MakingFriends.comHere you will find thousands of arts project sheets, recycled ideas & free printables for kids. They also sell Discount art supplies for your kids.
FreeKidsCrafts.comFree arts project ideas for kids. This site is an amazing search engine of arts activities for kids from all over the Internet.
Discovery Toys I recently bought Discovery Toys for my children for the first time after going to a Discovery Toy party and I love the toys so much that I am linking to my Discovery Toy consultant's page so you can get these toys too.
CRAFTS TOPICS BELOW
CRAFTS IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER
CRAFTS BY ITEMS
CRAFTS BY THEME
CRAFTS BY HOLIDAY
Suggested Links
Kids Crafts & Activities Blog
Home Preschooling Kids
Activity Coloring Pages
All Work at Home Ideas
OTHER SITES WE OWN
Crafts & Arts and Crafts
All Kids Murals
How to Draw
SITE LINKS
-See Charity Murals
-List of Children's Hospitals
-Homeless / Food / Clothing Shelters
-Healing With Art : Art Heals
-Art Resources for Children
-Get Children Involved in Community Service
-Children's Advocacy Groups
-Non-Profit Resources and Articles
-How to Paint a Mural
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
||
Home > NonProfit Charity Articles > Does Liability for Negligent Hiring Apply to Volunteers?
Recognition should fit with the organisation’s culture. A visit by a very senior member of management to a branch volunteer team could be a significant morale booster. Involve all the key players in the programme and your organisation.
Does Liability for Negligent Hiring Apply to Volunteers?
By John C. Patterson
From Staff Screening Tool Kit, p.13-14
There is
authority in the common law--the body of law derived from usage, custom,
and tradition--supporting the argument that the concept of negligent hiring
can be applied even when the
wrongdoer is an unpaid staff person. "A person conducting an activity
through servants or other agents is subject to liability for harm resulting
from his conduct if he is negligent or reckless.. .in
the employment of improper persons or instrumentalities in work involving
risk of harm to others."
RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF AGENCY, Section 213 (1958) jilt is negligence to permit a third person to use a thing or to engage in an activity which is under the control of the actor, if the actor knows or should know that such a person intends or is likely to use the thing or to conduct himself in the activity in such a manner as to create an unreasonable risk of harm to others."
RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS, Section 308 (1965). As discussed previously, key considerations are:
Foreseeability. Did the nonprofit know or should it have
known that the staff member
posed an unreasonable risk of harm?
Control. Did the nonprofit have control over the activity
in which the "actor" was engaged?
Risk Management Strategies for Legal Screening
Always base screening processes on the potential risk posed by a position.
Begin your screening
process by considering the potential dangers inherent in the position.
For example, a position that
will have one-on-one contact with vulnerable service recipients or the
general public poses
greater risk to these populations than a clerical position with light
typing duties and no public
contact.
When a position involves unsupervised contact with vulnerable service
recipients, use a more
rigorous screening process. The determination of whether a screening process
will be considered
reasonable will take into account the level of risk to service participants.
Before screening for a particular position, identify the characteristics
that will act as automatic
dis qualifiers for the position. For example, determine that one or more
moving violations during
the past five years will disqualify an applicant for the position of van
driver.
Whenever a basic screening process raises red flags about an applicant,
you should investigate
the issue to determine whether it disqualifies the applicant.
Do not disqualify applicants based on their beliefs. Conduct, not ideas,
is an appropriate basis
for exclusion.
If appropriate, when a disqualifying characteristic is detected in an
applicant for a volunteer
position, consider the applicant for another position.
Establish written screening guidelines and use written tools to substantiate
your efforts, such as
position descriptions, interview guides, hiring checklists, reference
check worksheets, and other
items as appropriate.
Determine whether a license is required for each position, and confirm
that every applicant has
the required license before proceeding with additional steps in the screening
process.
Evaluate the sufficiency of your screening processes using the reasonableness
standard. Is the
process used to screen applicants for volunteer positions reasonable under
the circumstances? Is
the process used to screen applicants for paid positions reasonable under
the circumstances?
Excerpted from . Found in the Energize, Inc. website library at http://www.energizeinc.com/art.html.
CHANGES TO ARTISTS HELPING CHILDREN - PLEASE READ
Artists Helping Children is No Longer Acting as a Nonprofit Due to the New Provisions of The Pension Protection Act of 2006 Passed on August 03, 2006. We Are No Longer Accepting Donations of Any Kind. We are Currently Keeping This Site Up As Is and Will Continue to Post Information on Any Updates to the Status of Artists Helping Children. The Site Still Has a Wealth of Information and Can Still Be Used as Such. We Are Obviously Deeply Distressed Over This Provision That Was Secretly Included In This New Law and We Were Taken by Complete Surprise. We Hope in the Future That We Will Be Able to Change the Status of Our Organization so That We Can Once Again Resume Our Help to Children. Thank You Very Much to Everyone Who Has Worked With Us So Hard Up Until Now. Please Continue to Use This Site for Free Coloring Pages / Printouts, Arts and Crafts Project Ideas, and as a Resource for Childrens Art Articles, etc. Don't worry, All donations of items that were sent to us will still be sent to hospitals and shelters, etc. All recent checks sent to us will be mailed back to you. Thanks.