LEGAL DISCLAIMER


New Law Regarding Fingerprinting of Volunteers:  Senate Bill 187: Effective March 22, 2001

The idea behind this bill is to encourage volunteer-utilizing organizations to conduct BCII (Bureau of Criminal Investigation and Identification) fingerprint checks on their volunteers who work with children, and to let parents have the information they need about the criminal background of those volunteers to decide whether to keep their child in that program.

SB 187 does not:

  • Give parents the right to request that volunteers be fingerprinted
  • Have parents pay for fingerprint checks on volunteers
  • Mandate fingerprinting at all
  • Provide any funding for fingerprint checks

 

To whom do the laws made by SB 187 apply?  Organizations who use volunteers who regularly have unsupervised access to a child. Section 109.574 (B) "Unsupervised access to a child" means that the person in question has access to a child and that either of the following applies:

(1) No other person eighteen years of age or older is present in the same room with the child.

(2) If outdoors, no other person eighteen years of age or older is within a thirty-yard radius of the child or has visual contact with the child.

If you don’t have volunteers with unsupervised access, this doesn’t apply to you. HOWEVER, be aware that although you may not program for unsupervised access, there may sometimes be exceptions in your program (e.g. a volunteer tutor removing a child from a noisy classroom).

If you have volunteers with unsupervised access, there are several things you need to know, and one that you need to act on right away:      

By April 22, 2001, you must notify in writing your volunteers with unsupervised access to children that they may be fingerprinted. After that, you must notify potential volunteers when they apply to be a part of your program. This is true whether or not you actually intend to fingerprint your volunteers. The bill does not tell you what you must say. Section 109.575

Best Practices Guide
In accordance with the law, the Ohio Community Service Council developed a set of "best practices" for organizations to use when screening volunteers. It is important to note - the Ohio Community Service Council is not a regulatory agency; it does not have the authority to make rules that have the force and effect of law. Consequently, these practices should not be considered rules or law; and courts should not impose liability based upon this document.

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VOLUNTEER SPOTLIGHT

Connie Kramer

Licking County
Coalition of Care
Newark, OH

Transition is the word that most characterizes my last year!  Away from the Ohio Community Service Council and Make A Difference Day Ohio which are very close to my heart - into the directorship of a very small, grassroots faith-based non-profit organization.  The Licking County Coalition of Care was born out of the need for local churches to be able to meet the emergency assistance needs in our county.  Churches routinely receive calls or walk-ins looking for financial help, staff members have difficulty discerning whether those requests are legitimate and if financial help is the best help that can be provided. 

At the Coalition, we work with referrals from local churches. During the process, we coach clients through accessing local resources, conduct an Ohio Benefits Bank check with them, develop a current budget and talk about possible long-term solutions to their overwhelming financial challenges.  After interviewing them and compassionately listening to their story, we verify their need and provide financial assistance to help keep shelter over their heads, utilities turned on, transpiration to a new job or doctor's appointment, or help with immediate medical needs.  As a faith-based organization, we also focus on connecting them to a local church and provide Bibles and daily devotionals for them free of charge.

We are a team of 40 partnering churches and 21 volunteers who provide direct client service and come from a broad spectrum of church backgrounds.  Our goal is for this ministry to provide the most effective assistance possible.  The stories are endless and the need ever increasing in our current economy. 



Connie served as the project coordinator for Make A Difference Day Ohio from 2000-2007. Thanks for continuing to give back!

Contact Information: Connie Kramer (740) 670-9700

If you would like to nominate a special person for the Volunteer Spotlight, please email John Poole at john.poole@ocsc.state.us

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