Constitution and - Arizona Community College Athletic ...



Arizona Community College Athletic ConferenceConstitution andBy-Laws 2019-20Table of ContentsPREAMBLE TO THE CONSTITUTION AND BYLAWS1Mission1Code of Conduct1ACCAC CONSTITUTION2ARTICLE I: NAME2SEC 1Name2ARTICLE II: AUTHORITY2SEC 1Purpose2SEC 2Authority2ARTICLE III: MEMBERSHIP2SEC 1Membership2SEC 2Members2SEC 3Conditions2ARTICLE IV: OFFICERS2SEC 1Titles2SEC 2Elections2ARTICLE V: MEETINGS3SEC 1Regular Meetings.3SEC 2Special Meetings3ARTICLE VI: STANDING COMMITTEES3SEC 1Committees3SEC 2Purpose3ARTICLE VII: FINANCES3ARTICLE VIII: REPRESENTATION3ARTICLE IX: AMENDMENTS3ARTICLE X: VIOLATIONS3BYLAWS4ARTICLE I: NAME4SEC 1Name4SEC 2Athletic Council4ARTICLE II: AUTHORITY4SEC 1Authority4SEC 2Eligibility4SEC 3Financial Assistance4ARTICLE III: MEMBERSHIP4SEC 1Member4SEC 2Application4SEC 3Resignations4SEC 4Dues4ARTICLE IV: OFFICERS5SEC 1Officers5SEC 2Nominations5SEC 3Term of Office5SEC 4Succession5SEC 5Duties of Officers5ARTICLE V: MEETINGS6SEC 1Regular Meetings6SEC 2Quorum6SEC 3Parliamentary Authority6SEC 4Voting of the Council7ARTICLE VI: STANDING COMMITTEES7SEC 1Executive Committee7SEC 2Rules and Ethics Committee7SEC 3Officiating Committee9SEC 4Service, Recognition and Awards Committee.9SEC 5Athletic Health and Safety Committee10SEC 6Nominating Committee10SEC 7Scheduling Committee10SEC 8Sport Committees11ARTICLE VII: FINANCES12SEC 1Fiscal Year12SEC 2Dues12SEC 3Annual Report12ARTICLE VIII: REPRESENTATION12SEC 1Representatives12SEC 2Appointment12ARTICLE IX: AMENDMENTS12SEC 1Amendments12SEC 2Ratification12ARTICLE X: VIOLATIONS12SEC 1General Violations12SEC 2Sanctions13SEC 3Appeals14ARTICLE XI: HALL OF FAME PROCESS PROCEDURES15SEC 1Nomination Process15SEC 2Selection Process15SEC 3Notification15ARTICLE XII: SPORTSMANSHIP15SEC 1Principles of Sportsmanship15SEC 2Sanctions16SEC 3Public Statements16ARTICLE XIII: SPORTS PROCEDURES17SEC 1Sports authorized by the conference17SEC 2Management of Contests/Practices17SEC 3Restrictions on Competition17SEC 4Adding a new sport17SEC 5Configuration of Sport Schedules18SEC 6Certification of Eligibility18SEC 7Postponed or Suspended Contests18SEC 8Season Cancellation/Contest Forfeit/No Contest19SEC 9Method for Breaking Ties for seeding the Region Tournament19SEC 10Statistical Procedures20SEC 11General Guidelines for All-Star Games & Preseason Jamborees20SEC 12ACCAC Coaches' & Athletic Trainers’ Associations21SEC 13BASEBALL21SEC 14BASKETBALL23SEC 15CROSS COUNTRY23SEC 16FOOTBALL24SEC 17GOLF24SEC 18SOFTBALL26SEC 19SOCCER27SEC 20TENNIS28SEC 21TRACK & FIELD30SEC 22VOLLEYBALL31ARTICLE XIV: OFFICIATING32SEC 1Supervisor of Officials Job Description32SEC 2Official’s Fees33SEC 3Official’s Fee Schedule34ARTICLE XV: SPORTS PUBLICISTS35SEC 1Sports Publicists Duties35SEC 2ACCAC Webmaster Duties35SEC 32018-19 Sports Publicists/Web Official’s Fee Schedule36ARTICLE XVI: AWARDS36SEC 1Championship Teams36SEC 2Coach of the Year36SEC 3Athlete of the Year36SEC 4All-Conference Team36SEC 5All-Conference Team Selection Procedures37ARTICLE XVII: FORMS41SEC 1ACCAC/Region I Student Athlete/Player of the Year Award Form41SEC 2ACCAC/Region I Athletic Trainer of the Year Award Nomination Form44SEC 3ACCAC Hall of Fame Nomination Form45ARTICLE XVIII: ADDENDUMS47SEC 1ACCAC Athletic Health & Safety Manual47PREAMBLE TO THE CONSTITUTION AND BYLAWSMissionThe mission of the Arizona Community College Athletic Conference (ACCAC) shall be the administration of intercollegiate athletics among its members and with other colleges. This is established through enforcement of procedures and regulations in conjunction with the ACCAC CONSTITUTION AND BY- LAWS to maintain the following:A balance between the athletic and the academic programs of the college,Standards of academic performance,Standards of amateurism as defined by the NJCAA,Institutional control of athletics,High ideals of sportsmanship,Fair and equal competition among the member institutions,An ongoing review of Athletic policy and procedures to insure continuous improvement.Code of ConductThe Code of Conduct applies to all contests and tournaments sponsored by the Arizona Community College Athletic Association.The basic principles of the Arizona Community College Athletic Conference stand for the highest ideals in sportsmanship. One of the primary objectives of competition is to develop and foster respect for fellow participants, coaches, officials and spectators. With this in mind, and since it is fundamental to the continuance of the activities sponsored by the ACCAC that the rights of the majority shall not be jeopardized by the actions of a few, this CODE OF CONDUCT has been adopted as follows:Participants shall recognize the responsibility for appropriate conduct at any tournament, contest or event sponsored by the ACCAC or its member colleges.Coaches shall recognize and assume responsibility for the actions of themselves and their team members.The host of any activity sponsored by the ACCAC shall establish all procedures deemed necessary for the encouragement of appropriate conduct of the participants in the activity. This shall include publicizing the CODE OF CONDUCT in advance of the sponsored activity so that the responsibilities of each participant shall be clearly understood before the event begins. Each coach who has participants competing in the event shall be responsible for informing each member of the CODE.ACCAC CONSTITUTIONARTICLE I: NAMESEC 1 NameThe name of the conference shall be the Arizona Community College Athletic Conference (ACCAC).ARTICLE II: AUTHORITYSEC 1 PurposeThe purpose of the conference shall be to foster and promote wholesome athletic programs as an integral part of the total educational offerings of each member institution.SEC 2 AuthorityThe ACCAC is authorized by and accountable to the Presidents of member colleges and operates in accordance with the rules and regulations of the NJCAA.ARTICLE III: MEMBERSHIPSEC 1 MembershipThe ACCAC is open to all Arizona Community Colleges who have made application for membership to the conference in accordance with the bylaws.SEC 2 MembersThe members of the conference are:Arizona Western College9. Mesa Community CollegeCentral Arizona College10. Paradise Valley Community CollegeChandler-Gilbert Community College11. Phoenix CollegeCochise College12. Pima Community CollegeEastern Arizona College13. Scottsdale Community CollegeEstrella Mountain Community College14. South Mountain Community CollegeGateWay Community College15. Tohono O’odham Community CollegeGlendale Community College16. Yavapai CollegeSEC 3 ConditionsThe members of this conference severally agree to:Administer their athletic programs in accordance with the constitution, bylaws and other legislative acts of the conference;Establish and maintain a high standard of ethics and fair play;Pay the annual dues before the deadline as stipulated in the bylaws;Have representation at each meeting.ARTICLE IV: OFFICERSSEC 1 TitlesThe elected officers of the conference shall be the President, President-Elect, Secretary and Treasurer.SEC 2 ElectionsThe officers will be elected and serve in accordance with the bylaws of the conference.ARTICLE V: MEETINGSSEC 1 Regular MeetingsThere shall be four (4) meetings during each academic year. The location, date and time of each meeting will be scheduled by the conference at the last meeting of the preceding year.SEC 2 Special MeetingsA special meeting of the conference may be held at any time on the call of the Executive Committee.ARTICLE VI: STANDING COMMITTEESSEC 1 CommitteesThe standing committees of the Conference are:Executive CommitteeRules and Ethics CommitteeOfficiating CommitteeService, Recognition & Awards CommitteeAthletic Health and Safety CommitteeNominating CommitteeScheduling CommitteeSport CommitteesSEC 2 PurposeThe purpose and function of each committee is stipulated in the bylaws.ARTICLE VII: FINANCESAll funds and property of the conference shall be held and administered in accordance with the bylaws of the conference.ARTICLE VIII: REPRESENTATIONTwo voting representatives shall be appointed by the Athletic Director of each member