While screening employees and staff has become standard practice, screening volunteers is also fast becoming a necessity. Failing to do so puts your employees, individuals or children at risk and leaves your organization open to liability.
Every organization is different, and volunteers bring unique issues with them that you or your team must handle. For example, the sheer number of volunteers can make screening and tracking them a challenge from a cost and man-power perspective. Often, organizations balance complex and demanding budgets, and the cost of screening all volunteers is a difficult decision for an organization to make. They may be forced to reduce the number of screenings to only certain types of volunteers, or they may conduct less thorough screenings in order to reduce per-screen costs.
Denying a person the opportunity to volunteer can cause conflicts for an organization and even elicit lawsuits. Parent advocacy groups often support screening but find it difficult to cope with the reality that someone they know may be screened out of volunteering.
There’s a lot to think about when screening volunteers, so we created this best practice checklist to help organizations think through the complexities and craft a smart, well-conceived program that maximizes screening benefits while managing the costs of doing so.
To learn more about these best practices and get the most up-to-date information and industry standards on volunteer screening check out our eBook "Volunteer Screening Best Practices"