StarlynnCare

California · San Carlos

Dayton Home Care

RCFE

A Residential Care Facility for the Elderly (RCFE) is a non-medical residential care home licensed by California CDSS under Health & Safety Code §1560. Residents receive assistance with daily living activities such as bathing, dressing, meals, and medication management in a home-like setting. RCFEs are not hospitals or skilled nursing facilities — they do not provide round-the-clock medical care.

1110 Dayton Ave · San Carlos, 94070

Quick facts

Licensed beds6
Memory careNot listed
Last inspectionMar 2026
Last citationNone on record
Operated byCaliwag Boyer, Krizia
Map showing location of Dayton Home Care

Quality snapshot

Updated April 25, 2026

Compared to 214 California RCFE facilities of similar size, over the last 36 months.

Source: California Department of Social Services, Community Care Licensing Division. View raw inspection records →

Quality grade· click to show how this was calculated

Severity
100th

Weighted citations per bed

Repeats
100th

Repeat deficiencies as share of total

Frequency
100th

Deficiencies per inspection

Tick mark at 50% = peer median · higher percentile = better facility

Dayton Home Care scores A. Better than 100% of comparable California RESIDENTIAL CARE ELDERLY facilities. Severity: top 0%. Repeats: top 0%. Frequency: top 0%.

Each metric is converted to a 0–100 percentile within the peer set (higher = better). The composite grade averages all four. Peer set: CA / rcfe_general / small beds (214 facilities).

Citation severity over time

stable

Weighted severity score per month · 24 months

May 24peer medianApr 26

Weighted score (24mo)

0

Finding distribution

none · 36 months

Scope × Severity (CMS A–L)

No findings in the last 36 months.

View inspections & citations

The rules that apply to this facility

California Title 22 requirements for this facility, with the specific regulation and a suggested question for each.

What training are all staff required to complete?22 CCR §87411

All direct-care staff must complete:

  • 10 hours initial training within the first four weeks of employment.
  • 4 hours annual in-service every year thereafter.
  • Administrator certificate from a CDSS-approved program — 80 hours for first-time, 40 hours renewal every 2 years.

Ask on tour: Ask when the last staff training was completed and how it's tracked.

How many staff must be on duty overnight?22 CCR §87415

Based on 6 licensed beds:

One qualified staff member must be on call and physically on premises at all times overnight.

Violation pattern to watch for:A facility that documents a staff member as "on call" but with that person physically off-site — when the law requires on-premises presence — is in violation of this section.

Ask on tour: Ask the facility to walk you through their overnight staffing plan and confirm whether on-call staff are on premises or off-site.

What health conditions can this facility legally accept or refuse?22 CCR §87612–87615

Restricted — allowed with physician order + care plan

  • Supplemental oxygen
  • Insulin and injectable medications
  • Indwelling or intermittent catheters
  • Colostomy / ileostomy
  • Stage 1 and Stage 2 pressure injuries
  • Wound care (non-complex)
  • Incontinence
  • Contractures

Prohibited — facility must refuse or discharge

  • Stage 3 or Stage 4 pressure injuries
  • Feeding tubes (PEG, NG, or J-tube)
  • Tracheostomies
  • Active MRSA or communicable infections requiring isolation
  • 24-hour skilled nursing needs
  • Total ADL dependence with inability to communicate needs

A hospice waiver (HSC §1569.73) can allow continued care for residents on hospice who would otherwise fall into a prohibited category.

Ask on tour: Ask whether your loved one's specific care needs are restricted or prohibited, and what the facility's process is if needs change after admission.

What must this facility report to the state — and how fast?22 CCR §87211 / WIC §15630
  • ImmediateElopement, fire, epidemic outbreak, or poisoningImmediately
  • 2 hoursAbuse with serious bodily injury2-hour phone report + 2-hour written report — to the California Department of Social Services (CDSS), Adult Protective Services, and law enforcement
  • 24 hrsAbuse without serious bodily injuryWithin 24 hours
  • Next dayDeath of a residentPhone by next working day; written within 7 days
  • Next dayInjury requiring medical treatment beyond first aidPhone by next working day; written within 7 days
  • WrittenBankruptcy, foreclosure, eviction, or utility shutoff noticeWritten notice to CDSS and residents — $100/day penalty (max $2,000) for failure

Your enforcement lever:Incidents that aren't reported on time are themselves a separate violation. If you believe a reportable event wasn't filed, you can submit a complaint directly to the California Department of Social Services (CDSS).

