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Understanding Minnesota Youth Sports Compliance

Minnesota organizations that serve youth — leagues, camps, parks and recreation departments, YMCAs, and clubs — must navigate a layered set of federal and state requirements to ensure every adult on the field is safe, trained, and compliant. Here's what you need to know.

1

Background Checks

Minnesota's Child Protection Background Check Act (Minn. Stat. §299C.60–64) authorizes organizations working with children to request criminal background checks through the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA). Most national governing bodies (US Soccer, USA Hockey, etc.) and insurance carriers require them.

  • Annual screening is industry best practice for all coaches, volunteers, officials, and administrators with access to minors
  • Checks should include national criminal database search, sex offender registry, and SSN trace at minimum
  • NGB-affiliated organizations: check your governing body's specific screening requirements — many mandate specific providers

2

Concussion Training

Minnesota has a clear statutory requirement for concussion training. Under Minn. Stat. §121A.37, any municipality, business, or nonprofit that organizes a youth athletic activity for which a fee is charged must comply with the following:

  • All coaches and officials must complete initial online concussion training (CDC HEADS UP or equivalent)
  • Refresher training required at least once every three calendar years
  • Coaches must remove any athlete showing concussion signs — the athlete cannot return without written clearance from a qualified provider
  • Concussion risk information must be made accessible to all coaches, officials, athletes, and parents

3

Abuse Prevention Training

The federal Protecting Young Victims from Sexual Abuse and Safe Sport Authorization Act of 2017 requires organizations affiliated with national governing bodies to provide abuse prevention training to all adults in regular contact with minor athletes.

  • All adults authorized to interact with minors at sanctioned events must complete abuse prevention training
  • Adults become mandatory reporters — required to report suspected child abuse within 24 hours
  • Organizations may face fines up to $150,000 for failing to provide required training
Even non-NGB organizations should implement abuse prevention training as a best practice and liability protection

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How Ankored Helps

Ankored automates compliance tracking across all three requirement areas — background checks, concussion training, and abuse prevention training — in one centralized platform. We integrate with leading background check providers, track certification expiration dates, send automated reminders, and give you real-time visibility into your organization's compliance status.

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