BUILDING KIDZ SAN FRANCISCO AT SUNSET
Data Freshness & Provenance
Inspection coverage
5 inspections on record
Active providers
License status: LICENSED
Last refreshed
April 6, 2026
Latest inspection
February 4, 2026
Provenance
California licensing inspections and DaycareCheck scoring
Quick Facts
These facts are normalized from the official record so they can be quoted directly.
Updated April 6, 2026
- Provider
- BUILDING KIDZ SAN FRANCISCO AT SUNSET
- License number
- Not listed
- Location
- 2540 TARAVAL STREET, San Francisco, CA 94116
- Status
- LICENSED
- Safety grade
- B (Good), score 88.8/100
- Inspection record
- 5 inspections, last inspected February 4, 2026
- Provenance
- Official state licensing inspections and DaycareCheck scoring. Last refreshed April 6, 2026.
Safety Scorecard
3
Total Violations
Feb 4, 2026
Last Inspection
49
Capacity
Violation Timeline
Violations by month over the last 3 years, colored by severity.
All Violations (3)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25On April 10, 2025, Licensing Program Analyst (LPA) Van conducted an unannounced case management inspection and met with the center’s owner, Stephanie Yeap, to follow up on an unusual incident and discuss preventive measures to ensure the safety and well-being of all children at the Center. The center’s director, Annie Ma, had left for the day. Five staff members supervised 30 children. On March 20, 2025, the center self-reported an incident involving a child (C1) left unattended in the center's outdoor area. According to the owner, two classrooms had outdoor activities in the facility’s outdoor space, where 20 children were supervised by substitute teacher S1 and the teacher's assistant, S2. S1 took a group of 12 children indoors, and S2 followed shortly after with 7 children. The facility owner noted that C1, a 3-year-old, was sitting on a bench outside when S2 transitioned their group indoors. C1 was supposed to go in with S2’s group. Upon returning to the classroom, lead teacher S3 realized a child was missing. S3 asked S2 about the child's whereabouts. S2 immediately returned and found C1 sitting alone on the bench. According to the center’s surveillance camera, C1 was left unsupervised outside for approximately 6 minutes. C1 returned to the classroom with S2 without any injuries, and the staff hugged and reassured C1 was safe. Continued on page 2... NAME OF LICENSING PROGRAM MANAGER: Garfield Leung NAME OF LICENSING PROGRAM ANALYST: Brendon Van LICENSING PROGRAM ANALYST SIGNATURE: DATE: 04/10/2025 I acknowledge receipt of this form and understand my licensing appeal rights as explained and received. FACILITY REPRESENTATIVE SIGNATURE: DATE: 04/10/2025 This report must be available at Child Care and Group Home facilities for public review for 3 years. LIC809 (FAS) - (06/04)Page: 1 of 4 FACILITY EVALUATION REPORT California law requires a public report of each licensing visit/inspection. This report is a record for the facility and the licensing agency. This report is available for public review; therefore, care is taken not to disclose personal or confidential information. Inquiries concerning the location, maintenance, and contents of these reports may be directed to the Licensing Program Analyst or Regional Office whose address and telephone number are listed on the front of this form. DEFICIENCIES A deficiency is an instance of noncompliance with licensing requirements, including applicable statutes, regulations, interim licensing standards, operating standards, and written directives. Applicants/ licensees must be notified in writing of all licensing deficiencies. Deficiencies are listed on the left side of this form, and the applicable licensing requirement upon which the deficiency is identified. There are two types of deficiencies: Type A deficiencies are violations of licensing requirements that, if not corrected, have a direct and immediate risk to the health, safety, or personal rights of persons in care. Type B deficiencies are violations of licensing requirements that, without correction, could become a risk to the health, safety, or personal rights of persons in care, a recordkeeping violation that could impact the care of said persons and/or protection of their resources, or a violation that could impact those services required to meet the needs of persons in care. PLANS OF CORRECTION (POCs) The licensing agency is required to establish a reasonable length of time to correct a deficiency. In order to set the time, the licensing agency must take into consideration the seriousness of the violation, the number of persons in care involved, and the availability of equipment and personnel necessary to correct the violation. Applicants/licensees are requested to provide a specific plan for each violation on the right side of the form across from each deficiency. The more specific the plan, the less chance exists for any misunderstanding in setting time limits and reviewing corrections. The applicant/licensee who encounters problems beyond their control in completing the corrections within the specified time frame may request and may be granted an extension of the correction due date by the licensing agency. CORRECTION NOTIFICATION The applicant/licensee is responsible for completing all corrections and promptly notifying the licensing agency of corrections. Applicants/licensees are advised to keep a dated copy of any correspondence sent to the licensing agency concerning corrections, or if corrections are telephoned to the licensing agency, the date, person contacted, and information given. CIVIL PENALTIES The licensing agency is required by law to issue a Penalty Notice, when applicable, to all facilities holding a license issued by the licensing agency, or subject to licensure, except Certified Family
