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GOVERNMENT EASES AU PAIR PROGRAM'S TIGHTER REQUIREMENTS

Associated Press

THURSDAY, February 16, 1995

FAIRFAX, Va. -- The federal government yesterday eased tough new rules regulating foreign nannies.

Many Americans who hire live-in baby sitters from other countries under the government-sanctioned au pair program had complained the rules were an overreaction to exceptional cases such as the death of Brenton Scott Devonshire. The Virginia newborn died from being violently shaken. The US Information Agency received about 3,500 letters from host families who complained that raising the minimum ages of au pairs and increasing their pay 55 percent would kill the program.

Spokesman James Morgan said the agency will have no comment beyond a four- page news release outlining the latest rules.

''The regulations include a number of revisions . . . and are the result of extensive consultations,'' with nanny agencies, families, Congress and others, the statement said.

A 19-year-old Dutch woman is scheduled for trial next month in the death of the 8-week-old boy in Loudoun County last August. Anna-Corina Peeze, who lived with the Devonshires for two weeks before the death, has denied harming the child.

Agency Director Joseph Duffey denied that the boy's death prompted the tougher rules. But Duffey said last fall that the death showed that the program the agency had overseen since 1986 needed tighter controls.

Yesterday, the agency reversed a policy announced in December barring nannies younger than 21 from caring for children under age 2.

The weekly stipend nannies receive will increase from $100 to $115, instead of $150.

The agency also scaled back its requirement that a parent remain home during the nanny's first week of work. Instead, a parent or other responsible person must be on hand for the first three days.

As proposed in December, the agency will no longer allow a nanny alone to care for children under 3 months old. But instead of a parent, someone else the family chooses, such as a grandparent or friend, may join the nanny.

The agency will require eight rather than 16 hours of child safety training for new nannies and will not require families to attend quarterly seminars.

The rules take effect immediately.

The program brings about 13,000 young, mostly European women to the United States annually for a one-year stay.


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