to background check or not to background check, that is the question 

Courtesy of Anna Guest, Founder and CEO, Rising Tide Volunteer Solutions

Whether or not to conduct background checks for potential volunteers is an important issue for Lifelong Communities to consider. Depending on the type of roles that volunteers are involved in, and the people they work with, completing background checks can be an important way to ensure that your team members are trustworthy representatives of your work and to limit the risk of liability to your organization.  At the same time, the process of undergoing background checks can be costly and time consuming, both challenges for Lifelong Communities operating on limited budgets and with volunteer leadership.   Here we’ll explore when background checking is appropriate and when it might be an unnecessary barrier.  And we’ll share some tools and ideas for making the background check process more manageable. 

Let’s start out by defining when background checks are not needed: 

As volunteer roles become more involved, with greater responsibility, it’s more likely that completing a background check is an important protective practice for your organization.   Background checks are typically considered essential for volunteers with roles in the following categories:  

If you do plan to conduct background checks, there are a variety of different types of information you might wish to review:  

Depending on the volume of background checks you expect to do, your community may choose to initiate the checks directly using the resources above.  There may be opportunities to streamline the process by partnering with other organizations or using an online service.  

Consider Partnering with Another Organization - Local Retired Senior Volunteer Programs (RSVPs), Area Agencies on Aging or local non-profits that have a high volume of volunteers may be willing to partner and have administrative infrastructure in place to help your community move through the background check process more efficiently.  Some communities have had success partnering with their police department.  

Reputable Background Check Services - Sterling Volunteers, Background Checks for Volunteers, and Checkr are popular services that can help you streamline the screening process by completing multiple check at one time and seem to start at $20/background check.  

Here’s a simple but eye-opening practice for your organization, consider a tricky situation with a volunteer – for example you complete a Maine Criminal Record Check on volunteers participating in your Friendly Visitor program, but one of the volunteers has a past offense (theft, fraud, assault, exploitation) from a different state so they are accepted into the program.  If an issue with this volunteer as part of your program ended up on the front page of the newspaper what would it mean for your reputation, liability, and impact? 

Your community must find a comfortable balance between minimizing any legal risk to your age-friendly initiative and harm to those you serve, keeping volunteer involvement low barrier, and minimizing administrative burdens.   If you’d like to explore more about background checks as part of a risk management approach, you may find these resources helpful.  

Further Resources from Anna: 

Risk Management Assessment and Planning Tools

We are deeply grateful to Anna Guest and Rising Tides Volunteer Solutions for working with Lifelong Maine to develop these training materials. Special thanks to Sharon Kelley, Berwick for a Lifetime, Candy Eaton, Age-Friendly Sullivan, and Jean Saunders, Age-Friendly Saco, for meeting with Anna to share their wisdom, experiences and challenges working with volunteers
We also want to thank AARP Maine for their thought leadership designing these modules.