Section 6: Safeguarding yourself and your community

Requirements

6.1 The Leader of a religious community has overall responsibility for ensuring the safety of their community, visitors and premises.

6.2 The DSP is responsible for ensuring that there are processes in place to keep community members and other visitors safe from visitors who may seek to cause harm.

6.3 Working with others, the DSP is responsible for ensuring that there are processes in place to safeguard members when they are working in the community, including where appropriate, risk assessing any premises and activities with regard to safeguarding.

Guidance

Religious communities differ greatly between themselves and do many great things.  This section is specifically for those communities which provide some sort of service, be that within their own premises or out in the community. From a risk management perspective, the starting point is to always think “what might go wrong, and how might that be prevented?”, rather than hoping everything will go right. This should not be seen as an “add on” or a tick box exercise, but about how to integrate safer working practices into the mission and the ways of working.

Safeguarding members in the community

Members of communities who work with children or vulnerable adults in the community should already be safely recruited and should be involved in regular supervision discussions. For those members, and for all other members who work in the community, there should also be clear processes to safeguard them as well as those they work with. This will include, as a minimum, details of where the member will be working, who with and how long for. In certain circumstances, it may be necessary to carry out a risk assessment of the environment members will be working in, and ensure basic mitigations are taken, e.g. two people together, telephones etc. The Safer Environments and Activities policy and the Code of Safer Working Practice both have more information on this.

Safeguarding buildings and activities

The DSP should work with others to ensure that a basic risk assessment of any premises owned or used is carried out in relation to safeguarding. This is in addition to any health and safety risk assessments which must be completed. This will identify any areas of concern, for example, unsecure or hidden entrances, basic security measures on doors and windows, areas of low lighting, placement and security of toilets etc. Steps can then be taken to mitigate the risks posed by the building itself.

If they are not already been carried out, risk assessments of the activities being carried out should also be completed, again so that the risk of any safeguarding incident arising is mitigated as far as possible. The Safer Environments and Activities policy, and the Code of Safer Working Practices both have more information on this and model risk assessment templates are also available.