Getting volunteer safeguarding right isn't easy. You have to ensure safety but at the same time you don't want to put them off with all the hassle.
So what is proportionate vetting?
Proportionate vetting for volunteers means performing background checks and screenings that are appropriate to the level of risk and responsibility of the specific role. It is about ensuring the safety of beneficiaries and the organisation's integrity without imposing unnecessary or overly intrusive checks that could discourage people from volunteering.
How do you decide if they do supervised vs unsupervised roles?
How much to do for volunteer induction and training?
What sort of ongoing monitoring and boundaries (including digital contact) should be set?
And how do you get them to understand your culture?
You need to consider all these questions to help ensure your volunteers understand their role and the expectations you have. Whilst it might not suit all, it means those that do join will certainly be committed.
- Low-contact / supervised roles: identity checks, references (where appropriate), basic induction, clear supervision.
- Regular / unsupervised roles: appropriate DBS route (where eligible), references, safeguarding training, stronger oversight.
If a volunteer drifts into unsupervised contact because the session is busy, or they've been a volunteer 'for ages' your risk profile changes instantly and you are accountable.
The best volunteer teams are the ones where it’s normal to say: “I’m not sure — can I check that?”
When monitoring is delivered as support and safety it's no longer monitoring, it's culture and it feels fair — not suspicious.