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title: "Appendix C: Protection and Referral Readiness"
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# Appendix C: Protection and Referral Readiness

<a id="appendix-c-protection-and-referral-readiness"></a>

Complete this appendix with qualified local people. Review it at least yearly and whenever laws, services, leaders, facilities, ministries, or contact details change. Store the operational version where leaders can find it quickly without exposing protected records.

<a id="local-response-map"></a>

## Local Response Map

- Need | Primary and backup path | Review and limits
- Immediate danger or urgent medical care | Local emergency service: ___ Emergency facility: ___ | Who may call; address and access details; reviewed: ___
- Suicide or self-harm crisis | Crisis line/team: ___ Local clinical emergency path: ___ | After-hours availability; accompaniment and follow-up; reviewed: ___
- Child protection | Reporting authority: ___ Safeguarding lead and independent backup: ___ | Local mandatory-reporting rule and time limit; guardian exceptions; reviewed: ___
- Vulnerable-adult protection | Reporting/adult-protection authority: ___ Church lead and backup: ___ | Capacity, consent, and legal duties; reviewed: ___
- Domestic or sexual violence | Qualified advocacy service: ___ Medical/forensic option: ___ | Safe contact method; no joint mediation; reviewed: ___
- Mental-health and addiction care | Licensed providers: ___ Low-cost/public options: ___ | Scope, availability, languages, and crisis limits; reviewed: ___
- Leader or worker allegation | Independent safeguarding path: ___ Denominational/regulatory path: ___ | Who can restrict access; conflict-of- interest alternative; reviewed: ___
- Legal and reporting advice | Qualified local counsel: ___ Relevant government guidance: ___ | Counsel must not replace reporting to proper authority; reviewed: ___

Do not place a church attorney, insurer, denominational reputation office, or senior leader as the only protection path. Those roles may help, but the person receiving a concern must know how to reach the proper public authority and a path outside implicated leadership.

<a id="first-response-card"></a>

## First-Response Card

Every person who works with children, vulnerable adults, counseling, small groups, or pastoral care should know this short sequence:

- Safe now? Address immediate danger and urgent medical need.
- Receive. Stay calm, thank the person, and do not blame or interrogate.
- No secrecy promise. Explain that protection may require sharing with responsible people.
- Record. Preserve the person's own words and the actions taken.
- Report. Follow current law and the proper outside and church path without waiting for internal permission where it is not required.
- Restrict. Prevent further access where safety requires it.
- Return. Give a named contact, explain the next known step, and continue fitting care after the first response.

<a id="annual-readiness-review"></a>

## Annual Readiness Review

The governing body and protection leads should verify:

- current law and reporting duties in every place the church serves;
- screening, references, training, supervision, and interaction rules;
- digital communication, transport, overnight, counseling, home-visit, bathroom, disability-support, and image-use practices;
- alternative reporting when a senior leader, family member, employer, or safeguarding lead is implicated;
- access to records, keys, money, children, vulnerable adults, and private rooms;
- a response exercise using a fictional case;
- secure records and lawful information sharing;
- survivor support, separate care for the accused, congregation communication, and long-term review;
- learning from near misses rather than waiting for proven catastrophe.

Policies matter because memory, courage, and judgment can thin under pressure. Policies are still only channels. Their truth is tested by whether trained people use them, whether conflicts of interest are exposed, whether reports reach the proper place, and whether vulnerable people become safer.