institution in accordance with the bylaws of the conference.ARTICLE IX: AMENDMENTSThe constitution and bylaws of the conference may be amended by the procedures and stipulations set forth in the bylaws.ARTICLE X: VIOLATIONSQuestions regarding alleged violations of the constitution and bylaws shall be administered in accordance with the procedures set forth in the bylaws.SEC 1 NameBYLAWS ARTICLE I: NAMEThe name of the Conference shall be the Arizona Community College Athletic Conference (ACCAC).SEC 2 Athletic CouncilThe ACCAC shall conduct its business through action by the Athletic Council. The Athletic Council is a group consisting of a maximum of two authorized representatives from each institution responsible for administering collegiate athletics.ARTICLE II: AUTHORITYSEC 1 AuthorityThe ACCAC is authorized by and accountable to the Presidents of member colleges and operates in accordance with the rules and regulations of the NJCAA. ACCAC and Region I Rules may be more restrictive than NJCAA Rules.SEC 2 EligibilityFor a student to represent his/her college in intercollegiate competition, he/she must meet all current eligibility rules of the NJCAA. Individual institutional rules may be more restrictive than NJCAA, ACCAC or Region I Rules.SEC 3 Financial AssistanceAn athletic grant-in-aid may be awarded to any student-athlete in recognition of his/her athletic ability in accordance with NJCAA. Individual institutional rules may be more restrictive than NJCAA, ACCAC or Region I Rules.ARTICLE III: MEMBERSHIPSEC 1 MemberA member college is an Arizona community college which conducts an athletic program and has been approved for membership by the Athletic Council.SEC 2 ApplicationA written application for membership in the conference shall be presented to the Athletic Council through the Secretary prior to the first quarterly meeting of the year prior to the first year of membership requested.An applicant will become a member of the conference July 1 following approval by a 2/3 vote of the quorum of the Athletic Council during the preceding second quarterly meeting.SEC 3 ResignationsA written letter of resignation as a member of the conference in a selected sport shall be submitted to the President of the ACCAC prior to the season of that sport.SEC 4 DuesAnnual dues, as approved by the Athletic Council shall be paid by each member college by August 15th of each calendar year.In the case where this requirement is not met, the college will be subject to a late fee of $250 per gender.Failure to pay annual dues by the August 15th deadline may result in member institutions losing membership in the Conference, if so determined by 2/3 vote of the Athletic Council quorum.ARTICLE IV: OFFICERSSEC 1 OfficersThe elected officers of the conference shall be the President, President-Elect, Secretary and Treasurer.SEC 2 NominationsThe nomination and election of officers shall occur during the May meeting of the even numbered year. The slate of officers shall be presented to the Council in accordance with Article VI, Sec 6 of the bylaws.SEC 3 Term of OfficeEach officer of the conference shall serve a two-year term of office.SEC 4 SuccessionThe President-Elect, Secretary-Elect and Treasurer-Elect shall succeed the outgoing President, Secretary and Treasurer at the conclusion of the last regularly scheduled meeting of the previous term.SEC 5 Duties of OfficersThe President shall:Preside at ACCAC Council meetings;Serve as chairperson of the Executive Committee;Prepare the agenda for the scheduled ACCAC meetings and deliver such to each Athletic Council member and the Supervisor of Officials for each sport at least one week prior to the scheduled meeting;Be responsible for all coin flips when deemed necessary according to the individual sport policies.Serve as liaison with the Presidents of member colleges.Responsible for sending notification to all conference Athletics Director whenever an ejection takes place in any ACCAC contest. The report should include the date of the ejection, the name(s) of any ejected player(s) or coach(es), and the team the player or coach represents. Ejection report should be sent to Athletic Directors within 48 hours of the ejection.Responsible for sending notification to all conference Athletics Director whenever a forfeiture of any contests takes place before or during an ACCAC athletic season. The report should include the dates of the forfeitures, the school(s), sport(s) and contest(s)involved, as well as the conditions involved that led to the forfeiture(s). Report should be sent to Athletic Directors, Region I Officers and R&E Chair within 48 hours of the decision.Receive a stipend of $1200 per year.The President-Elect shall:Act in the absence of the President;Succeed to the office of President after the completion of the two-year term;Perform other duties as assigned by the President;Serve on the Executive Committee;Serve as Chair of the Nominating Committee.The Secretary shall:Record the minutes of all ACCAC council meetings;Provide written or electronic copies of all minutes to the ACCAC council representatives, the President of each member college, and the Supervisor of Officials for each sport.Serve as a member of the Executive Committee;Carry on all general correspondence for the ACCAC;Maintain a file that includes the following:Minutes of all meetings,Copies of all correspondence,All reports from committee chairpersons,Other items of special significance or of a historical nature;Request names of ACCAC council representatives in writing from Athletic Directors of each college for that academic year prior to the August meeting;Call the roll of the voting membership prior to the transaction of business at each regular meeting;Receive a stipend of $1000.00 per year.The Treasurer shall:Serve as a member of the Executive Committee,Issue an annual invoice statement of dues to each member college;Be responsible for making all financial transactions;Be responsible for collecting all dues and fees;Purchase and ensure presentation of all ACCAC awards;Submit to the council an annual treasurer’s report;Receive a stipend of $750.00 per year.The Arbiter Administrator shall:Oversee the administration of officiating payment schedule for all conference sports that utilize the Arbiter online system.Receive a stipend of $4250.00 per year.Elected officers not eligible for reimbursement by an ACCAC member college:May submit a travel expense form for mileage, per diem and lodging, as allowed by AZ state rates, to attend ACCAC meetings. The form is to be submitted to the ACCAC treasurer, with a copy sent to the ACCAC president, by June 1 for the prior fiscal yearA receipt for lodging is required.Per diem may not be claimed when meals are provided.ARTICLE V: MEETINGSSEC 1 Regular MeetingsThe four regularly scheduled meetings of the conference may be held during the months of August/September, November, February/March and May.The dates and sites for the four meetings during the 2019-20 year will be as follows (May 2019): August:August 27th/28thHost: Yavapai November:November 13thHost: Paradise ValleyMarch:March 5thHost: Chandler-GilbertMay:May 5th/6th Host: PimaExceptions to the regularly scheduled meetings may be approved by a 2/3 vote of the Athletic Council quorum.SEC 2 QuorumIn order for the Athletic Council to conduct business, a quorum must be present.A quorum is defined as one more than one-half of the total number of official representatives appointed annually by the Athletic Director of each member school.SEC 3 Parliamentary AuthorityA.The Athletic Council shall be governed by the latest edition of Robert’s Rules of Order.SEC 4 Voting of the CouncilEach of the two authorized representatives of the member institutions is allowed to cast one separate vote.In all matters requiring a vote (other than those listed in the bylaws Article V, Sec 4, c) Article IX, Sec 2 a majority vote of the quorum is necessary.A 2/3 vote of the athletic quorum is required in the matters of application for membership, and proposed changes of the Constitution and bylaws.Rules and Ethics Committee decisions are based