Your facility has been designed to prevent child abuse and neglect. You must ensure that all staff understand and maximize the features of the environment that prevent abuse and neglect. You can also use tools, such as closed circuit television, to assist in this important work. This lesson will introduce you to the physical features of your facility that prevent abuse and neglect, provide an overview of closed circuit television, and discuss ways to restrict access to your program only to authorized individuals.
This lesson may have content specific to certain audiences. Differences between audience views may be subtle or non-existent. Please select your audience:
Secondary tabs
- Maintain the security of the facility.
- Use and monitor closed-circuit television.
- Describe the benefits and limitations of facility features designed to prevent child abuse and neglect.
Learn
The key to a safe facility is monitoring. However, you cannot be in all places at all times. It is impossible to monitor your entire facility yourself. This lesson is designed to help you understand how your facility has been designed to prevent child abuse and neglect. Then it will introduce you to additional ways you can prevent abuse and neglect through closed circuit television surveillance systems and monitoring access to your program.
How is Your Facility Designed to Keep Children Safe?
Note: This section has been closely adapted from two sources developed under the direction of the DoD, Office of Family Policy for military child and youth programs and has been cross-referenced and updated based on Unified Facilities Criteria (UFC 4-740-14):
- Koralek, D. G. (1993, Nov). Preventing Child Abuse and Neglect in Center Settings. Washington, DC: Teaching Strategies, Inc. Department of Defense Contract #MDA 903-91-M-6715 for Office of Family Policy Support and Services, Office of the Secretary of Defense.
- Koralek, D. G. (1994) Preventing Child Abuse and Neglect: A Training Module for Youth Program Staff. Double H Productions. Department of Defense Contract #DAE08-94-5011.
适龄儿童发展和项目运作in many different types of facilities. Your program might operate within a dedicated Child Development Center, in a renovated elementary school, a community center, or a variety of other settings. Regardless of floor plan or design elements, all programs share several key characteristics that protect children from harm. These features promote visibility and enable active supervision of children at all times (depending on the age and design of your facility, it may not have all of these features):
In CDCs:
- There are windows in the doors to all rooms and areas used to care for children (except for adult and school-age toilet rooms), allowing activities in the room to be viewed from outside the room.
- There are vision panels between activity rooms and hallways to provide visual access.
- Doors on toilet stalls are removed, except for toilets used by children over age 5 and adults; or there are half walls that allow line of sight supervision for children under age 5.
- Walls around toilet stalls are reduced to half the normal height, if possible, to permit better viewing of toilet areas.
- 存储区域设计的硬件doors is operable from both sides. Doors on closets can be opened from the inside without a key. This prevents a child from being locked in a closet or storage area. In some Services, vision panels are required in the doors for all storage areas.
- There are no draperies or blinds that obstruct the view into areas in which children receive care or areas where someone might take a child. Art work is not hung on windows.
- There are sinks for handwashing in activity rooms rather than in toilet areas so children can be observed more easily.
- Diapering areas are separated from activity rooms by either half walls or walls with glass. Ideally, buildings are constructed with no walls between diapering areas and activity rooms to increase visibility of caregivers and children during diapering.
- Crib or sleeping areas are located in activity rooms. If the design of the building prevents this arrangement, crib or sleeping areas are separated from activity rooms by half walls or walls with glass.
- Concave mirrors are installed where needed to improve visibility.
- Rooms used for evening care are located near the front door so staff and parents have easy access.
- Outdoor play areas are constructed so all parts can be viewed from inside the center and from outside the playground fencing. There are windows in the walls between activity rooms and outdoor play areas to permit viewing of both areas.
- Doors to storage areas are visible from the main building so they can be visually monitored by adults other than those on the playground.
- Play structures such as lofts and play houses are built so that children can be viewed while at play in the structure.
- 闭路电视(CCTV) systems are installed, working properly, and allow staff members, managers, T&Cs, and families to monitor program activities.
In School-Age programs:
- 所有程序领域(房间,走廊,停车场和户外空间)都是充分利用的,可见性足够好,工作人员可以轻松监督所有空间。
- 存储区域设计的硬件doors is operable from both sides. Doors on closets can be opened from the inside without a key. This prevents a child from being locked in a closet or storage area. In some Services, vision panels are required in the doors for all storage areas. This prevents children from entering unsafe spaces with each other or an adult who means harm.
- 闭路电视系统安装,正常工作,允许工作人员,经理,T&CS和家庭监控计划活动。
- There are no draperies or blinds that obstruct the view into areas in which children receive care or areas where someone might take a child.
- 安装凹面镜,需要在需要提高角落或难以看到的空间周围的可见性。
- Doors to outdoor storage areas are visible from the main building so they can be visually monitored by adults other than those on the playground.
Using Closed Circuit Television
闭路电视surveillance cameras can be a powerful tool in preventing child abuse and neglect. These cameras not only deter staff from inappropriate behavior, but they also can help protect staff from false allegations of child abuse or neglect. Despite the benefits, the use of video in programs introduces other potential risks related to privacy. It is important to comply with all regulations related to the use of closed circuit television while mitigating risks to the privacy of children, families, and staff. YourMILinstallationPUBLIC程式might have specific guidance related to the use of closed circuit television surveillance systems. Find out whether there are specific instructions or memoranda for your place of work (for example:http://mccscherrypoint.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/closedcircuittv.pdf.)
