Not exact matches
California law
prohibits cities from regulating small
family child care homes (licensed for eight or fewer
children) but allows cities to place some restrictions on large
family child care homes, which may serve no more than fourteen
children.
No matter how many
children you
care for, the same law that says your landlord may not
prohibit you from providing
family child care requires you to inform your landlord in writing that you are operating, or plan to operate, a
family child care home.
Because of the law
prohibiting landlords from imposing restrictions on
family child care homes, your landlord may not require you to get liability insurance for your
family child care home.
If your landlord is concerned about cancellation or refusal to renew his or her own insurance policy because of your
family child care home, inform the landlord that the law
prohibits the insurer from cancelling or not renewing the landlord's insurance because a
family child care is operating on the premises.
Cities and counties may not
prohibit the operation of either small or large
family child care homes in single -
family dwellings.
[ii] For example, Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&R s) that
prohibit the use of
homes as a «business» can not be applied to
family child care homes.
California law
prohibits insurers from canceling an insurance policy that has been in effect for 60 days or a renewal policy because of the operation of a
family child care home on the premises.
The law also
prohibits HOAs from deciding not to sell or rent to an applicant because she / he is a
family child care home provider.