As a volunteer manager, you have a responsibility to make sure that all volunteers are safe and secure day to day. Your trustees have a legal duty of care to consider volunteers health, safety and well-being that you can help them deliver.
Many of the practices that will help you take a safeguarding approach also help with other goals as a volunteer manager such as making sure you have equality of opportunities or helping you keep volunteers engaged with your organisation.
You can take a number of different approaches to preventing harm as part of your safeguarding approach. You should have in place:
You should aim to provide the right level of supervision and support to your volunteers throughout the time they are volunteering. You need to work out what the demands are of the role, what you can offer, and what is best for both you and the volunteer. For example, volunteers at a one-off social event may need less support than someone volunteering several times a week in a Hospice.
In safeguarding, supervision can mean different things at different times.
Supervision as a form of support is a way for you to provide a safe space to explore how your volunteers are feeling and how they are doing in the role. It also gives you a way of monitoring the volunteer to ensure that they are operating safely. By providing supervision sessions you can make sure your volunteers know they have someone turn to for support. You can also make sure you are building a culture of vigilance where people feel comfortable raising concerns.
Some methods you may find effective:
You should make sure to treat volunteers that have the same responsibilities fairly. When planning meetings you should consider:
Some volunteers may see support or supervision meetings as a distraction from the reason they wanted to volunteer in the first place. You should aim to:
You should take away these things from the meetings:
And you should make sure the volunteer gets:
Some questions to ask:
Some volunteering roles are more inherently stressful, create emotional burden or more likely to be exposed to safeguarding concerns of your organisations intended beneficiaries. These roles should have more regular supervision and more opportunity to seek more support as they need it.
If you have any volunteering roles who are undertaking the role of designated safeguarding lead or where a volunteer has been involved in a safeguarding concern – because they were told something, saw a concern or an allegation has been made about their behaviour – they may need additional support. You should consider whether there is additional support that can be offered, for example if you have an employee assistance programme could this be extended to cover the volunteer.
You can use the supervision process to address concerns with a volunteers behaviour. If they do not respond well, and particularly if they stop volunteering as a result, you have a duty to discuss those concerns and potentially refer them to statutory authorities.
As a volunteer manager, you will often be the first person a volunteer comes to with a safeguarding concern, even if you are not the designated safeguarding lead for your organisation.
When a volunteer speaks to you about something that is concerning them, there are a number of things you should do.
You need to make sure you are familiar with your organisation’s processes for:
In all situations you should follow your processes or procedures for the type of issue you have identified. If you have any uncertainty at all always speak with the designated safeguarding lead for your organisation if you have one.
Want to know more about reporting procedures? The responding to safeguarding concerns section of the guide for designated safeguarding leads.
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