How does CDSS enforce these rules?22 CCR §87755–87777 / HSC §1569.58
  1. 1Notice of DeficiencyWritten citation with a correction deadline. Facility must submit a Plan of Correction.
  2. 2Civil PenaltyStarts at $50/day for non-serious; $150/day for serious deficiencies — immediately, with no grace period. Repeats escalate to $150 first day + $50/day, then $1,000 first day + $100/day.
  3. 3Suspension of AdmissionsFacility cannot accept new residents until violations are corrected.
  4. 4Temporary Suspension or RevocationEmergency suspension for imminent danger; full revocation after administrative hearing.
  5. 5Exclusion OrderAdministrator and operator can be barred from all CDSS-licensed facilities — not just this one.

See how these rules have been applied to this specific facility:

View state inspection record and citations

Questions to ask on your tour

Based on Dayton Home Care's state inspection record.

  1. Your most recent inspection was on March 19, 2026 — what changes or updates to care practices have been made since that inspection?

  2. The facility is advertised as providing memory care, but CDSS licensing records do not show a formal memory-care designation — what memory-care-specific training and protocols do staff complete?

  3. With only 6 licensed beds, how do you ensure that residents with different care needs are matched appropriately, and what is your process for determining whether a prospective resident's needs fall within your scope of care?

  4. California Title 22 §87705 requires documentation of resident assessments and care plans — can you walk through how assessments are completed and how often care plans are reviewed and updated?

State records

California Dept. of Social Services · Community Care Licensing
License number
415601082
License type
RESIDENTIAL CARE ELDERLY
License status
LICENSED
License expires
Not yet indexed
Licensed beds
6
Operator
Caliwag Boyer, Krizia

Inspections & citations

3

reports on file

0

total deficiencies

InspectionMarch 19, 2026
No deficiencies

Plain-language summary

On March 19, 2026, the facility passed its annual inspection with no violations. The inspector reviewed the building, safety equipment, food and medication storage, resident records, and staff files, and found everything in order—bedrooms were properly furnished, fire alarms and carbon monoxide detectors worked, medications were correctly labeled and stored, and all sharp objects and hazardous materials were locked away.

View full inspector notes

On March 19, 2026, Licensing Program Analyst(LPA) John Calandra arrived at the facility to conduct the Annual 1-year required inspection. LPA Calandra was greeted by Krizia Boyer, Administrator/Licensee and explained the purpose of the visit. LPA toured the physical plant. This is a 1-story building with 5 bedrooms and 2 bathrooms, a living room, dining room, kitchen, and outdoor space/backyard. All bedrooms had the required furniture and sufficient lighting. No accessible bodies of water or hazards were observed in hallways or the backyard. The facility's fire alarms and Carbon Monoxide detector were observed to be in working order. The facility's first aid kit was observed to have all required items. The facility had the required 7 days of non perishables and 2 days of perishables on site. No food was expired. The facility was maintained at a comfortable temperature of 71 degrees Fahrenheit. The facility's hot water was measured between the required 105-120 degrees Fahrenheit. The facility's fire extinguishers were last serviced on 1/14/2026. All sharp objects, poisons, and detergents were observed to be locked and in-accessible to persons in care. LPAs reviewed 4 resident records and 5 staff files. All were observed to be complete. A review of Centrally stored medications indicated that medications for residents were properly labeled with instructions on dosage and times of day and matched the Centrally Stored Medication records kept at the facility. No deficiencies cited during today's visit. During the visit, LPA received a copy of the facility's liability insurance and a copy of the facility's LIC 500. An exit interview was conducted and a copy of the report provided. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Deficiency are cited under California Code of Regulations(CCR). Failure to correct deficiency by the POC due date may result in civil penalties. During the visit, LPA received a copy of the facility's liability insurance and requested a copy of the facility's LIC 500 by 3/27/2026. An exit interview was conducted. A copy of the report along with Appeal Rights were provided.

