My son started refereeing in England in summer 2021 as a 14 year old, and re-registered in summer 2022 as a 15-year old.
My and his understanding is that he needs to have a DBS in place in order to continue refereeing mini/youth football* beyond his 16th birthday (which is coming up soon).
However, my understanding from various official (non-football) '.gov.uk' sources is that you can't even apply for a DBS until you have reached the age of 16 (i.e. you can't apply a couple of months beforehand in order to ensure that the DBS is in place by the time you reach 16).
The implication of this would be that my son would have to stop refereeing for a short while between the date of his 16th birthday and the date when he actually receives the DBS confirmation.
Obviously if that is the rule then he will do so and it isn't a big deal, but ideally he'd rather not have a gap, and I suspect that actually something about my understanding of the above is not quite correct.
I have searched, but can't find anything official online about a 'grace period' for the DBS application or anything similar.
However, I think I saw something somewhere online (not on an official FA site, & I unfortunately can't find the link now as it was way back when my son first started refereeing) suggesting that you don't actually need a DBS at all when you reach 16, but instead you need it when you register as a referee if you are aged 16 or over.
That would make sense, and would imply that my son could continue to referee without a DBS for the remainder of this season (even after he turns 16), but will need a DBS in place by the date when he renews his annual referee registration in Summer 2023 (as by then he will be 16).
I would be most grateful if anyone can confirm which of the below is correct, and if possible point me to an official source confirming the same:
Many thanks.
*I appreciate that whilst I have said mini/youth football above for brevity, the above will also apply to 'open age' football when any of the other participants (players, officials, etc.) are under 18 years old.
My and his understanding is that he needs to have a DBS in place in order to continue refereeing mini/youth football* beyond his 16th birthday (which is coming up soon).
However, my understanding from various official (non-football) '.gov.uk' sources is that you can't even apply for a DBS until you have reached the age of 16 (i.e. you can't apply a couple of months beforehand in order to ensure that the DBS is in place by the time you reach 16).
The implication of this would be that my son would have to stop refereeing for a short while between the date of his 16th birthday and the date when he actually receives the DBS confirmation.
Obviously if that is the rule then he will do so and it isn't a big deal, but ideally he'd rather not have a gap, and I suspect that actually something about my understanding of the above is not quite correct.
I have searched, but can't find anything official online about a 'grace period' for the DBS application or anything similar.
However, I think I saw something somewhere online (not on an official FA site, & I unfortunately can't find the link now as it was way back when my son first started refereeing) suggesting that you don't actually need a DBS at all when you reach 16, but instead you need it when you register as a referee if you are aged 16 or over.
That would make sense, and would imply that my son could continue to referee without a DBS for the remainder of this season (even after he turns 16), but will need a DBS in place by the date when he renews his annual referee registration in Summer 2023 (as by then he will be 16).
I would be most grateful if anyone can confirm which of the below is correct, and if possible point me to an official source confirming the same:
- A DBS is needed to referee a mini/youth football* match as an FA-registered official if you are aged 16 or over on the date of the match.
- A DBS is needed to referee a mini/youth football* match as an FA-registered official if you were aged 16 or over on the date of your FA-registration.
Many thanks.
*I appreciate that whilst I have said mini/youth football above for brevity, the above will also apply to 'open age' football when any of the other participants (players, officials, etc.) are under 18 years old.