on one vote per Institution and a majority of the quorum present is required to render a decision. (See Article VI, Sec. 2)ARTICLE VI: STANDING COMMITTEESAll Standing and Sport Committee Chairs must be one of the two representatives from their college.SEC 1 Executive CommitteeFunction:The Executive Committee shall be responsible for conducting the work of the conference during the time between the regularly scheduled meetings. The Executive Committee shall not make decisions in violation of the constitution and bylaws.Membership:The members of the Executive Committee shall be as follows:The Conference PresidentThe President ElectThe SecretaryThe TreasurerThe Immediate Past President (Ex Officio)Duties:The duties of the Executive Committee shall be:Review the agenda of the scheduled meetings;Assign the chair and membership of the various committees, except membership to Rules and Ethics Committee.Exercise the powers of the Council between meetings in accordance with Article VI, Sec 1 A. This includes any and all protests not covered by the official rulebook/handbook for that sport. In the event the Executive Committee is deadlocked in a decision due to the makeup of the committee membership being an even number of members, the men’s or women’s region directors, or the sport committee chair (in that order) would be allowed to participate in the decision depending on whether the issue involved a men’s or women’s team.When possible, provide twenty-four (24) hour notice to all member Athletic Directors of a scheduled or emergency meeting with an agenda and outline and results of all action. If this is not possible, the action will be reported at the next scheduled Council meeting.SEC 2 Rules and Ethics CommitteeFunctionThe Rules and Ethics Committee is responsible for the investigation of alleged violations of the constitution and bylaws and/or any other questions of misconduct by member institutions, exclusive of questions of eligibility which fall under the purview of the NJCAA. In addition, the Rules and Ethics Committee is responsible for adjudication of all cases and awarding of appropriate sanctions as necessitated in accordance with Article X (“Violation”) of these by-laws.MembershipAt the beginning of the academic year, the Chair of the Rules and Ethics Committee will be provided a roster of the membership of the Committee (as designated by ACCAC Athletic Directors). This roster may include an alternate who may serve as the substitute for the collegeat Rules and Ethics meetings.Members and alternates must be members of the Athletic Council.The Chair of the Rules and Ethics Committee will be appointed from the Committee membership by the Executive Committee during the Fourth Quarterly Meeting to be in effect for the following year.The Chair of Rules and Ethics Committee may not be designated as the voting representative.No member of The Executive Committee may be designated as The Rules and Ethics voting representative.Duties and Operating ProceduresFor all matters of official adjudication by the Rules and Ethics Committee, a formal written or electronic complaint must first be forwarded directly to the Chair or the President of the ACCAC. The ACCAC President will forward the complaint to the Rules and Ethics Chair.Letters of complaint may be submitted by any individual voting member of the ACCAC.The committee will review and investigate formal written complaints of any alleged violations, or infringement of policies, procedures, rules, misconduct and other infractions by member schools. The Chair must report the alleged violation & subsequent resolution to the Executive Committee & to the ACCAC membership at its next meeting (or sooner) to resolve the issue.The Rules and Ethics Committee Chair will contact the Athletic Director of the accused institution regarding their response within 48 hours of the receipt of the complaint.The Athletic Director has ten calendar days to respond in writing to the Chair, via hand delivery or certified mail or electronic mail. If the adjudication of a complaint must be decided promptly, requiring a shorter response time, the Athletic Director from the accused institution will be notified by the Chair. The Executive Committee will decide the length of the shortened time period. Issues that require immediate resolution can be adjudicated electronically via phone or e-mail by the Rules & Ethics Committee. All decisions will be sent to all ACCAC members within 5 days of the decision. At the discretion of the Chair, the Committee need not be convened if preliminary discussion between all parties has resulted in satisfaction to the original plaintiff.It is the responsibility of the Chair to gather a quorum of Committee members to adjudicate the issue and impose any sanctions.Failure to reach a decision within thirty (30) days will result in the matter being referred to the Executive Committee for approved extension of time for a final decision.For alleged violations involving the Chairperson’s institution, the Executive Committee will appoint a temporary Chairperson from the Committee membership to serve in his/her capacity.Chairperson of the Rules and Ethics Committee shall have the right and the obligation to investigate any formal complaint to gather fact and documentation when necessary to assist the committee in rendering a decision.The chair will provide a copy of the formal Rules and Ethics complaint and all appropriate supporting documentation to committee members prior to the meeting.A roll call will be taken at the beginning of all Rules and Ethics meetings to determine a quorum.A quorum must be established in order for the committee to conduct business. A quorum will be defined as one more than one-half of the total number of eligible voting representatives.To avoid conflict of interest, the member school that the complaint is filed against and the school that filed the complaint will not be allowed to vote on the outcome of the hearing.The Rules and Ethics Committee will hold a meeting open to all voting members and involved parties to discuss the complaint and gather fact. Persons other than Rules and Ethics representatives may speak at the discretion of the chair.The Rules and Ethics Committee shall hold all deliberations in closed Executive session. Only eligible Rules and Ethics voting representatives may attend and vote. Unless unable to attend due to conflict, the athletic director of each school will be the designee to participate in the Executive session.A majority of the quorum present is necessary to impose any and all sanctions.Sanctions rendered by the Committee may be imposed during the current or following sports season at the discretion of the mittee decisions will be summarized and presented orally at regular ACCAC Council meetings or sent electronically to member institutions’ athletic directors when necessary. In addition, written summaries will be submitted by the Chairperson to the President of the ACCAC immediately following Rules and Ethics Committee action.The President of the ACCAC will notify the President and Athletic Director of the sanctioned institution in writing of the Rules and Ethics committee’s decision within forty-eight (48) hours of receipt of the written summary.The Rules and Ethics Committee’s decision is not subject to the Athletic Council’s review or approval.The sanctioned institution may appeal the Rules and Ethics Committee’s decision in accordance with stipulations in Article X, Section 3.SEC 3 Officiating CommitteeFunction:The Officiating Committee shall oversee the activities of the Supervisor of Officials for the following sports:BaseballBasketballSoccerSoftballVolleyballMembershipThe Chair and the Members of the Committee shall be appointed by the Executive Committee.Duties:The Officiating Committee shall:Recommend the duties, job description and pay rate for each Supervisor of OfficialsRecommend the hiring, retention or firing of the Supervisor of Officials to the CouncilMeet and confer with each Supervisor of Officials at the end of each sport seasonReport, in writing, the results of the meetings with