked
the doors, and exited the building. The facility had no plan in place for ensuring that
no children remained behind before leaving for the day. When Child’s mother
(Mother) arrived at the facility for pick-up, the two remaining on-site employees did
not have keys to open the door, so a third employee had to return and unlock the
door.   At 6:02 p.m., Child was reunited with Mother.              Consequently, for
approximately one-quarter of the time that Child was unattended, the facility was
locked and dark. The Department revoked the facility’s license on the basis of its
                                          8
failure to comply with the Code, DHS’ Regulations, and gross incompetence,
negligence, or misconduct in the operation of a child care program. The Aa to Zz
Court determined that the severity of the incident warranted license revocation. In
addition, the Aa to Zz Court held:

             In any event, the Department is authorized to revoke a
             certificate based on even a single violation of its
             regulations. . . . Further, the Department is authorized to
             revoke a license for any of the five reasons enumerated in
             Section 1026 of the Code. In other words, any of the five
             reasons, standing alone, can constitute sufficient ground[s]
             for revocation.
Aa to Zz, slip op. at 8 (citations omitted).

             The Gibbs Court determined that there were no DHS Regulation
violations therein. On that basis alone, Gibbs is inapposite. In Aa to Zz, the license
was revoked for Code and DHS Regulation violations in addition to gross
incompetence, negligence, or misconduct in operating the facility. Similarly, in the
instant case, Kidzoo’s License revocation was based on both DHS Regulation
violations and gross incompetence, negligence, or misconduct in operating the
facility. Accordingly, regardless of whether the Department established that Kidzoo
acted with gross incompetence, negligence, or misconduct, the undisputed DHS
Regulation violations are alone sufficient grounds to revoke Kidzoo’s License.
However, this conclusion does not end the Court’s review of this matter.

                                 Provisional License
             Kidzoo also argues that the Department erred by failing to issue Kidzoo
a provisional license under Section 1008(a) of the Code, instead of revoking its
License. DHS rejoins that provisional licenses are only available for applicants, not
license holders, and cites KC Equities v. Department of Public Welfare, 95 A.3d 918
(Pa. Cmwlth. 2014), to support its position. DHS further asserts that the term
                                               9
“applicant” as used in Section 1008(a) of the Code also includes an applicant for
license renewal, and Kidzoo was not in the process of renewal; therefore, Section
1008(a) of the Code does not apply to Kidzoo.
              Initially, Section 1008(a) of the Code provides: “When there has been
substantial but not complete compliance with all the applicable statutes,
ordinances[,] and regulations[,] and when the applicant has taken appropriate steps
to correct deficiencies, [DHS] shall issue a provisional license.” 62 P.S. § 1008(a)
(emphasis added). Similarly, Section 20.54(a) of DHS’ Regulations declares: “A
provisional certificate of compliance is issued if the facility . . . is in substantial, but
not complete, compliance with applicable statutes, ordinances, and regulations.” 55
Pa. Code § 20.54(a).
              DHS’ reliance on KC Equities for its position that Section 1008 of the
Code applies only to applicants is misplaced. The issue in KC Equities was whether
the BHA properly denied a child care facility’s appeal from a license revocation
based on non-compliance with a settlement. The KC Equities Court ruled that the
provisional certificate became an option for the facility by virtue of its agreement to
the settlement. Thus, the issue of whether Section 1008 of the Code applies to
licensees was not before the Court. Accordingly, KC Equities is inapposite.
              Notwithstanding, both before and after this Court’s ruling in KC
Equities, this Court has addressed whether a licensee was properly denied a
provisional license without any discussion concerning whether Section 1008(a) of
the Code applied. This Court expressly addressed whether a licensee showed
correction of non-compliance items and compliance with plans of correction or
substantial compliance. See, e.g., Lil Shining Stars, Inc. v. Dep’t of Hum. Servs.,
140 A.3d 83 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2016); see also Liberty Manor Care Home v. Dep’t of
Pub. Welfare (Pa. Cmwlth. No. 979 C.D. 2014, filed Apr. 17, 2015) (“[A] licensee
may be issued a provisional license if the licensee is in substantial compliance with
                                            10
the Code and [DHS’ R]egulations[.]”), slip op. at 24; Miller Home, Inc. v. Dep’t of
Pub. Welfare, 556 A.2d 1 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1989).
             In reviewing whether the Department should have issued the licensee
(which was not applying for renewal) a provisional license, the Lil Shining Stars
Court determined that “many of the violations found during the [specified]
inspection were repeat violations and that the Department rejected [the p]etitioner’s
three proposed plans of correction.” Id. at 97. The Lil Shining Stars Court held: “In
such cases,” i.e., where the licensee continues to repeat the same violations, and its
plans for correction are continuously unacceptable to the Department, “this Court
has found a lack of substantial compliance sufficient to warrant the issuance of a
provisional license.” Id.
             Further, the Miller Home Court noted, “Miller had been given two
provisional licenses. As emphasized, any provisional license beyond the first is
discretionary. Additionally, a regular license shall be issued immediately ‘upon
full compliance.’ The record indicate[d] there was not full compliance by Miller.”
Id. at 3 n.12 (emphasis added). Notably, at least one of the Miller Home case
facility’s provisional licenses was granted when the facility was neither an original
applicant nor an applicant for renewal.
             Moreover, in Liberty Manor Care Home, this Court held:

