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Failing to Release Child to Authorized Parent at Chicago Daycares

Every parent who drops their child off at a Chicago daycare trusts that the facility will keep that child safe, including making sure only the right person picks them up. When a daycare fails to follow proper release procedures, the consequences can be devastating. A child could end up with a stranger, an abusive parent violating a court order, or someone who intends harm. This is not a minor clerical error. It is a serious breach of the duty of care that every licensed daycare in Illinois owes to the children it serves. If your child was released to an unauthorized person by a Chicago daycare, you may have a legal claim. Briskman Briskman & Greenberg, located in Chicago, Illinois, represents families in exactly these situations.

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What Illinois Law Requires for Child Pickup at Daycares

Illinois law sets clear standards for how daycares must handle the release of children. Under Illinois DCFS licensing standards for Day Care Centers, specifically Part 407, Section 407.260, children must be admitted and discharged under circumstances that ensure protection of their physical and emotional well-being, and when a child is released to a person other than a parent or guardian, the facility must maintain a record of who that child was released to, along with the date and time. This is not a suggestion. It is a binding legal requirement for every licensed day care center in the state.

En Chicago abogado de lesiones personales team at Briskman Briskman & Greenberg understands that these rules exist for a reason. Parents provide authorized pickup lists at enrollment for exactly this purpose. It is the responsibility of bus and classroom and on-site center staff to identify all authorized persons per DCFS Licensing Standards before a child is released from their care. When staff skip this step, even once, the risk to a child’s safety is immediate and real.

En Illinois Child Care Act of 1969 (225 ILCS 10) gives DCFS the authority to license and regulate daycare centers across the state. That licensing framework includes the pickup authorization rules found in DCFS Rule 407. A daycare that fails to follow these rules is not just violating a regulation. It is creating a dangerous situation that can expose a child to serious harm. Violations can also trigger DCFS investigations, licensing penalties, and civil liability under Illinois negligence law.

How Daycares Are Supposed to Verify Authorized Pickup Persons

Proper pickup verification is a process, not a formality. At enrollment, parents and guardians provide a list of people authorized to pick up their child. Every child must be released only to a person on the authorized list, and persons on that list who are not known to the center staff must provide photo identification, such as a driver’s license or photo ID, before the child is released to them. This two-step process, checking the list and verifying identity, is the baseline standard Illinois daycares must meet.

When a child is released to a person on the authorized list, the center must maintain a record of that person’s name along with the date and time, and the time of each child’s departure must be noted on a daily departure log, initialed, signed, or otherwise documented by the person to whom the child is released. These records matter. They create an accountability trail that protects children and gives parents a way to verify who picked up their child and when.

Training is also part of this obligation. It is the center director’s responsibility to train all other staff, especially bus and classroom personnel, on pickup policies and procedures, and all staff must also be trained on what to do if they cannot find the authorized pickup person or if the person who arrived to pick up the child is not on the parent’s list. A daycare that fails to train its staff on these procedures, or that has staff who simply ignore them, is setting up a situation where a child can be handed to the wrong person. That failure can form the basis of a negligence claim under Illinois law.

When a Chicago daycare releases a child to someone not on the authorized pickup list, the legal fallout can be significant. Under Illinois negligence law, a daycare owes a duty of care to every child in its custody. That duty includes following DCFS pickup verification standards. When a facility breaches that duty and harm results, the daycare, and potentially its owner or operator, can be held liable for damages.

Think about what can happen in practice. A child is released to an estranged parent who is subject to a court order restricting contact. Or a child is handed to a relative the custodial parent has specifically excluded from the pickup list. Or, in the most alarming situations, a child is released to a stranger who used social engineering to convince an undertrained staff member to hand over the child. In each case, the daycare’s failure to follow its own written procedures, and the procedures required by DCFS Rule 407, is what allowed the harm to occur.

Illinois law allows families to pursue civil claims for negligence, negligent supervision, and negligent hiring or training in these cases. The damages available can include costs related to any physical harm the child suffered, emotional distress, therapy and counseling expenses, and in severe cases, long-term psychological harm. When a daycare’s conduct is especially reckless, Illinois law also allows for punitive damages, which go beyond compensating the victim and are meant to punish and deter truly egregious behavior. Cases involving supervisory neglect or inadequate staff training often intersect with these claims, and the full picture of what went wrong at the facility matters when building a case.

What Parents Should Do After an Unauthorized Release Incident

If you learn that a Chicago daycare released your child to someone not on your authorized pickup list, act quickly. The steps you take in the first hours and days after the incident can directly affect the strength of any legal claim you pursue. Start by documenting everything you know. Write down the date, time, and what you were told about the incident. Get the name of the staff member involved, if possible.