each Supervisor of OfficialsRecommend pay rates for officials for each sportRecommend changes to the handbook relative to officiating.SEC 4 Service, Recognition and Awards CommitteeFunctionThe responsibility of the Service, Recognition and Awards Committee is to identify and recognize those individuals who have rendered outstanding service to athletics in Arizona Community Colleges.MembershipThe Members and Chair of the Service, Recognition and Awards Committee shall be appointed by the Executive Committee.DutiesThe Service, Recognition and Awards Committee shall recommend, in writing, the names of individuals who have distinguished themselves in athletics in Arizona Community Colleges.ACCAC/Region I Male & Female Student-Athlete of the Year AwardAny Region I student-athlete who participated in any NJCAA certified sport(s) can be nominated for this award by his/her athletics director, with approval from the college president.The criteria for the selection will be based on academic achievement, athletic ability/achievement, community service and leadership as outlined below.Nominations for all sports will be due by July 1 following the conclusion of that athletic season, and any modifications to fall nominations need to be submitted at this time. All nominations for ACCAC Student Athlete of the Year are to besubmitted on the nomination form included in Article XVII of the handbook.ACCAC/Region I Athletic Trainer of the Year AwardAny active Region I athletic trainer can be nominated for this award. The criteria for the selection will be based on service as outlined below.Nominations will be due by July 1st. All nominations for ACCAC/Region I Athletic Trainer of the Year Award are to be submitted on the nomination form included in Article XVII of the handbook.Selections will be made by the Service, Recognition and Awards committee.Criteria:Must be an active member of the ACCAC Health & Safety CommitteeMust be in good standing with the Board of Certification and the Arizona Board of Athletic TrainingMust be employed at an ACCAC Institution for a minimum of one yearA nomination with at least two letters of recommendationDescribe why the nominee is deserving of the awardInclude any other documentation supporting the nomination of the athletic trainer for the honorSEC 5 Athletic Health and Safety CommitteeFunctionThe Athletic Health and Safety Committee shall serve as a vehicle to promote the communication of athletic health care issues and the improvement of athletic training services within the ACCAC.MembershipThe committee shall consist of one athletic director, at least one athletic trainer, one at large member from the ACCAC ATC representatives and the remainder of the committee from at-large members of the Athletic Council.DutiesDevelop, recommend and implement ACCAC sports athletic training coverage standards.Advise the ACCAC on all health care issues.Identify athletic health care concerns within the ACCAC.Work cooperatively with other ACCAC athletic trainers.Promote cooperative working relations with the medical community serving ACCAC athletics.SEC 6 Nominating CommitteeFunctionThe responsibility of the nominating committee is to identify and recommend candidates for the offices of the ACCAC council during election years.MembershipThe President Elect will serve as Chair of the Nominating Committee. The members of the nominating committee will be appointed by the Executive Committee.DutiesThe nominating committee shall:Identify viable candidates for the offices of the ACCAC,Present, in writing, a slate of candidates for consideration as officers to the Athletic council no later than the evening prior to the election meeting,Receive nominations from the floor prior to the final presentation of candidates to the council.SEC 7 Scheduling CommitteeFunctionProvides oversight of all ACCAC sport schedules to ensure they meet all conference guidelines and address any questions related to scheduling conflicts and/or issues.MembershipThe committee shall consist of a Chair appointed by the Conference President; all members of the ACCAC Executive Committee; the Men’s Region I Director and the Women’s Region I Director.DutiesReview of all proposed schedulesRecommendation concerning approval of master schedules to the body prior to the November meetings.Distribution of a master packet of approved ACCAC master schedules to each school.Approval of changes to conference schedules after established deadline dates as outlined in the ACCAC Bylaws.Address any questions related to scheduling conflicts and/or issues.The Scheduling Committee Chair will receive a stipend of $1,000 per year.SEC 8 Sport CommitteesFunctionThe sport committees are to serve as liaisons between representative coaching associations and the Athletic Council.MembershipThe chair and membership of each sport committee will be appointed by the Executive Committee.Any of the two representatives from each college is eligible for membership on the Sport’s Committee.The current president of each coaches’ association will also serve as a member of the Sport Committee.There will be a committee for each of the following sports:BaseballTennisVolleyballBasketballTrack & FieldCross CountrySoccerGolfSoftballDutiesThe Sport Committees shall:Recommend the sport master schedule for the upcoming season.Review and evaluate sport procedures for the purpose of making recommendations to the Athletic Council for appropriate changes.Provide the Athletic Council with an end-of-season Conference report inclusive of standings, champions, ACCAC All-Conference teams, and all related matters.Hold a mandatory post-season meeting involving the sports committee chair and all head coaches. This meeting is necessary to review the season, develop the schedule and select All- Conference teams and coaches to be honored in accordance with the provisions of Article XIII Awards.ARTICLE VII: FINANCESSEC 1 Fiscal YearThe fiscal year of the Conference shall be from July 1st to June 30th of each year.SEC 2 DuesThe ACCAC annual dues will be assessed to each member college each year.The Executive Committee recommends guidelines for dues to the Athletic Council.SEC 3 Annual ReportThe treasurer shall publish an annual report.The annual report shall include funds collected and expended during the fiscal year and the two previous years.The report shall be distributed at the first quarterly meeting of the following year.ARTICLE VIII: REPRESENTATIONSEC 1 RepresentativesEach ACCAC member college shall be entitled to have two voting representatives.SEC 2 AppointmentThe Athletic Director of each member college shall designate the representatives of his/her institution in writing to the ACCAC President prior to the first quarterly meeting.Notification of replacements must be delivered to the ACCAC President prior to the start of each ACCAC regularly scheduled meeting.ARTICLE IX: AMENDMENTSSEC 1 AmendmentsAmendments to the ACCAC Handbook may be made according to the following procedure:Submit proposed amendments/changes to the ACCAC Secretary on the designated form by February 1st. Any editing to handbook changes submitted by the February deadline must be included in all committee minutes at the conclusion of the March general session.Read and discuss the proposed changes at the March meeting.Vote for acceptance, denial or modification at the May meetingAll approved handbook changes will become effective on August 1.SEC 2 RatificationA 2/3 vote of the Athletic Council quorum shall be necessary for an amendment to pass.ARTICLE X: VIOLATIONSSEC 1 General Violations:Number ViolationsFor a violation that involves a number (i.e. number of scrimmages, games, letter of intent, scholarship agreements) the following progressive series of sanctions shall be imposed:First OffenseTwo to one ratio/penalty in which next season’s games (or other type of “numerical infractions”) are reduced in direct proportion to the offenseSecond OffenseOne-year probation for the sport in violation (see Article X, Section 2, B)Third OffenseSuspension for the sport in violation (See Article X, 2, C)Date ViolationsFor a violation