Type B citation - potential risk if not corrected
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25On April 10, 2025, Licensing Program Analyst (LPA) Van conducted an unannounced case management inspection and met with the center’s owner, Stephanie Yeap, to follow up on an unusual incident and discuss preventive measures to ensure the safety and well-being of all children at the Center. The center’s director, Annie Ma, had left for the day. Five staff members supervised 30 children. On March 20, 2025, the center self-reported an incident involving a child (C1) left unattended in the center's outdoor area. According to the owner, two classrooms had outdoor activities in the facility’s outdoor space, where 20 children were supervised by substitute teacher S1 and the teacher's assistant, S2. S1 took a group of 12 children indoors, and S2 followed shortly after with 7 children. The facility owner noted that C1, a 3-year-old, was sitting on a bench outside when S2 transitioned their group indoors. C1 was supposed to go in with S2’s group. Upon returning to the classroom, lead teacher S3 realized a child was missing. S3 asked S2 about the child's whereabouts. S2 immediately returned and found C1 sitting alone on the bench. According to the center’s surveillance camera, C1 was left unsupervised outside for approximately 6 minutes. C1 returned to the classroom with S2 without any injuries, and the staff hugged and reassured C1 was safe. Continued on page 2... NAME OF LICENSING PROGRAM MANAGER: Garfield Leung NAME OF LICENSING PROGRAM ANALYST: Brendon Van LICENSING PROGRAM ANALYST SIGNATURE: DATE: 04/10/2025 I acknowledge receipt of this form and understand my licensing appeal rights as explained and received. FACILITY REPRESENTATIVE SIGNATURE: DATE: 04/10/2025 This report must be available at Child Care and Group Home facilities for public review for 3 years. LIC809 (FAS) - (06/04)Page: 1 of 4 FACILITY EVALUATION REPORT California law requires a public report of each licensing visit/inspection. This report is a record for the facility and the licensing agency. This report is available for public review; therefore, care is taken not to disclose personal or confidential information. Inquiries concerning the location, maintenance, and contents of these reports may be directed to the Licensing Program Analyst or Regional Office whose address and telephone number are listed on the front of this form. DEFICIENCIES A deficiency is an instance of noncompliance with licensing requirements, including applicable statutes, regulations, interim licensing standards, operating standards, and written directives. Applicants/ licensees must be notified in writing of all licensing deficiencies. Deficiencies are listed on the left side of this form, and the applicable licensing requirement upon which the deficiency is identified. There are two types of deficiencies: Type A deficiencies are violations of licensing requirements that, if not corrected, have a direct and immediate risk to the health, safety, or personal rights of persons in care. Type B deficiencies are violations of licensing requirements that, without correction, could become a risk to the health, safety, or personal rights of persons in care, a recordkeeping violation that could impact the care of said persons and/or protection of their resources, or a violation that could impact those services required to meet the needs of persons in care. PLANS OF CORRECTION (POCs) The licensing agency is required to establish a reasonable length of time to correct a deficiency. In order to set the time, the licensing agency must take into consideration the seriousness of the violation, the number of persons in care involved, and the availability of equipment and personnel necessary to correct the violation. Applicants/licensees are requested to provide a specific plan for each violation on the right side of the form across from each deficiency. The more specific the plan, the less chance exists for any misunderstanding in setting time limits and reviewing corrections. The applicant/licensee who encounters problems beyond their control in completing the corrections within the specified time frame may request and may be granted an extension of the correction due date by the licensing agency. CORRECTION NOTIFICATION The applicant/licensee is responsible for completing all corrections and promptly notifying the licensing agency of corrections. Applicants/licensees are advised to keep a dated copy of any correspondence sent to the licensing agency concerning corrections, or if corrections are telephoned to the licensing agency, the date, person contacted, and information given. CIVIL PENALTIES The licensing agency is required by law to issue a Penalty Notice, when applicable, to all facilities holding a license issued by the licensing agency, or subject to licensure, except Certified Family
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is BUILDING KIDZ SAN FRANCISCO AT SUNSET's safety grade?
BUILDING KIDZ SAN FRANCISCO AT SUNSET has a safety grade of B (Good) based on state inspection data. The composite score is 88.8 out of 100.
How many violations does BUILDING KIDZ SAN FRANCISCO AT SUNSET have?
BUILDING KIDZ SAN FRANCISCO AT SUNSET has 3 total violations on record, including 0 critical, 3 serious, and 0 minor.
When was BUILDING KIDZ SAN FRANCISCO AT SUNSET last inspected?
BUILDING KIDZ SAN FRANCISCO AT SUNSET was last inspected on February 4, 2026.