Club Safety
At the Boys & Girls Club of Livingston County, Child Safety is Job Number 1.
Ensuring child safety is fundamental to the mission of the Boys & Girls Club of Livingston County.
The Safety and Wellbeing of Young People is Our top Priority
We work every day to create a safe, fun environment so kids can have every opportunity to be successful in life. We have ZERO tolerance for inappropriate behavior of any kind, including child sexual abuse or misconduct, and we put resources behind that stance.
Safety Policies
The Boys & Girls Club of Livingston County has comprehensive safety policies in place that protect youth including, but not limited to, supervision, transportation, communication, and prohibiting private one-on-one contact.
Mandatory Background Checks
Mandatory criminal background checks are required every year for every staff and board member at the Boys & Girls Club of Livingston County. In addition, criminal background checks are required for any volunteer who has direct contact with children. All potential employees and volunteers are also run through the National Sex Offender Registry using Veriscreen, Inc.
Mandatory Annual Safety Assessments
We complete a safety assessment each year to ensure we continually make improvements to safety at our Clubs, and the assessment is reviewed by our Board-led Safety Committee.
Mandatory Employee Reference
Any employee interested in moving to another Boys & Girls Club is required to have a reference from the previous Club, even if the Clubs are within the same community.
State and Local Laws
We comply with federal, state, and local safety laws, including those impacting facilities and vehicles.
Local Safety Partnerships
Pontiac Police Department
Fairbury Police Department
Livingston County Sheriff’s Office
Fire Department
IHR in Livingston County
Community Connections
Project Oz (the Boys & Girls Club of Livingston County is a certified SAFE PLACE)
Culture of Safety
The Boys & Girls Club of Livingston County continually updates robust safety policies, programs, and training for our staff and volunteers that are designed to promote child safety and protect young people from threats that are present in our society. We implement layers of safety policies and guidelines to keep our kids safe including:
Backgrounds screenings for all employees and volunteers.
Bi-Monthly Safety Committee Meetings.
Quarterly Trainings for front line and leadership team staff members.
24-hour Toll-free Child Safety Hotline
We encourage all staff, members and families to report any incident or situation they feel is unsafe. Through our national partnership with Praesidium, one of the nation’s leading safety experts, the Boys & Girls Club of Livingston County members and staff have access to a confidential 24-hour toll-free Child Safety Hotline, 866-607-SAFE (7233) or email SafeClub@Praesidiuminc.com.
Required Immediate Reporting
The Boys & Girls Club of Livingston County staff and volunteers are all mandated reporters. We are required to report any critical incident/safety concern to local authorities immediately. We are also required to report any critical incident to Boys & Girls Clubs of America within 24 hours.
Safety Trainings
Ongoing training and supervision of staff is critical. We participate in a wide variety of child safety training, such as those conducted by the Illinois After-School Conference, Leadership University (including over 16 hours of onboarding before staff start with 8 hours of sexual abuse prevention training), DHS training, Trauma Trainings, Leadership Conference, National Conference, Youth Development Institute, and Club Directors Academy along with A.L.I.C.E. training & drills. We also engage leading third-party safety experts to provide guidance for our policies and approaches, including Praesidium, the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children, and the National Children’s Advocacy Center.
National Safety Partnerships:
National Child Safety Advisory Task Force, made up of leading experts and organizations
Blue Ribbon Taskforce, comprised of local Club leaders charged with providing input on the safety direction and key safety initiatives
Mental Health First Aid, a national program that teaches skills to recognize and respond to signs of mental illness and substance abuse
Crisis Text Line, a confidential text message service for youth in times of crisis
The Boys & Girls Clubs of America has also advocated the passage of the U.S. PROTECT Act, which improved background screening systems and access. The national organization has also partnered with the FBI, the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children and the Centers for Disease Control to contribute to the development of safety practices that benefit ALL youth-serving organizations.