Learn the skills you need to succeed. Camping Magazine is your primary source for the most recent trends in the camp industry, the latest research in the field of youth development, critical management tools, and innovative programming ideas. September/October 2010 articles address education, research, history, 2020 Toolbox, and much more.
Join more than 1,500 of your colleagues, presenters, and exhibiting personnel at the 2011 National Conference in San Diego. Fourplus packed days of quality education, social and issuesbased networking, professional trade-show access, and special events are designed to boost your professional development.
Children and youth need a community that: encourages achievement and builds self-esteem; promotes healthy lifestyles, fitness, and activity; teaches in a classroom without walls; instills appreciation, respect, and responsibility for the natural world around them; and inspires the confidence and courage to become the leaders of tomorrow.
Learn the skills you need to succeed. Camping Magazine is your primary source for the most recent trends in the camp industry, the latest research in the field of youth development, critical management tools, and innovative programming ideas. September/October 2010 articles address education, research, history, 2020 Toolbox, and much more.
Join more than 1,500 of your colleagues, presenters, and exhibiting personnel at the 2011 National Conference in San Diego. Fourplus packed days of quality education, social and issuesbased networking, professional trade-show access, and special events are designed to boost your professional development.
Children and youth need a community that: encourages achievement and builds self-esteem; promotes healthy lifestyles, fitness, and activity; teaches in a classroom without walls; instills appreciation, respect, and responsibility for the natural world around them; and inspires the confidence and courage to become the leaders of tomorrow.
Overview
The
pilot program allows participating camps
to submit fingerprints of their volunteers
to the FBI. The FBI sends the criminal
records report to the National Center for
Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC).
NCMEC reviews the records and makes a
determination of whether the volunteer
meets the criteria of the pilot to serve
as a volunteer. Camps then use the determination
to make their decision to use a volunteer
or not.
The cost is $18 per volunteer
and the turn-around time is one week or
less.
Why This Pilot is So Important to the Camp Community
Every year, more than 11 million children and adults benefit from the camp experience at approximately 12,000 camps throughout the United States. Those 12,000 camps use almost 2 million individuals as staff or volunteers to serve children, youth, and vulnerable adults. The American Camp Association believes that camps should utilize multifaceted screening and hiring programs and support practices appropriate to the clientele, staffing, supervision and program consideration of each camp. (View the ACA Standard on Staff Screening, HR-4.)
Currently, the only way to ensure the identity of an individual is through fingerprinting. However, camps may not be able to access a fingerprint-based check, depending on their state's background check laws. For more information about the differences between fingerprint-based checks and name-based checks, access the PROTECTScreen Manual.
An FBI check is the best identity background check available (although still not all-encompassing - for details, access the PROTECTScreen Manual), but it is not always accessible or feasible for camps. In States that allow access to camps, an FBI check must be obtained through a State’s background check agency. But, many States have strict eligibility requirements for FBI checks, and camps often don't qualify. When FBI checks are accessible, they may be very costly and have a lengthy turnaround time.
Under current law, youth-serving organizations in 37 states are prevented from getting nationwide criminal record checks, leaving them the only option of conducting only state and local checks. (For information on your State’s laws, visit the state regulations database.)
Additionally, the kind of information that is received from a background check
varies widely by State and locality. For example, some States such
as Colorado have established guidelines as to what crimes are acceptable in
order to hire an individual to work with children. In other States, background
checks return vague information about what crimes have been committed, and
leave it up to the employer to determine hireability. The American Camp Association
believes that it is critical that background checks become consistent in the
information provided according to identical pre-determined indicators of potentially
harmful behavior. (For more information on ACA's position, access the ACA
Public Policy Position Statement on Criminal Background Checks.)
Type Of Background Check That Will be
Performed
The PROTECTScreen pilot
allows camps access to a fingerprint-based
FBI criminal background check. To
obtain a FBI fingerprint background check,
a volunteer must complete a "ten-print" fingerprint
card in which all ten fingers are inked
and rolled onto a special fingerprint card.
