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the PIAA recently released a 5 page statement regarding this article. Here is an excerpt that directly responded to the article:
NOTE REGARDING RECENT PUBLICATIONS ON THIS ISSUE: In a recent article published by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, it was reported that a few PIAA-registered officials had been convicted of criminal offenses but had been allowed to officiate PIAA Contests. The reporter did a thorough job and, while concerned that any persons convicted of serious crimes have officiated Contests, PIAA was not disappointed to see that fewer than 1% of the PIAA-registered officials in the District VII and District VIII areas had prior criminal convictions of any kind, and most of those were for misdemeanors and offenses that occurred 15 to 20 years ago. PIAA was even more pleased to note that, after the thorough and yearlong investigation was completed, there was no finding that any official, at any time, committed an offense relating to, or arising out of, his or her officiating duties. In any event, PIAA was grateful that the reporter brought to the attention of PIAA incidents that raise question about whether certain officials should remain registered with PIAA. PIAA promptly responded to the information provided to it by investigating the persons identified by the reporter. Almost all had been convicted of offenses prior to when PIAA began to require newly registering officials to disclose prior criminal convictions. Most of the convictions were over ten years ago, with the official maintaining a clean record since the earlier conviction. Only one of the convictions was for a felony that would have automatically barred the official from registration (that official, who had already been suspended by PIAA, will soon have a hearing to determine whether to remove him from the list of registered officials). PIAA has contacted each of the identified officials and obtained information permitting PIAA to make a reasoned assessment as to whether any of them should be disqualified from further officiating. What was learned about some of the officials identified in the article are set forth below: ● David Coligan: The article reports on various charges brought against Mr. Coligan, apparently taking as fact the allegations made against him. It then notes in passing that Mr. Coligan was actually guilty only of a summary offense and paid a $249 fine. A criminal background check of Mr. Coligan would not have disclosed any offenses that would have barred him from any employment with a school or otherwise. ● William Miller: The article reports that Mr. Miller pled guilty to "interference with the custody of children." He was placed on probation and received no prison time. PIAA determined the Mr. Miller was involved with a public outreach ministry in a drug infested area. The child in question was discovered at the outdoor outreach ministry, accompanied by sixty other children and four counselors. There was no allegation of abuse, threats or intimidation of the child. A couple of additional observations and corrections to the Post-Gazette article are probably also appropriate for those who may have read it: ● The article incorrectly asserts that "though partially funded by tax dollars, the PIAA also maintains it is not bound by state laws requiring checks on anyone in contact with children." This statement is incorrect in both of its premises. First, PIAA is a nonprofit corporation that is not funded by any governmental entity and receives no tax dollars. The second error is the incorrect assumption that "state laws require checks on anyone in contact with children." No such law exists. Rather, Acts 34 and 151 do require schools to conduct such background checks for certain persons. PIAA, however, is not a school and, so far as we are aware, no person with knowledge of the laws has ever implied that the laws would apply to PIAA. ● The article also incorrectly states that Acts 34 and 151 "bar anyone convicted of most misdemeanors from working in schools near children." The crimes identified under the Acts are specifically limited to a fairly narrow range of offenses, most of which are felonies. ● While the article states, without support, that there are dozens of PIAA-registered officials with criminal records, it fails to note that almost all of these are for summary offenses or misdemeanors and that most occurred more than ten years ago, with the officials maintaining a "clean" record since then. None of the offenses relate to interscholastic athletics. ● The article implied that PIAA, which reported $567,982 in membership dues from athletic officials, should not have much difficulty in implementing mandatory criminal background checks. However, those dues total an average of only $41.45 per each of the 13,700 registered officials and those registration fees are used to cover a wide range of services provided in training and organization. The anticipated cost of background |
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For those of you that wish to read the full statement: http://www.piaa.org/assets/web/docum...essRelease.pdf
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