InspectionMarch 7, 2025
No deficiencies

Inspector: John Calandra

Plain-language summary

On March 7, 2025, inspectors conducted the annual required inspection and found the facility to be well-maintained, with proper bedrooms, bathrooms, working safety equipment, adequate food and medication storage, and complete resident and staff records. One issue was noted: the facility had not documented when its emergency disaster plan was last reviewed, as required by state regulations. The facility was asked to submit additional personnel records by March 14, 2025.

View full inspector notes

On 3/7/2025, Licensing Program Analysts(LPAs) John Calandra and Yi Sam Jian arrived at the facility at 12:50 AM to conduct the Annual 1-year required inspection. LPA Calandra was greeted by Krizia Caliwag- Boyer, Administrator/Licensee and explained the purpose of the visit. LPAs toured the physical plant. This is a 1-story building with 5 bedrooms and 2 bathrooms, a living room, dining room, kitchen, and outdoor space/backyard. All bedrooms had the required furniture and sufficient lighting. No accessible bodies of water or hazards were observed in hallways or the backyard. The facility's fire alarms and Carbon Monoxide detector were observed to be in working order. The facility's first aid kit was observed to have all required items. The facility had the required 7 days of non perishables and 2 days of perishables on site. No food was expired. The facility was maintained at a comfortable temperature of 71 degrees Fahrenheit. The facility's hot water was measured between the required 105-120 degrees Fahrenheit. The facility's fire extinguishers were last serviced on 9/19/2025. All sharp objects, poisons, and detergents were observed to be locked and in-accessible to persons in care. LPAs reviewed 3 resident records and 4 staff files. All were observed to be complete. A review of Centrally stored medications indicated that medications for residents were properly labeled with instructions on dosage and times of day and matched the Centrally Stored Medication records kept at the facility. LPA's requested a copy of the LIC 500 (Personnel Summary Report) and LIC 610E by 3/14/2025. A Technical violation was provided for having no documentation of when the Emergency Disaster Plan was last reviewed which per Title 22 Regulations is required Annually. An exit interview was conducted. This report was reviewed with Krizia Caliwag-Boyer, Licensee/Administrator and a copy of the report left at the facility.

InspectionFebruary 22, 2024
No deficiencies

Inspector: Komal Charitra

Plain-language summary

During a routine unannounced inspection on February 22, 2024, the facility was found to meet all requirements for safety, cleanliness, and resident care documentation. The inspector verified that resident rooms were properly furnished, bathrooms were clean with necessary supplies, hazardous materials were locked and inaccessible, fire safety equipment was current, and staff training records were complete. No violations were cited.

View full inspector notes

On February 22, 2024, Licensing Program Analyst (LPA) Komal Charitra conducted an unannounced annual visit. LPA met with Administrator, Krizia Boyer and explained the purpose of the visit. LPA toured the facility inside and outside including all of resident rooms, common areas & kitchen. The indoor and outdoor passageways were free of obstruction. No accessible bodies of water of fire safety hazards observed. Extra linen was observed. LPA toured 4 private resident bedrooms, two full bathrooms, and one staff room. All resident rooms were observed with all required furniture. Bathrooms were observed clean and odor-free; equipped with liquid soap and paper towels. Living room and dining room was observed to be free from tripping hazards. A comfortable temperature is maintained and lighting is sufficient for comfort. Hot water throughout the facility measured between 110-115 degrees F throughout the facility. Sharps, toxins and medication were locked and inaccessible to residents. Carbon monoxide monitors are working properly. All fire extinguishers have been checked and current as of September 2023. LPA observed 2 days for perishables and 7 days non-perishables. Emergency drills are logged and done every three months. LPA reviewed 4 resident records and 4 staff records. Resident records are updated, complete and signed. Staff records are complete, with training logs that have met the basic requirement. Medication review was done, and all medications are accounted for, and centrally stored medication records are updated. No citations are issued during the visit. LPA reviewed report with Administrator and a copy is provided.

Federal summary

CMS Care Compare

Not a CMS-certified facility

California RCFEs (residential care facilities for the elderly) are licensed by the state, not by CMS. CMS data only applies to skilled nursing facilities or to CCRCs that operate a licensed SNF wing.

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