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AYSO is proud to have as part of their
team, members to serve as Child Protection Advocates. It is their
responsibility to oversee the child protection program in accordance with
AYSO guidelines. They are members of the regional board and will act as the
main resource on child protection issues.
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The region is committed to the
protection of all its children from all forms of abuse and neglect while
participating in the program, and it promotes the awareness and prevention
of child abuse in the community at large.
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The region requires all volunteers
complete, date and sign the appropriate volunteer application form and its
authorization to AYSO to perform applicant screening. All volunteers shall
be screened at a level appropriate to the level of risk.
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The region shall have the right to
revoke the participation of any individual who lies or knowingly
misrepresents information on the application form, or who violates the
principles of these child protection policies. AYSO shall have the right
to revoke both the registration and certification of any volunteer who
falsifies information, is found guilty of child abuse, or fails to fill in
and return the volunteer application form.
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A volunteer accused of abuse will be
asked to resign voluntarily. If the volunteer refuses, the board will move
to suspend the volunteer until the matter has been resolved. Regardless of
civil or criminal guilt for the alleged child abuse, the continued
presence of the volunteer in the program will damage the reputation of the
region, even during the investigation and pretrial phase.
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A volunteer accused of child abuse but
subsequently cleared may apply for reinstatement in the region. However,
reinstatement is not a right, and reinstated volunteers are not guaranteed
to return to their former positions.
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All coaches, referees, other volunteers
who work directly with children, and the child protection advocate shall
be trained before working with children. Head coaches must be certified;
assistant coaches and referees should be certified.
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Only certified AYSO materials and
courses (or those approved by AYSO) may be used to train and certify these
key volunteers.
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Properly signed rosters of attendees
will be sent to AYSO Education to validate each attendee's training and
certification, and to insure that the coaches and referees are registered
with AYSO.
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Courses and clinics shall be taught by
AYSO trained instructors. Only official AYSO programs, procedures, and
policies will be taught.
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Other volunteers will be trained before
they do their jobs, including child protection training as appropriate.
Whenever possible, "on the job training" will be avoided.
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Volunteers shall be subject to ongoing
evaluation, and additional training may be required to maintain good
standing within the region and the organization.
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The region advocates and expect
exemplary behavior by all its participants, and it will hold a strict line
on conduct as laid out in these policies, regardless of whether misconduct
is committed by coaches, referees, players, siblings, parents, or
spectators.
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Demeaning verbalizations are not
permitted, especially those abusive statements that deal with race,
ethnicity, religion, nationality, gender, age, or sex.
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In addition to verbal abuse, physical,
emotional, sexual, and ethical abuses are prohibited, as is neglect of a
child. Examples of potentially abusive behaviors include but are not
limited to striking, hitting, slapping, pushing, kicking, shaking, biting,
yelling, threatening, insulting, mocking, demeaning, indecent gesturing,
wanton gesticulation, ogling, suggestive posturing, inappropriate
touching, lewd remarks indecent exposure, unwanted physical contact,
suggestions to cheat or to harm another, or unreasonable pressure to play
when sick or injured.
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Some forms of touching are acceptable as
long as they are specific and appropriate:
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Touching should be in response to the
need of the child, not the need of the adult. |
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Touching should be with the child's
permission. |
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Resistance to touching must be
respected. |
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Touching should never include the
breast, buttocks, or groin. |
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Touching should be done in the open,
not in private. |
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Touching should have a brief, limited
duration. |
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Touching is age and developmentally
dependent; what is appropriate changes over time.
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