that involves starting dates, ending dates, signing dates, etc.; the following sanctions will be imposed:First OffenseLetter of warning (see Article X, Section 2, A)Second OffenseOne-year probation for the sport in violation (see Article X, Section 2, B)Third OffenseSuspension for the sport in violation (see Article X, Section 2, C)In the event of a member institution having to “forfeit” or have any games declared as “no contest”, the following is required:Notification sent to the ACCAC President about the violation (forfeit, no contest, non-collegial) including the cause of the violation.List of colleges effected by the ruling and dates of the contests.The ACCAC President will send the information to the Chair of the Rules & Ethics Committee for discussion at the next ACCAC meeting or for an Executive Committee decision if needed sooner.The offending college(s) notification to the ACCAC President must be done immediately after the contests are deemed forfeits or no contest. Failure to notify the ACCAC President could result in the offending college being sanctioned by future restrictions up to and including no participation in regional play and not being able to win a conference championship. (May 2019)SEC 2 SanctionsExamples are not all inclusive. (If you have questions that affect your college, call the Rules and Ethics Chair about possible sanctions.)Warning:Shall be invoked when a violation has occurred but is not considered serious enough in and of itself to warrant more than a formal notification to the offender that it not be repeated.The penalty for receiving warning will be a formal letter by the ACCAC President in accordance with Article VI, Section 2, Paragraph C, 7 of these By-Laws.Example: A team played too many games; i.e., a number violation. A sanction was applied plus a letter of warning concerning a “numbers” violation was sent to the college.Probation:Shall be invoked when a violation has occurred that, in the judgment of the Rules and Ethics Committee, is serious enough to justify probation, or is an example of a continued series of violations.The penalty for receiving probation will be the loss of eligibility for the next Conference Championship and an opportunity to participate in the post- season competition in the sport in which the violation occurred. (See Article VI, Section 2, Paragraphs C, 6 and 7.)Example: A team fails to complete a season.Suspension:Shall be invoked when a violation has occurred that in the judgment of the Rules and Ethics Committee is serious enough to justify suspension or is an example for a continued series of serious violations.The penalty for receiving suspension will be the loss of the right to participate in the conference in that sport for the next full season. (See Article VI, Section 2, Paragraph C, 6 and 7.)Applications for reinstatement of suspended programs must be in compliance with Article III, Section 2 of these By-Laws.Example: A team on probation fails to complete a season.Loss of MembershipShall be invoked when, in the judgment of the Rules and Ethics Committee, the offending school has:demonstrated a continued unwillingness to abide by the rules and regulations of the ACCAC,failed to have representation at the Athletic Council meetings for two consecutive sessions without adequate explanation,failed to pay dues in a timely manner or has declined to join or renew membership in the NJCAA and Region I.Shall be executed, through a formal letter to the President and the Athletic Director of the offending school detailing the violation and stating the formal severance action.Applications for reinstatement of membership must be in compliance with Article III, Section 2 of these By-Laws.13SEC 3 AppealsEach member college will have the right to appeal any decision of the Rules and Ethics Committee and/or action by the Athletic Council if the institution deems the decision unfair or unjust.Grounds for AppealAll appeals must be filed solely on the grounds of:New evidenceMisinterpretation of printed proceduresA deprival of due process procedures (as provided in Article VI, Section 1 and 2 of these By- Laws)Invidious discriminationDenial of constitutional rights as provided for in the ACCAC Constitution and By-LawsClearly unreasonable, arbitrary or capricious actionProcedures for AppealThe appeal must be in writing or electronic mail (May 2019) and made within fifteen (15) days after the Athletic Council, President or Secretary has mailed notice of the action by the council or Rules and Ethics Committee to the member institution.The written appeal can be either hand-delivered, certified mail or an electronic mail sent to the ACCAC President or Secretary. (May 2019) For all appeals involving Rules and Ethics Committee decisions, a copy should also be delivered by the same means to the Rules & Ethics Committee Chair.)All appeals must be inclusive of:The names and addresses of the parties and/or member institutions involved.The Alleged grounds upon which the appeal is based.Supporting evidence or documentation upon which the appeal is based.A statement of the decision to be appealed.The Letter of Appeal will be placed on the Agenda of the next Executive Committee Meeting.The Executive Committee will review the case, request official response to the appeal from the Rules and Ethics Chair, and conduct further investigation at its discretion.The Executive Committee will hold a hearing and render a decision regarding the appeal.Within five (5) days after the decision is rendered, all parties affected will be notified by the President or his/her designee via certified mail or electronic mail. (May 2019)If an appeal involves a member of the Executive Committee’s college, that member will withdraw from the committee.If a majority of the Executive Committee is involved in the appeal, the decision of the Rules and Ethics Committee will stand.Institutions wishing to appeal decisions rendered by the Executive Committee (exclusive of decisions initially involving Rules and Ethics) may submit said appeal directly to the Rules and Ethics Committee in accordance with all procedures and stipulations included in Article X, Section 3, and Items A-D.The Chair of the appropriate appeal body, i.e., Executive Committee, has the authority to initially reject an appeal predicated upon the institution’s failure to meet the standards of appeal as delineated in this Section X of the By-Laws.Double JeopardyAny institution, having been administered a sanction by the Rules and Ethics Committee and subsequently receiving an additional sanction by the NJCAA for the exact same offense, may appeal to the Executive Committee for relief on the grounds of double jeopardy.If deemed reasonable and prudent by the appeals body, the sanction may be adjusted to reflect a singular and congruent sanction consistent with ACCAC By-Laws.ARTICLE XI: HALL OF FAME PROCESS PROCEDURESSEC 1 Nomination ProcessNominations for the ACCAC Hall of Fame will follow the same date guidelines required in making handbook changes.Nominations must be submitted to the Service & Recognition Committee Chairman no later than February 1st.The nominations will be presented to the ACCAC body at the ACCAC March Meetings, and then voted on at the ACCAC May Meetings.Each class may be comprised of up to 16 inductees from any member college, max 2 per school per classNominees must have a minimum of 20 years of ACCAC service or be absent from service in the ACCAC for a minimum of three years prior to being selected for induction.SEC 2 Selection ProcessSelection to the ACCAC Hall of Fame requires a 2/3 vote of the quorum of voting representatives at the May ACCAC Meetings.Voting will be conducted by secret ballot.SEC 3 NotificationThe nominations will be presented to the ACCAC body at the ACCAC March Meetings, then voted on at the ACCAC May Meetings.Selected nominees, and their respective college Presidents/Athletic Directors, will be notified by the ACCAC President/Service and Recognition Chair upon completion of the ACCAC May Meetings. The ACCAC President will provide all of the information about the ACCAC Hall of Fame