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Head Start and Early Head Start Injuries in Chicago

Head Start and Early Head Start programs serve some of Chicago’s youngest and most vulnerable children, from infants just weeks old to preschoolers preparing for kindergarten. These federally funded programs operate across Chicago neighborhoods, from Englewood and Gage Park on the South Side to Belmont Cragin and Portage Park on the Northwest Side, giving low-income families access to early education, health screenings, and developmental support. But when a child is hurt at one of these programs, parents often feel lost, unsure of who is responsible and what their rights are. The attorneys at Briskman Briskman & Greenberg have helped families across Chicago hold negligent child care providers accountable, and we want you to understand your options.

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What Are Head Start and Early Head Start Programs in Chicago?

Head Start agencies that provide services to children and families must meet the Head Start Program Performance Standards and the requirements set forth in the Head Start Act of 2007. These are federally funded programs administered by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, designed to promote early learning and healthy development for children from low-income families. In Chicago, these programs are run by a wide range of grantee organizations, including nonprofits, school systems, and community-based providers.

Early Head Start services are available to pregnant women and children birth to age 3 and their families. Head Start, by contrast, serves children ages 3 to 5 who are not yet eligible for kindergarten. Families with children up to age five can explore community-based preschool and early learning programs, which include Head Start and Early Head Start programs. Head Start and Early Head Start programs promote and provide quality early learning, school readiness, nutritious meals, and access to free medical and dental services.

Easterseals partners with more than 35 independently operated early childhood programs in Chicago and suburban Cook County to provide welcoming, high-quality learning for children ages 0-5 and pregnant women and expectant families. Other providers include Metropolitan Family Services, which operates centers on Chicago’s South, Southwest, and Northwest sides, serving communities like Englewood, West Lawn, and Irving Park. The YMCA of Metropolitan Chicago also runs Early Head Start programming at several Chicagoland locations. The sheer number of providers means the quality of supervision, staff training, and facility safety can vary significantly from one site to the next.

Because these programs serve infants and toddlers who cannot speak up for themselves, the potential for undetected abuse or neglect is real. Parents trust these programs completely. When that trust is broken and a child is harmed, it raises serious legal questions about who failed and who must be held accountable.

Federal Safety Rules That Head Start Programs Must Follow

Head Start and Early Head Start programs are not just governed by state daycare rules. They carry a separate, detailed layer of federal obligations that go well beyond what a typical Illinois-licensed daycare must meet. Understanding these rules matters because a violation of them can be central to a personal injury claim.

All staff with regular child contact must have initial orientation training within three months of hire and ongoing training in all state, local, tribal, federal, and program-developed health, safety, and child care requirements to ensure the safety of children in their care, including, at a minimum, training in: the prevention and control of infectious diseases; prevention of sudden infant death syndrome and use of safe sleeping practices; administration of medication consistent with standards for parental consent; prevention and response to emergencies due to food and allergic reactions; building and physical premises safety; prevention of shaken baby syndrome, abusive head trauma, and child maltreatment; and emergency preparedness and response planning.

All staff, consultants, contractors, and volunteers must follow appropriate practices to keep children safe during all activities, including reporting of suspected or known child abuse and neglect as defined by the Federal Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act (CAPTA), 42 U.S.C. 5101, safe sleep practices, appropriate supervision of children at all times, and only releasing children to an authorized adult.

The federal rules also address physical facilities. A program must develop a plan to prevent children from being exposed to lead in water and paint in Head Start facilities. In facilities where lead may exist, a program must implement ongoing practices, including testing and inspection at least every two years, with support from trained professionals. As needed, a program must pursue remediation or abatement to prevent lead exposure.

When a Head Start program fails to train its staff, maintain its building, or supervise children properly, it violates binding federal performance standards. Those violations can serve as powerful evidence in a civil lawsuit filed on behalf of an injured child.

