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Childery

Deborah Osborne

Data last updated · May 2026

Quality Indicators

See Methodology →
  • Overall Quality
    2 / 5
  • Process Quality
    2 / 5
  • Structural Quality
    3 / 5

Why this rating

This daycare earned 2 out of 5 stars overall. Process quality reflects a Kentucky ALL STARS rating of Level 1 (out of 5). Structural quality reflects Kentucky's licensing baseline. Kentucky caps infant ratios at 1:5, toddler ratios at 1:6, and preschool ratios at 1:14. Lead teachers must hold a High School Diploma. Teachers must complete 15 hours of annual training.

Quality Recognitions & Accreditations

State Quality Rating
Kentucky ALL STARS Level 1 (Max 5) Learn more →
Accreditations
  • National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC)Not Accredited
  • National Accreditation Commission (NAC)Not Accredited
  • National Early Childhood Program Accreditation (NECPA)Not Accredited
  • National Association for Family Child Care (NAFCC)Not Accredited

Facility Info

Facility type
Daycare
Age groups served
Not Available
Licensed capacity
Not Available
Teacher-child ratios & group sizesState Minimum Displayed
AgeMax ratioMax group
Infants1:510
Toddlers1:612
Preschool1:1428

Teacher Credentials

Lead teacher credentialState Minimum Displayed
High School Diploma

Inspection History

2 Inspection Visits Since 2025 · 7 Findings
1 Critical6 Important

Across 2 inspections since 2025, the issues cited most often were Staff-to-Child Ratios & Group Size (3), Safe Sleep & SIDS Prevention (2), and Licensing & Administrative Compliance (2). Of 7 total findings, 1 was critical.

See All 2 Inspection Visits
  1. Feb 11, 20262 Findings1 Critical1 Important
    • Infant Sleep Position290

      922 KAR 2:100 - Section 13. Care Requirements for a Provider. (7) An infant shall sleep and nap on the infant’s back unless the infant’s health professional signs a waiver that states the infant requires an alternate sleeping position. Findings: General: Based on observation and interview, the following was found: 1. The surveyor toured the child care home and observed that a six (6)-week-old infant was asleep on a couch, face down, with a blanket over their back. The staff-person-in-charge stat

    • Health, Safety and Comfort160

      922 KAR 2:100 - Section 13. Care Requirements for a Provider. (1) A provider shall ensure the health, safety, and comfort of each child. Findings: General: Based on observation and interview, the following was found: 1. The surveyor toured the child care home and observed that a six (6)-week-old infant was asleep on a couch, face down, with a blanket over their back. The staff-person-in-charge stated that the child had been placed on their stomach approximately forty five (45) minutes before the

  2. Nov 18, 20255 Findings5 Important
    • Written Plan of Correction110

      922 KAR 2:100 - Section 4. Statement of Deficiency and Corrective Action Plans. (2) Except for a violation posing an immediate threat, a family child-care home shall submit a written corrective action plan to the cabinet or its designee within fifteen (15) calendar days from receipt of the statement of deficiency to eliminate or correct the regulatory violation. Findings: A PLAN OF CORRECTION WAS DUE ON 12/23/2025 AND AS OF 12/24/2025, THE PLAN OF CORRECTION HAS NOT BEEN RECEIVED.

    • Number of Children120

      922 KAR 2:100 - Section 10. Standards for the Provider. (2) A provider shall not provide care for more unrelated children than the number authorized on the certificate of operation. (3) A provider shall have an assistant present if the provider cares for more than: (a) Four (4) infants, including the provider's own or related infants; or (b) Six (6) children under the age of six (6) years old, including the provider's own or related children. Findings: General: Based on observation, interview, a

    • Total Capacity125

      922 KAR 2:100 - Section 10. Standards for the Provider. (4) The maximum number of unrelated children in the care of a certified family child-care home provider shall not exceed six (6) at any one (1) time. A provider may care for four (4) related children in addition to six (6) unrelated children for a maximum child care capacity of ten (10) at any one (1) time. Findings: General: Based on observation, interview, and review of documentation, the provider's capacity exceeded the six (6) children

    • Television/Video Viewing285

      922 KAR 2:100 - Section 13. Care Requirements for a Provider. (3) Television or video viewing by a child shall be limited to: (a) Two (2) hours daily; (b) The planned program activities; and (c) Developmentally appropriate child-related content, as designated by standardized content guidelines. Findings: General: Based on observation and review of documentation, upon arrival to the home, the television was on. A review of the schedule for the day did not have television viewing included on it.

    • Immunization730

      922 KAR 2:100 - Section 19. Records. (1) A provider shall maintain: (a) A current immunization certificate for each child in care within thirty (30) days of the child’s enrollment, unless an attending physician or the child's parent objects to the immunization of the child pursuant to KRS 214.034; Findings: General: Based on review of documentation, five (5) children (DOE: 09/23/24, 03/11/25, 03/04/25, 10/23/24, and 08/29/25) did not have current or any immunization records on file.