             Although a licensee may be issued a provisional license
             if the licensee is in substantial compliance with the Code
             and [DHS’ R]egulations, this Court has held that where
             there are repeat violations of the same statutory or
             regulatory provisions in multiple inspections, the licensee
             does not establish substantial compliance and is not
             entitled to a provisional license pursuant to Section 1008
             of the Code and [Section 20.54(a) of DHS’ Regulations,]
             55 Pa. Code § 20.54(a).

                                          11
Liberty Manor Care Home, slip op. at 24-25 (emphasis added). Thus, it is evident
that Section 1008(a) of the Code applies to both applicants and licensees. The issue
before this Court, therefore, is whether Kidzoo has shown “substantial compliance
sufficient to warrant the issuance of a provisional license.” Lil Shining Stars, 140
A.3d at 97.
                Unlike the licensees in Lil Shining Stars, Miller Home, and Liberty
Manor Care Home, Kidzoo was not cited for any repeat violations, and all violations
have been corrected. See N.T. at 46, 54-55. Further, the Department has never
issued Kidzoo a provisional license. See N.T. at 96. Moreover, with the exception
of the November 8, 2020 incident, all of Kidzoo’s violations were minor and
reasonably explicable. “Certainly, [this Court] would not expect [Kidzoo] or any
other entity in this particular industry to maintain 100% compliance at all times
during their respective operations[.]”17 Lil Shining Stars, 140 A.3d at 97.
                Finally, the November 8, 2020 occurrence was an isolated incident
involving a nine-year-old child who admitted that he tricked his teacher into
believing that he was using the restroom, waited until the teacher turned his back,
and snuck out the front door. See N.T. at 78. The child further revealed that he hid
behind the bushes outside the facility for a time before heading to his home, in case
anyone came looking for him. See N.T. at 78-79. This situation is distinct from both
Gibbs and Aa to Zz, wherein a 2-year-old child wandered off the premises while
being supervised, and a sleeping 5-year-old autistic child was left without staff

        17
            In Lil Shining Stars, the petitioner asserted that DHS maintains over 400 Regulations
and that no single proprietor could reasonably be expected to be in compliance with every
regulation. However, the petitioner provided no authority to support how these assertions would
justify a finding of substantial compliance. This Court noted: “[The p]etitioner opted to engage in
an industry that is heavily regulated . . . but the fact remains that [the p]etitioner received notice of
its violations, many of which continued from a previous inspection, and its submitted plans of
correction were rejected by the Department on three separate occasions.” Lil Shining Stars, 140
A.3d at 97 (emphasis added).
                                                  12
supervision for 41 minutes. In addition, Kidzoo self-reported the incident and the
child returned to Kidzoo the very same day, which was clear evidence that the
mother believed that it was her son’s conduct, rather than gross incompetence,
negligence, or misconduct on the part of Kidzoo, that caused the violation.18
               Because Kidzoo has established “substantial . . . compliance with all
the applicable statutes, ordinances[,] and [DHS’ R]egulations[,] and [that it] ha[d]
taken appropriate steps to correct deficiencies[,]” 62 P.S. § 1008(a), Kidzoo is
entitled to a provisional license. Accordingly, the Department erred by revoking
Kidzoo’s License, and in refusing to issue Kidzoo a provisional license.

                                            Conclusion
               For all of the above reasons, the BHA’s order is reversed, and the matter
is remanded to the BHA to remand to the Department to issue Kidzoo a provisional
license.

                                               _________________________________
                                               ANNE E. COVEY, Judge

       18
          The child’s mother testified on behalf of Kidzoo at the ALJ hearing. See N.T. at 86-94.
The child’s mother expressly stated: “I don’t feel that they’re [(Kidzoo)] at fault for this incident.”
N.T. at 93.
                                                 13
         IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Kidzoo Child Care Center                    :
and Preschool,                              :
                  Petitioner                :
                                            :
            v.                              :
                                            :
Department of Human Services,               :   No. 985 C.D. 2021
                 Respondent                 :

                                       ORDER

            AND NOW, this 15th day of July, 2022, the Department of Human
Services (DHS), Bureau of Hearings and Appeals’ (BHA) August 12, 2021 order is
REVERSED, and the matter is REMANDED to the BHA to remand to the DHS
Office of Child Development and Early Learning to issue Kidzoo Child Care Center
and Preschool a provisional license.
            Jurisdiction is relinquished.

                                        _________________________________
                                        ANNE E. COVEY, Judge