Common Injuries at Chicago Head Start and Early Head Start Programs

The youngest children in Early Head Start, some just weeks old, face risks that older children do not. Infants can suffer serious harm from unsafe sleep practices, improper handling, or inadequate supervision. Toddlers and preschoolers face dangers from playground equipment, furniture, choking hazards, and physical altercations with other children when supervision breaks down. Any of these situations can produce injuries ranging from minor cuts to traumatic brain injuries.

Serious injuries that require immediate professional medical attention, such as hospitalization, include serious harm, injury, or endangerment of a child resulting from lack of supervision while in the care or under the supervision of program staff. Federal rules treat supervision failures as reportable incidents, which means there is often a paper trail when a program drops the ball.

Serious harm or injury of a child resulting from lack of preventative maintenance of a Head Start facility, including in a classroom, bathroom, or on a playground, bus, or other approved program transportation, must be reported. Serious injuries require immediate professional medical attention. Lack of supervision includes leaving a child alone and unattended anywhere on the grounds of a Head Start facility, as well as outside the facility in a parking lot, on a nearby street, or on a bus or another program-approved transportation or excursion while under the care of the Head Start program.

Common injury scenarios at Chicago Head Start sites include falls from playground equipment, head injuries from falls off changing tables, choking on small objects, burns from hot food or liquids in program kitchens, allergic reactions when food protocols are ignored, and physical abuse by staff. Children with special needs or nonverbal children face added risks because they may not be able to report what happened to them. If your child came home from a Chicago Head Start or Early Head Start program with an unexplained injury, that alone warrants a serious conversation with a qualified Chicago abogado de lesiones personales.

Illinois Law and Your Right to Sue a Head Start Program

Head Start programs operating in Illinois must comply with both federal performance standards and state law. The Illinois Child Care Act of 1969 (225 ILCS 10) governs licensed child care facilities in the state, including those operating under Head Start grants. This law sets minimum requirements for staffing, facility safety, background checks, and health and safety procedures. A violation of the Illinois Child Care Act of 1969 can support a negligence per se claim, meaning the violation of the law itself is treated as evidence of negligence.

The Illinois Child Care Act of 1969 requires procedures for employee and volunteer emergency preparedness and practice drills; procedures to ensure that first aid kits are maintained and ready to use; the placement of a minimum level of liability insurance as determined by the Department; procedures for the availability of a working telephone that is onsite and accessible at all times; and procedures to ensure that emergency phone numbers are posted onsite.

Beyond the Illinois Child Care Act of 1969, a Head Start program can also face liability under general Illinois negligence law. To succeed in a civil claim, a family must show that the program owed a duty of care to the child, that the program breached that duty through some act or failure to act, that the breach caused the child’s injury, and that the injury produced actual damages, including medical bills, pain and suffering, and future care costs. Illinois courts have consistently recognized that child care providers owe a high duty of care to the children in their custody.

It is also worth knowing that Head Start programs receive federal funding, which introduces additional legal considerations. Depending on the structure of the program and the grantee organization, claims may involve federal agencies, nonprofit organizations, or private contractors. Identifying every responsible party requires a careful investigation. Families should act quickly, because evidence, including incident reports, surveillance footage from facilities near landmarks like the Richard J. Daley Center or community centers in Humboldt Park, and staff training records, can disappear fast.

What to Do If Your Child Is Injured at a Chicago Head Start or Early Head Start Program

The moments after discovering your child was hurt at a Head Start program are stressful and confusing. Knowing the right steps can protect both your child’s health and your legal rights. First, get your child medical attention immediately, even if the injury looks minor. Some injuries, including head trauma and internal injuries, do not show all their symptoms right away. A doctor’s visit creates a medical record that documents the injury close in time to when it happened.

Second, ask the program for a copy of the incident report. An Information Memorandum from the Office of Head Start clarifies the requirements of 45 CFR §1302.102(d)(1)(ii) for reporting significant incidents regarding the health and safety of children in Head Start programs. Federal rules require programs to document and report serious incidents. If the program refuses to give you a copy or claims no report was filed, that is itself a red flag worth noting.

