
For Immediate
Release:
Contact: Cindy Mall
April 7, 1998 415-882-0234
Statewide Public Education Campaign Launched to Prevent Nanny/Baby Sitter Abuse
Pacific
Life Foundation Grant Helps to Educate Public about
Life-Saving
TrustLine Program
TrustLine
1-800-822-8490
Sacramento – Parents and
children victimized by unconscionable nannies and baby-sitters launched a
comprehensive statewide public education campaign today for TrustLine – the
state’s only background check for in-home child care with access to Department
of Justice records – to help prevent abuse.
“You can never do too much to see that your children are safe. Parents should use all resources at their disposal, including TrustLine, checking references and conducting a thorough interview, to find the right in-home caregiver,” said Mary Beth Phillips, a TrustLine founder, whose daughter was permanently blinded after being shaken severely by a neighbor’s nanny. “Being registered on TrustLine is a minimum requirement that parents should ask of a caregiver. We hope the TrustLine campaign encourages parents and caregivers to use this life-saving service.”
TrustLine is a child protection
program jointly administered by the California Department of Social Services
and the non-profit Child Care Resource and Referral Network. All caregivers listed with TrustLine have
been cleared through a fingerprint check of records at the California
Department of Justice. This means they
have no disqualifying criminal convictions or substantiated child abuse reports
in California. It is also the only
background check authorized by state law to use three databases that the
general public, including private investigators and private background check
companies, cannot access. These
databases include the fingerprint records from the California Department of
Justice’s California Criminal History System; the Child Abuse Central Index of
California; and fingerprint records of the FBI Criminal History System. TrustLine is endorsed by the California
Academy of Pediatrics.
“With talk of fingerprinting and
criminal records, some parents may feel uncomfortable requiring their caregiver
to register with TrustLine,” said Eloise Anderson, Director, Department of
Social Services. “But is it worth the
risk to not call or not register an in-home caregiver on TrustLine? It’s simply the right thing to do.”
Pacific Life Foundation, the
charitable giving arm of Pacific Life Insurance Company, provided a $180,000
grant for the public education campaign that includes the creation and
statewide distribution of English and Spanish television and radio public
service announcements, brochures and posters as well as corporate fundraising
and media campaigns.
TrustLine Public
Education Campaign
News
Release: April 7, 1998
Page 2
“Pacific
Life Foundation is proud to support this life-saving program,” said Robert G.
Haskell, President of Pacific Life Foundation.
“We encourage other organizations to help spread the word about
TrustLine.”
According to Patricia Siegel, executive
director, California Child Care Resource & Referral Network, more than
30,000 applicants have been processed through TrustLine. “In 1997, more than 800 applicants were
denied approval from the registry because of criminal backgrounds, including individuals
with criminal convictions for murder, manslaughter, willful child cruelty,
sexual assault and kidnapping,” she said.
“It’s an invaluable resource to prevent child abuse and address issues
of quality of care in license exempt child care settings.”
Program administrators said that
parents and potential caregivers will be more likely to call TrustLine’s 800
number because the campaign uses positive, nurturing themes and images to
create interest and awareness.
The public education campaign is aimed
at parents and those that influence them on a daily basis, such as
pediatricians, hospital birthing center personnel, child care resource and
referral agencies, play groups and more.
TrustLine’s posters and brochures feature bright colors with smiling
toddlers framed in flowers with the headline, “Did you ever imagine you could
love someone so much?” Two public
service announcements, one in English and one in Spanish, also will be
distributed to television and radio stations statewide. The television spots show a women caring for
a toddler in a variety of settings.
However, it’s not until the end of the piece, when the parents walk
through the front door, that it is revealed that the caregiver is a nanny/baby-sitter.
Siegel pointed out that all child
care providers who operate in State-Licensed settings, such as child care
centers, have undergone a similar screening process. All employment agencies also are required by law to register
their caregivers with TrustLine upon placement.
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