to the media just prior to the ACCAC August/September Meetings.Selected nominees will be presented with an ACCAC Hall of Fame Plaque at, or after, the ACCAC August/September Meetings. Each institution is responsible for holding an official induction recognition, as they see fit,for their HOF inductees within the next academic year. ARTICLE XII: SPORTSMANSHIPSEC 1 Principles of SportsmanshipThe basic principles of the ACCAC stand for the highest ideals of sportsmanship. One of the primary objectives of competition is to develop and foster respect for fellow participants, coaches, officials and spectators.The ACCAC stands for:A: Accountability (Be responsible for one’s actions)C: Character (Live up to our own standards)C: Consideration (Treat others with respect)A: Action (Demonstrate integrity in every decision)C: Courage (Do the right thing)ACCAC Sportsmanship PolicyThe principle values of ACCAC competition and sportsmanship are:Demonstrating respect to everyone involved in competitionPromoting fair play and good sportsmanship at all timesUnsportsmanlike behavior is defined as profanity, vulgar gestures, trash talking, taunting or abusive language directed at players, coaches, referees, game management personnel and/or spectators. The use of tobacco or alcohol during NJCAA-sponsored events is prohibited withinthis rule.Violent behavior is defined as an act in which physical contact or an attempt to make physical contact occurs with the purpose to do damage, harm, intimidate, incite a fight or otherwise injure a player, coach, referee, spectator, game management personnel or damage property; or an act in which anyone other than the head coach leaves the bench area when a fight may break out or has broken out.Enforcement & Procedures:Post-Ejection behavior:For the 2016-17 athletic season, (May 2019) The Executive Committee will have discretionary authority to recommend additional sanctions for post-ejection behavior to the offending schools’ athletic directors.Failure by the offending school(s) to comply with the recommendation from the Executive Committee may result in a complaint made to the Rules & Ethics Committee.Procedures:The athletic directors of the colleges involved will submit a written report to the ACCAC President within 48 hours of the incident in question, or by 12pm the next business day, whichever occurs sooner. (May 2019)The report should include a summary of the incident and the subsequent actions taken by the institution.The Executive Committee will then review the report and make a recommendation prior to the next game involving that institution.The Executive Committee’s recommendation will be first given to the institution in question and then shared with all members of the conference.If any college is dissatisfied with the recommendation, a complaint may be filed with the Rules & Ethics Committee for immediate review.If any national rule governing an individual sport or any NJCAA policy imposes additional sanctions for any infraction or behavior, those rules and policies would take precedence.Participants will recognize their responsibility for proper conduct before, during and after every contest.Coaches and Athletic Directors will recognize and assume responsibility for themselves and members of their college's athletic teams.SEC 2 SanctionsThe ACCAC will follow the current NJCAA rules related to sportsmanship, sanctions and reporting of misconduct. Any student-athlete or coach who is ejected from his/her final game of the season, including playoff competitions, will be automatically referred to the Rules and Ethics Committee for possible sanctions. End of season ejection sanctions will be determined by the severity of the offense and the number of team’s players ejected. All sanctions will be sent to the offending colleges Athletic Director and President. (May 2019)If the athlete or Head Coach is returning for the next season of play, they will serve the ejection penalty in the first game(s) of the new season.If an athlete is not returning for the next season of play, the Head Coach will serve the ejection penalty. If there are multiple ejected athletes not returning, the Head Coach will only be sanctioned a two-game suspension for the next season with a letter of reprimand being sent to the college’s president explaining the multiple ejections.If a Head Coach is ejected and does not return to the college for the next season, the new Head Coach will serve a 2-game suspension and a letter of reprimand will be sent to the college president. (May 2019)SEC 3 Public StatementsCoaches, Administrators and Athletes are discouraged from making any public statements related to the officiating or the performance of an opposing player or team. Statements critical of officials, host or visiting institutional representatives including coaches and players shall be considered inappropriate and subject to review by the Rules and Ethics CommitteeARTICLE XIII: SPORTS PROCEDURESSEC 1 Sports authorized by the conference.The Constitution, bylaws, and ACCAC handbook shall govern all intercollegiate play.In order to start a new sport, at least 5 colleges must agree to field a team.SEC 2 Management of Contests/PracticesAll intercollegiate games shall be played under the management of the host college.Officials for all ACCAC sponsored intercollegiate competition shall be assigned by the appropriate ACCAC Supervisor.The ACCAC is committed to the health and safety of its athletes, coaches, and staff. This commitment is demonstrated through the employment and utilization of licensed athletic trainers by its member institutions, which rely on their expertise, skill and judgment.The ACCAC will closely follow all procedures in relation to safe playing environment, available safety items, medical emergency plan, lightning safety guidelines, appropriate medical coverage guidelines, concussion procedures, multiple event guidelines, dangerous location determination, cardiovascular screening, and CPR/AED Certification rules AS OUTLINED in the ACCAC/Region I Athletic Health & Safety Manual, ACCAC Handbook Article XVIII, Addendum 1 (page 50).SEC 3 Restrictions on CompetitionOnly one team per sport is permitted to represent a member college in intercollegiate competition.ACCAC teams shall not play games, either scrimmage or practice, with any Arizona Interscholastic Association-affiliated team.Professional teams may be scheduled within the limits allowed by the NJCAA.ACCAC teams may compete in NJCAA post-season play in addition to the regular schedule.Any ACCAC member’s college team which competes in regular season and earns a berth in post season play and then decides not to participate in ACCAC and/or NJCAA play-offs in order to enter an outside tournament or contest shall be dropped from the ACCAC for a period of one year in that sport.Invitational competition and/or All-Star games, held after the close of regular season, shall have approval of the Athletic Council and must receive sanction from NJCAA.An individual student enrolled at a member college may not compete in ACCAC contests unless the college which that student represents has been approved to participate in that sport under existing conference rules.Without prior Athletic Council approval, any student entering any meet or event prior to or after the regular reason, as outlined in the by-laws, must participate unattached and without school funds or assistance.SEC 4 Adding a new sportIn order for a college to be included in the Conference schedule, and be eligible for a championship in a sport not previously participated in, the President of the college must notify the ACCAC, in writing, of their desire to participate in that sport at the first quarterly meeting of the year prior to beginning conference play. The request will be considered by the sport committee involved.Sport Committees may make or deny recommendations based on, but not limited to, the following issues:impact on conference scheduletravel issuesquality and accessibility of playing facilitiesA recommendation from the committee for acceptance or denial of the request will be forwarded