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Compliance and its Cast of Characters ~ Introductory Compliance Concepts for those with Auxiliary Roles Kimberli E. Bowman NCAA Membership Services.

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Presentation on theme: "Compliance and its Cast of Characters ~ Introductory Compliance Concepts for those with Auxiliary Roles Kimberli E. Bowman NCAA Membership Services."— Presentation transcript:

1 Compliance and its Cast of Characters ~ Introductory Compliance Concepts for those with Auxiliary Roles Kimberli E. Bowman NCAA Membership Services

2 Session Topics NCAA overview. Institutional control. Key elements in a compliance program. Compliance responsibilities.

3 The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) is… a voluntary association of about 1,300 colleges, universities and athletics conferences devoted to the sound administration of intercollegiate athletics.

4 The NCAA is… the “membership” or “members” - the colleges, universities and athletics conferences that make up the NCAA. The members appoint volunteer representatives that serve on committees which introduce and vote on rules. The members also establish programs to govern, promote and further the purposes and goals of intercollegiate athletics. The membership is divided into three main divisions (I, II and III). Each NCAA division has a separate governing structure and there are membership representatives from each division that serve on Association-wide committees.

5 the “national office” 370 staff members Implement the rules and programs established by the membership. Administer 88 championships in 23 sports. More than 44,900 student-athletes annually compete for national titles. National office headquarters - Indianapolis, Indiana. Myles Brand NCAA President The NCAA is…

6 the “Association.” The entire organization comprised of members and staff. Many believe the national office staff makes the rules; actually it is the membership that proposes and adopts the rules.

7 Association-wide Committees Executive Committee Eight I-A members from Division I Board of Directors Two I-AA members from Division I Board of Directors Two I-AAA members from Division I Board of Directors Two members from Division II Presidents Council Two members from Division III Presidents Council Ex Officio members: NCAA President Chairs of Divisions I, II and III Management Council Division I Board of Directors (presidents and chancellors) Division II Presidents Council (president and chancellors) Division III Presidents Council (presidents and chancellors) Division I Management Council (athletics administrators faculty athletics representatives) Division II Management Council (athletics administrators faculty athletics representatives) Division III Management Council (presidents and chancellors, athletics administrators, faculty athletics representatives and student-athletes) Division I Committees and Cabinets Division II Committees Division III Committees Sport and Rules Committees

8 Institutional Control NCAA Constitution 2.1.1 Responsibility for Control. It is the responsibility of each institution to control its intercollegiate athletics program in compliance with the rules and regulations of the Association.

9 Key Elements In A Compliance Program C C ommunication. O O rganization. D D ocumentation. E E valuation.

10 Communication Demonstrate the institution’s commitment to rules compliance through oral and written communications with various campus entities.

11 Organization Senior-level institutional administrators assume leadership roles in establishing the institution’s commitment to compliance initiatives. Institutional staff assume responsibility for rules knowledge and compliance. Clearly defined compliance procedures including key individuals and their tasks and responsibilities.

12 Documentation Compliance is a central element in the athletics department and involves the campus community through the documentation of policies and procedures.

13 Evaluation Ensure continuing and regular administrative oversight in key compliance areas. Periodic review of the rules compliance program by an institutional authority outside the athletics department.

14 Key Elements In A Compliance Program C C ommunication. O O rganization. D D ocumentation. E E valuation.

15 Compliance Responsibilities Defining my role. Compliance committee. Compliance resources.

16 Compliance Office FARAdmissions Financial Aid Academic Support Internal Auditor Student Affairs Coaches Athletics Dept. Registrar Defining My Role

17  Reporting lines.  Job descriptions.  Performance evaluations.  Rules education.

18 Compliance Committee Document and evaluate compliance policies and procedures. Assist in rules education. Communicate importance of rules compliance to the campus community. Assist in rules-violations investigations. Serve as an advisory group. Complete monitoring tasks.

19 Example of a Compliance Committee Director of athletics. Senior woman administrator. Compliance coordinator. Faculty athletics representative. Registrar’s office representative. Financial aid office representative. Admissions office representative. Dean of students office representative. Faculty representative. Student-athlete representative. Athletics board representative. Coaches.

20 Compliance Resources Technology. –Compliance Assistant Internet (CAi). –LSDBi (https://goomer.ncaa.org/wdbctx/LSDBis/LSDBI.home). –NCAA Web site (www.ncaa.org).www.ncaa.org NCAA Regional Rules Seminar. Conference office and NCAA conference contact program. Calling NCAA membership services. –317/917-6003 (institutional line). –317/917-6222 (general public line).

21 Compliance Concepts Review Compliance Concepts Review Institutional control. Key elements in a compliance program. Compliance responsibilities.

22 Questions


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