There are several topics you must consider to maximize your use of closed circuit television surveillance systems:
- 记录和定期监控视频:如果没有一个视图输出,闭路电视系统是无用的。确保视频监视器安装在管理团队可以实时观看镜头或从录制中轻松观看镜头的位置。取决于您的MILService’sPUBLIC程式policies, the location should be accessible to families who request to view their child’s classroom.
- Sharing video: No footage should ever be shared with anyone outside of the organization unless specifically ordered to do so as part of an investigation. Ask about yourMILinstallation’sPUBLIC程式policies related to (a) viewing recordings in real time and (b) footage that has been previously recorded in classrooms.MILIn some cases, recorded footage is considered Government property, for exclusive use of the Government. Recorded footage may only be accessible to families or other individuals through a Freedom of Information Act request. In such cases, there would be specific steps you need to follow in preparation for or compliance with the request.
- Destroying video: Learn yourMILinstallation’sPUBLIC程式存储和销毁视频的政策。例如,在某些安装上,视频维护了30天,然后销毁。如果管理层意识到可能受到镜头影响的情况(索赔或诉讼),则视频仅保留超过30天。MILThis might vary across Services and installations, so check with leadership on your installation. If your installationPUBLICIf your programdoes not have a policy on this topic, you can find a sample in the Apply section.
Restricting Access
Child development and school-age programs are busy places. It takes a large team to keep the programs running. Your facility has been designed to ensure that only authorized individuals enter the building. According to Koralek’s guide to preventing child abuse and neglect in center settings (1993), design features include:
- 接待台位于,以便可以通过接待台员工查看入口。
- Centers have alarms on all exit doors, other than the main entrance and the kitchen exterior entrance, that do not open to a fenced area.
- One central entrance area serves all wings or modules. This reduces the number of ways to enter or exit the building.
- A system at the main entrance, such as a buzzer system, restricts entry to the building at night when only a few caregiving employees are on duty.
Those strategies simply help you control who enters the doors. How do you ensure that children are safe in the presence of authorized individuals? How do you ensure that those individuals share your mission to keep children safe? For individuals like regular teen and adult volunteers, contractors (e.g., someone contracted to teach a language class), nurses, and food service personnel, the answer is relatively simple. You must conduct standard background checks and provide adequate supervision.
For individuals like maintenance and delivery personnel, the answer is a bit more complicated. These individuals may be infrequent or one-time visitors to your program. However, they might have access to parts of the building where children are present. To ensure children’s safety, you must control access and monitor visitors at all times. Enforce your program’s sign-in and sign-out procedures. Check in with the visitor regularly. As always, ensure staff use active supervision strategies to monitor children and youth. When unfamiliar adults are working in the building, staff should adjust their supervision to keep children safe. For example, if maintenance is being performed in a school-age program activity room, the room might be closed to children or a staff member might stay in the room at all times.
Controlling access can be even more difficult if your program is co-located within another program (i.e., your school-age program is co-located in drop-in teen center). Remember, child abuse does not just happen at the hands of adults. Older children or teens can also target younger children. Staff supervision and “management by walking around” become critically important in these situations. Make sure staff members are aware of the risks and your expectations: develop written plans for supervising areas or groups of children, develop and communicate boundaries within the program (i.e., where are children and teens supposed to be and at what times), and move around the building frequently to make sure all plans are in place. Finally, educate the children about safety within the program. At the most basic level, teach children where they are allowed to go and when. Work with staff members and local agencies to develop curricula or teaching strategies related to personal safety. Topics might include being aware of your environment, recognizing risky situations, responding to risky situations, and finding an adult when you feel unsafe.
Explore
In this lesson and the previous lessons, you read about many program management practices and facility features that prevent child abuse and neglect. Take a few minutes to reflect on those practices or features in your facility. Are you doing all you can to prevent child abuse and neglect? What could be improved? Download and print theReflecting on Preventionactivity and answer the questions.
Apply
If your program has not yet grappled with the privacy issues related to closed circuit television systems, you can learn from other programs. Here you will find sample language from an order related to closed circuit television systems on one military installation. This is provided as a sample to spur thought and conversation. Of course, you must talk with legal counsel on your own installation about guidelines or instructions for your use of closed circuit television.
Demonstrate
Koralek, D. G. (1993, Nov). Preventing Child Abuse and Neglect in Center Settings. Washington, DC: Teaching Strategies, Inc. Department of Defense Contract #MDA 903-91-M-6715 for Office of Family Policy Support and Services, Office of the Secretary of Defense.
Koralek, D. G. (1994) Preventing Child Abuse and Neglect: A Training Module for Youth Program Staff. Double H Productions. Department of Defense Contract #DAE08-94-5011.
Marine Corps Community Services Order 1754.1A (2 Apr 13). Closed Circuit Television (CCTV) Systems in MCAS Cherry Point Child and Youth Development Centers.
The National Center for Fatality Review and Prevention. (n.d.) Child abuse and neglect fact sheet.https://www.ncfrp.org/