to the Athletic Council for approval at the second quarterly meeting.A two-thirds (2/3) vote is required for approval.SEC 5 Configuration of Sport SchedulesApproval of Master schedule processSport committees must submit proposed future conference schedules to the body at the September ACCAC meetings.Scheduling Committee will review all proposed schedules and make recommendation to the body at the November meetings.ACCAC body will approve conference block master schedules for each sport at the November meetings.Scheduling committee will distribute a master packet of all approved ACCAC master schedules to each school by January 1st following the November meetings.Approval of individual college conference schedulesEach college shall submit a conference schedule to the scheduling committee chair in the approved format by the following deadlines:June 1:Fall sportsAug 1:Winter sportsNov 1:Spring sportsFailure to submit a conference schedule by the deadlines above will result in a default use of the ACCAC approved block conference schedule without changes.Scheduling committee chair will compile and distribute a master schedule to each member school participating in that sport, the Supervisor of Officials and conference treasurer following the deadlines above.Supervisor inputs all schedules into Arbiter, and notifies all schools to verify accuracy of Arbiter schedule information.Changes to conference game times, dates or locations after the deadlines listed above require approval of the Scheduling Committee, and must follow the steps below:Respective athletic directors request the change.Scheduling Committee Chair verifies availability of officials with the Supervisor of Officials.Scheduling Committee is polled for approval.After approval, official change to master schedule is sent to the respective athletic directors, Supervisor of Officials and conference treasurer.Once the season begins, any changes that occur due to weather or unforeseen circumstances shall be agreed upon by the participating schools’ Athletic Directors within 7 days and follow the procedures of that particular sport. Home Athletic Director is responsible for notifying the Supervisor of Officials and Treasurer of the changes.SEC 6 Certification of EligibilityFor a student to represent his/her college in ACCAC sponsored competition, he/she must meet all current eligibility rules of the NJCAA.SEC 7 Postponed or Suspended ContestsA date for the postponed or suspended contest must be rescheduled by the Athletic Directors within one week of the postponement.If a date cannot be agreed upon, the original schedule shall be upheld or petitioned to the Executive Committee for a ruling.Failure to comply with the Executive Committee’s decision will result in a forfeit.See individual sport policies for further detail.SEC 8 Season Cancellation/Contest Forfeit/No ContestAn ACCAC Institution may cancel a season for a reason beyond the control of the Institution after consultation with the ACCAC President and Executive Committee.Failure to complete an ACCAC season or any games that result in a “‘no contest’/forfeit” ruling will result in an automatic Rules and Ethics complaint. It is the responsibility of the athletic director of the offending school to notify the ACCAC President and the R&E Chair of the offense.Any ACCAC team that does not participate in a scheduled ACCAC contest, or, any ACCAC contest that is ruled a forfeit must be reported to the ACCAC President immediately.The Conference President will consult the Executive Committee to determine what immediate sanctions (considering the time sensitive nature of schedules and seasons) will be imposed. The President will then refer the matter to the Rules and Ethics Committee for further consideration.SEC 9 Method for Breaking Ties for seeding the Region TournamentMethod for determining conference champions and for breaking ties for seeding the Region tournaments:Conference champions shall be determined by the best conference record based on winning percentage in any sport in which there is an unequal number of NJCAA Division I and Division II teams.In the event of a tie for conference champion, co/tri-conference champions will be named.If there are co/tri-conference champions, the seeding for the region tournament will be decided by the ACCAC tie-breaking methods described below.All ties will be broken in the order in which they occur, from top to bottom, in the standings.When comparing tied teams against positions in the standing which are also tied, those positions shall be considered as a single position for the purpose of establishing the seeding in the Region I Tournament.Examples: Team A and Team B, who tied for second place, would compare against Team X and Team Y, who tied for sixth place as follows: Team A would compare its combined record against both X and Y against Team B’s record against both X and Y.Two Team TiesIf two teams tied for a position and one team beat the other twice during the regular season, the team with the two wins receives the higher seed.If two teams split during the regular season, compare each team’s record against the team occupying the highest position in the standings. If a tie still exists, continue through the standings until one team gains an advantage.Multiple ties (3 or more teams)Compare the team’s record against each other and use the records as a method for seeding.Example: Team A’s record against B and C, Team B’s record against A and C, Team C’s record against A and B. Use these records to get a total: A’s record is 3 -1, B’s record is 2 -1, C’s record is 1 -3 These totals are now used to seed the teams. Team A is seeded higher than B; B is seeded higher than C. If two teams are still tied after using the above method, then revert to a two- team tie break procedure.When multiple ties cannot be broken by the head to head records, those teams’ records will be compared against the team occupying the highest position in the standings. If a tie still exists, continue through the standings until one team gains an advantage. Any ties that exist within the standings must be broken prior to comparing records.Unbreakable Tie In the event that a tie for seeding purposes cannot be broken, the tie shall be broken by a coin flip per ACCAC policy. (Art IV, Section 5A4)If an unbreakable tie still exists for the last playoff spot, there shall be a play-in game. The playoff format shall be determined by the Executive Committee.SEC 10 Statistical ProceduresA college’s failure to submit statistics more than two times during a season to the designated ACCAC statistician, by the stated deadlines, will result in athletes from that college being ineligible for All-Conference and All-Region nominations. Coaches who fail to report statistics on time more than twice a season will not be eligible to vote for All-Conference/All-Region teams, nor will they be able to receive coach of the year awards. Each sport’s statistician will report those who fail to submit stats by the deadline to the ACCAC President within 24 hours of the missed deadline.Following are the weekly days and times for submission of statistics:Baseball – Each Sunday by noon following the first game of each college’s season.Softball – Each Monday by noon following the first game of each college’s seasonVolleyball – each Monday by 11AM following the first game of each college’s season.Men’s and Women’s Basketball – Each Sunday by noon following the first game of each college’s season.Men’s and Women’s Cross Country – by the end of the next business day following the meet.Men’s and Women’s Soccer – Each Sunday by noon following the first game of each college’s season.Men’s and Women’s Tennis – Each Friday by 6:00 PM following the first match of each college’s season.Men’s and Women’s Track – by the end of the next business day following the meet.Men’s and Women’s Golf – by the end of the next business day following the match.SEC 11 General Guidelines for All-Star Games & Preseason JamboreesPurpose: The purpose of ACCAC All-Star games & Preseason Jamborees is to provide exposure for ACCAC athletes and to provide