Ask the daycare for a copy of the sign-in and sign-out log for the day in question. Under DCFS Rule 407, Section 407.260, the facility is required to maintain these records. If the daycare refuses or claims the records do not exist, that itself is a serious problem and something your attorney needs to know. Take photographs of any written correspondence you have with the facility, and keep copies of your original enrollment paperwork showing the authorized pickup list you provided.

If your child was harmed physically or emotionally, seek medical and mental health care right away. Medical records are critical evidence. You should also report the incident to DCFS. You can make a licensing complaint to the local DCFS Licensing Office or by calling the Child Abuse Hotline at 1-800-252-2873, and a DCFS licensing representative will investigate your complaint and report the results back to you. A DCFS investigation can generate records and findings that support your civil case. Do not wait to contact an attorney. Illinois has a statute of limitations for personal injury claims, and acting early gives your legal team the best opportunity to preserve evidence, including surveillance footage from the facility.

Why Families in Chicago Trust Briskman Briskman & Greenberg

Briskman Briskman & Greenberg has been fighting for injured families in Chicago and across Illinois for decades. Our firm handles daycare injury and negligence cases, including situations where a facility failed to follow proper child release procedures. We know the DCFS licensing rules. We know how to investigate whether a daycare complied with its legal obligations. And we know how to hold facilities accountable when they put children at risk through careless, undertrained, or reckless staff behavior.

Chicago families from neighborhoods like Lincoln Park, Wicker Park, Pilsen, Bronzeville, and Rogers Park, as well as those near communities along the lakefront and throughout the suburbs, come to us when a daycare has failed their child. Whether the incident happened at a large licensed center near Michigan Avenue, a faith-based program on the North Side, or a smaller in-home facility, the legal principles are the same. Daycares have a duty to protect every child in their care, including at the moment of pickup.

Our firm works on a contingency fee basis in personal injury cases, meaning you pay no attorney fees unless we recover compensation for you. However, you may still be responsible for certain costs and expenses, so we encourage you to discuss the specific terms with us directly. To speak with a member of our team about what happened to your child, call Briskman Briskman & Greenberg at (312) 222-0010. Our office is located in Chicago, Illinois, and we are ready to listen.

FAQs About Failing to Release Child to Authorized Parent at Chicago Daycares

What should I do if a Chicago daycare released my child to someone not on the pickup list?

Contact the daycare immediately to get a full account of what happened and who took your child. Request a copy of the sign-out log. If your child was harmed or placed in danger, seek medical attention and report the incident to DCFS by calling 1-800-252-2873. Then contact a personal injury attorney to understand your legal options. Acting quickly helps preserve critical evidence like surveillance footage and staff statements.

Is a Chicago daycare legally required to check ID before releasing a child?

Yes. Under DCFS licensing standards for Day Care Centers, specifically Part 407, Section 407.260, staff must verify that a person is authorized before releasing a child to them. For individuals on the authorized list who are not personally known to the staff, photo identification must be provided before the child can be released. Failing to follow this procedure is a violation of Illinois daycare licensing rules.

Can I sue a Chicago daycare if my child was released to the wrong person but was not physically hurt?

Physical injury is not always required to bring a civil claim. If your child suffered emotional distress or psychological harm as a result of being released to an unauthorized person, you may still have a viable claim under Illinois law. The strength of such a claim depends on the specific facts, including the severity of the incident and the documented impact on your child. An attorney can evaluate your situation and advise you on what damages may be available.

What if the daycare claims it was an honest mistake?

A mistake does not automatically eliminate liability. Illinois negligence law looks at whether the daycare acted with reasonable care. If staff failed to check the authorized pickup list, failed to ask for ID, or were never properly trained on pickup procedures, the facility may still be held liable even if the error was unintentional. The fact that a mistake occurred does not mean a family has to absorb the consequences without legal recourse.

How long do I have to file a lawsuit against a Chicago daycare for releasing my child to an unauthorized person?

In Illinois, personal injury claims generally must be filed within two years of the date of the injury under the Illinois Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/13-202). However, claims involving minors may have different timelines. Under Illinois law, the statute of limitations for a minor’s personal injury claim may be tolled until the child reaches the age of majority in certain circumstances. Because these deadlines are complex and fact-specific, you should speak with an attorney as soon as possible to protect your right to pursue a claim.

This page is an advertisement for legal services. Briskman Briskman & Greenberg is a personal injury law firm located in Chicago, Illinois. Past results do not guarantee similar outcomes in future cases. Each case is unique and depends on its own facts and circumstances. Viewing this content does not create an attorney-client relationship.

More Resources About Abuse, Neglect, and Misconduct by Daycare Staff

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Chicago lawyer, Paul A. Greenberg is a top-rated by Super Lawyers
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