These fingerprints are then compared with
the digitized fingerprints and criminal
records in the FBI’s master criminal
record database (called IAFIS), the National
Crime Information Center (NCIC), and the
National Sex Offender Registry.
IAFIS
contains criminal records on over 45
million individuals, with 5,000 to 7,000
new individuals being added every day
(after they are arrested for the first
time). All federal crimes are included
in IAFIS, plus the large majority of
non-federal crimes, which are maintained
by the states. IAFIS contains both
arrest and conviction records. It
is the most complete criminal history
database in the country, and is continuously
updated to ensure data integrity and
quality. NCIC includes a Wanted
Persons File with 1.2 million records,
and the National Sex Offender Registry
includes over 300,000 offenders.
Determining
if the Pilot is Right for Your Camp
PROTECTScreen may
not be right for every camp. Each
camp should consider all of the information
included in the PROTECTScreen Manual before deciding whether or not to participate
in the pilot. ACA's overview
of background check issues(PDF) can
also help you make your decisions.
Key things to consider about the pilot:
The pilot is currently only available
to your camp's volunteers - not your
paid staff.
Your state may have laws or regulations
requiring you to perform specific types
of background checks. Refer to
the state
regulations database for details
about your state
Your state may already subsidize the
cost of the FBI background check so that
it is less expensive than the pilot’s
$18 charge. One example is Oregon,
where FBI checks are available at no
cost to some nonprofit 501(c)3 organizations.
Criteria Used to Develop a Fitness Determination
Consistent
with the provisions of the PROTECT Act,
the original participants in the pilot
determined that convictions for the five
following crimes will result in a determination
that a volunteer "does not meet" the
criteria to serve as a volunteer:
Any felony conviction (and any crime
punishable by confinement greater than
1 year).
Any lesser crime using force or threat
of force against a person.
Any lesser crime in which sexual relations
is an element, including "victimless" crimes
of a sexual nature.
Any lesser crime involving controlled
substances (not paraphernalia or alcohol).
Any lesser crime involving cruelty
to animals.
A conviction of any of
these categories automatically gives the
volunteer a determination of "does
not meet the criteria". These
categories are defined as criterion offenses.
If the individual is a sex offender registrant,
they will automatically be given the determination
of "does not meet the criteria."
A volunteer having an arrest of
one or more of the criterion offenses with no
disposition noted in the criminal history will
be assigned the determination of "may
not meet the criteria." Additionally,
any charge involving children resulting
in a disposition favorable to the volunteer
nonetheless with result in a determination
of "may not meet the criteria."
If a volunteer has no
criminal history or the crime in which
the volunteer was arrested or convicted
for is not a criterion offense, or the
crime in which the volunteer was charged
was a criterion offense and the volunteer
was found not guilty, or the case was dismissed
(except as noted in the above paragraph)
will receive a determination of "meets
the criteria."
Once
a camp receives the determination on one
of their volunteers, if a volunteer wants
to appeal the determination, there is a
process for doing so. Refer to the PROTECTScreen Manual for
details.
In any case, the final decision of whether to use a volunteer or not is at the complete discretion of the camp.
Learn the skills you need to succeed. Camping Magazine is your primary source for the most recent trends in the camp industry, the latest research in the field of youth development, critical management tools, and innovative programming ideas. September/October 2010 articles address education, research, history, 2020 Toolbox, and much more.
Join more than 1,500 of your colleagues, presenters, and exhibiting personnel at the 2011 National Conference in San Diego. Fourplus packed days of quality education, social and issuesbased networking, professional trade-show access, and special events are designed to boost your professional development.
Children and youth need a community that: encourages achievement and builds self-esteem; promotes healthy lifestyles, fitness, and activity; teaches in a classroom without walls; instills appreciation, respect, and responsibility for the natural world around them; and inspires the confidence and courage to become the leaders of tomorrow.