Third, photograph your child’s injuries as soon as possible. Write down everything you remember about what the program told you, the names of any staff members who spoke with you, and the timeline of events. If other parents witnessed anything or if their children mentioned something, note that too. Do not sign any documents from the program or its insurance company without first speaking to an attorney.

A final rule from the Administration for Children and Families includes several modifications to align ACF descriptions of child maltreatment with federal guidance and laws related to mandated reporting of child abuse and neglect. The final rule also strengthens several requirements intended to prevent child health and safety incidents, such as annual trainings on mandated reporting of child abuse and neglect. This means Head Start staff are legally required to report suspected abuse or neglect, including abuse that may have occurred within the program itself. If a staff member harmed your child and failed to report it, that failure is itself a violation of federal law.

Briskman Briskman & Greenberg represents families throughout Chicago whose children have been hurt at Head Start and Early Head Start programs. We investigate these cases thoroughly, gather incident reports, staff training records, and witness accounts, and pursue every avenue of recovery available under Illinois and federal law. Call us at (312) 222-0010 for a free consultation. You pay nothing unless we recover for you.

FAQs About Head Start and Early Head Start Injuries in Chicago

Can I sue a Head Start program in Chicago if my child was injured there?

Yes, you can pursue a civil lawsuit against a Head Start program if your child was injured due to negligence, inadequate supervision, unsafe conditions, or staff misconduct. Head Start programs, while federally funded, are typically operated by nonprofit or community-based organizations that can be sued under Illinois law. The Illinois Child Care Act of 1969 and general negligence principles both apply. An attorney can help you identify all responsible parties and determine the best path forward for your family.

Does it matter that Head Start is a federal program when filing a lawsuit?

The federal funding behind Head Start programs adds a layer of complexity to these cases. The grantee organization, which is usually a nonprofit, community agency, or school system, is generally the party that operates the program and can be held liable in civil court. Federal funding does not give Head Start programs immunity from state personal injury claims. However, you should speak with an attorney early, because the structure of the program affects who can be named as a defendant and what evidence is available.

How long do I have to file a lawsuit after my child is injured at a Chicago Head Start program?

In Illinois, the statute of limitations for personal injury claims is generally two years from the date of the injury. However, when the injured party is a minor, Illinois law tolls, or pauses, the statute of limitations until the child turns 18. This means a child injured at a Head Start program generally has until their 20th birthday to file a claim. That said, waiting is risky because evidence fades and witnesses become harder to locate. It is always better to consult an attorney as soon as possible after the injury occurs.

What kinds of damages can my family recover after a Head Start injury in Illinois?

Illinois law allows injured children and their families to recover a range of damages. These include past and future medical expenses, costs of therapy and rehabilitation, pain and suffering, emotional distress, and, in severe cases, loss of future earning capacity. If the injury was caused by willful or intentional misconduct by a staff member, punitive damages may also be available. Every case is different, and the value of a claim depends on the nature and severity of the injury, the strength of the evidence, and the specific facts of what happened.

What if my child cannot tell me what happened at their Head Start program?

Many children enrolled in Early Head Start are infants or toddlers who cannot communicate what happened to them. Nonverbal children and children with developmental delays face an even greater challenge. In these situations, physical evidence, medical records, facility surveillance footage, incident reports, and witness statements from other staff or parents become critical. Federal rules require Head Start programs to document serious incidents, so there may be an internal paper trail. An attorney experienced in child injury cases knows how to gather and preserve this evidence before it disappears.

Briskman Briskman & Greenberg | 351 W. Hubbard Street, Suite 810, Chicago, IL 60654 | (312) 222-0010

This page is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Reading this content does not create an attorney-client relationship. Past results do not guarantee similar outcomes in future cases.

More Resources About Types of Child Care Facilities and Programs

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