Notes from a youth coach.
How young? If 3rd grade, or below, don't even keep score. At that age, the whole process should be instructional, so a lot of violations should either be ingnored or result in a stoppage of play, verbal correction, and resumption of play without change of possession. Second or third gross violation, award the ball to other team. No zones and no tripple-teaming up through 4th grade. Warn on 3 seconds - the kid will leave if corrected - but don't call until 5 seconds. No closely guarded call when attempt is being made to advance the ball. Only call it if ball is held or the kid is not making any attempt to move in. Ideally no zones through 6th, but that would be likely to get push-back from volunteer coaches who still want to win without having to teach the kids how to play defense. Equal playing time should also be enforced. In 3rd or below, have officials draw numbers out of hat to determine who plays each quater, with no numbers put back into hat until everyone has played a quarter. Above 3rd, let coach decide, but still require that everyone plays as close to an equal amount as possible. Some leagues have charts that tell the coaches how many kids play 1, 2, or 3 quarters depending on how many are on the team. For my younger teams, I always tried to equalize playing time for the whole season as well. This should be encouraged by the league, even though the overhead of trying to enforce it would be too great for the league to bear.
Important for your sanity is to make sure all the coaches (and ideally parents) are aware of these (and any other you come up with) rules and "treatments" before the season starts. Make it clear that you won't call a double dribble for the occasional touching of the ball with two hand (for youngets ones) etc. Stress that since this is a church league, there are clear expectations for behavior. Have all coaches and parents sign a code of conduct contract that emphasizes "THIS IS FOR THE KIDS".
Good luck
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