- A. The local department shall provide kinship caregivers with developmentally appropriate and trauma-responsive resources to manage the behaviors of children in care, including behavior management methods, and connect the kinship caregiver with community programs to address concerning behaviors.
- B. Kinship caregivers shall establish clear expectations for behavior and understand and manage challenging behaviors in a trauma-responsive manner, rewarding good behavior.
- C. Only a kinship caregiver or other adult caregiver approved by the local department and known to the children in care may discipline children in care.
- D. Kinship caregivers may only physically restrain a child in care to protect the child in care from self-injury or from injuring others.
E. Prohibited punishments include:
- (1) Using corporal punishment that includes spanking, shaking, physical hitting, or any other type of physical punishment, no matter how inflicted;
- (2) Requiring physical exercises such as running laps or performing pushups;
- (3) Forcing a child in care to assume or hold an uncomfortable position, such as squatting or bending, or to repeat physical movements;
- (4) Confining a child in care in a locked room;
- (5) Using mechanical or chemical restraints;
- (6) Making remarks that belittle or ridicule a child in care or a child in care's family;
- (7) Denying essential program services, such as not taking a child in care to a planned appointment for educational, psychiatric, or psychological services;
- (8) Withholding visitation or communication with the child in care’s family;
- (9) Withholding meals, clothing, or bedding, or disrupting a child in care’s sleep; and
- (10) Threatening to have a child in care removed from the home.
Effective date: March 20, 2000 (27:5 Md. R. 581)
Chapter repealed effective April 16, 2012 (39:7 Md. R. 490)
New Regulations .01 — .13 adopted effective December 12, 2024 (51:24 Md. R. 1081)