an opportunity for University/College recruiters to evaluate our athletes at one location.Site: The All-Star game or Preseason Jamboree should be played in a community that is serviced by a major airport. College recruiters respond better to easy access.Date: Preseason Jamborees should be played prior to the start of the regular season as a preseason scrimmage date. All-Star games should be played following completion of ACCAC schedules, region and national championships. Baseball and Softball are exceptions.Coaches: Coaches shall be current coaches of ACCAC teams in that sport. They shall be selected by the ACCAC coaches' association of that sport.Player Selection: The respective ACCAC coaches' association will establish a procedure for selection of players to the All-star game. Preseason Jamborees will involve the intact rosters of conference teams that attend.All-Star Game Practice: Practice shall be permitted only on All-Star game day. Practice may not begin before 2:00 p.m. on a school day. Practice shall not exceed one hour per team.Officials: All officials may be volunteers. This includes ticket sellers/takers, game officials, timers, line judges, shot clock operators, athletic trainers, scorers, etc.Athletic Trainers: An athletic trainer covering an ACCAC Jamboree will be paid $125 per event. The athletic trainer will provide services to all teams participating in the event. The materials used will be provided by athletic trainer if participating teams do not have desired products.Proceeds: Money generated from the All-Star games may be used only for the benefit of the respective ACCAC coaches' association.Accounting: A financial report regarding each All-Star game shall be submitted to the ACCAC at the ACCAC meeting which immediately follows the game.Sponsors: A corporate sponsor may be recruited to underwrite expenses.SEC 12 ACCAC Coaches' & Athletic Trainers’ AssociationsCoaches from each ACCAC sanctioned sport shall organize a coaches' association.Each school will be levied a coaches' association membership fee of $25 per academic year in addition to conference dues.Associations will meet no less than two times per academic year.During the final end of season meeting, officers will be elected for the following academic year. Officers will include President, Secretary and Treasurer.All financial records and monies will be the responsibility of the ACCAC Treasurer in cooperation with the relative Coaches' Association Treasurer.Coaches' Associations will be responsible for the following:Selection of All-Conference teams, All-Region teams and All-American nominations following the guidelines set forth in the ACCAC and Region I handbooks.Make recommendations to the appropriate sport committee chair of proposed Handbook changes.Selection of a Coach of the anize and fund ACCAC All-Star games.The President of the Coaches Association is responsible for providing a budget of anticipated income and expenses for All Star games and Jamborees to the Treasurer 30 days prior to the event.Coaches’ Associations will provide written recommendation of the Player of the Week process to their respective Sport Committee Chair prior to the start of their season.Athletic Trainers from each school shall organize an athletic trainers’ association.Each school will be levied a membership fee of $25 per academic year.The association will meet during the May ACCAC meeting.All financial records will be the responsibility of the ACCAC treasurerSEC13 BASEBALLGame Starting TimesSingle weekday games will have a start time of 3:00 or 2:00. Doubleheaders and Saturday single games will have a start time of 12:00. The second game of a doubleheader should start within 25 minutes of the conclusion of the first game. With the agreement of the athletic directors from both schools, alternative starting times may be used and doubleheaders may be scheduled as single games.Scheduling Guidelines 1.The conference will consist of 6 Division I schools and 8 Division II schools: Division IDivision IIArizona WesternChandler-GilbertCentral ArizonaGatewayCochiseGlendaleEastern ArizonaMesaSouth MountainParadise ValleyYavapaiPhoenixPima ScottsdaleThe conference schedule will consist of 36 games for Division I schools and 40 games for Division II schools.Division I schools will play each other 4 times and play each Division II school twice. Division II schools will play each other 4 times and play each Division I school twice.The Conference Champion will be determined by Conference winning percentage.Conference games may be played either as single games or doubleheaders. All single games will21be 9 innings in length and doubleheaders will consist of a 7-inning game followed by a 9-inning game. If the first game of a doubleheader goes into extra innings, the second game will be 7 innings.Halted, Rained out and Suspended gamesFrom the first inning until the completion of 5 full innings (or 4 1/2 innings if the home team is ahead), any game that is halted for any reason will be rescheduled and resume at the exact point it was stopped.Any game halted after the 5th inning shall be considered complete as long as the score is not tied at the end of the last complete inning played.If each team has not had an equal number of innings in this situation, the score reverts to the previous complete inning.A suspended tie game will be rescheduled and resume at the exact point it was suspended.All-Conference rained out games must be completed on or before the Monday following the conclusion of the regular season.Exception: games rained out after the last scheduled makeup date that do not affect conference standings need not be made up.Conference make-up games that are to be played on regularly scheduled make-up dates will take precedence over any non-conference games that may have been scheduled for those dates.Home athletic director is responsible for notifying the Supervisor of Officials and conference treasurer of any changes.Conference Champion(s)The top four Division I finishers in ACCAC play will qualify for the NJCAA Region I Division I tournament. For seeding purposes, the team with the best overall conference record will be the #1 seed, and seeds #2, #3, and #4 will be determined in the same manner. If teams have identical conference records, the winner of the conference series between the two teams will receive the higher seed. If head-to-head records are identical, conference tie-breaking procedures will be used.The top four Division II teams in ACCAC Conference play will qualify for the NJCAA Region I, Division II playoffs. For seeding purposes, the Division II team with the best conference record will be the #1 seed, and seeds #2, #3, and #4 will be determined in the same manner. If teams have identical conference records, the winner of the series between the two teams will be used to determine the higher seed. If head to head records are identical, the ACCAC tiebreaking procedure will be used. Note: the higher seeded team will always be the home team in the playoffs.Rules and ProceduresNCAA baseball rules will be used in all regular season, conference and post-season games.In ACCAC 9-inning games, a 10-run rule will be enforced after 7 innings. In ACCAC 7-inning games, a 10-run rule will be enforced after 5 innings.A designated runner may be used for both the catcher and a pitcher-designated hitter.The Diamond Collegiate D1 Baseball will be used in all conference games for the 2018 season.Any wood bat or a conference approved composite bat must be used in conference play.SEC 14 BASKETBALLGame Starting TimesWeekday gamesWomen’s games will begin at 5:30 p.m.Men’s games will begin twenty minutes after the conclusion of the women’s game, but cannot start prior to 7:30 p.m. without consent of both institutions.Colleges with only one team will begin home games at 7:30 p.m.Saturday games in Maricopa& Pinal Counties and Pima Community CollegeWomen’s games will begin at 2:00 p.m.Men’s games will begin twenty minutes after the conclusion of the women’s game, but cannot start prior to 4:00 p.m. without consent of both institutions.Colleges with only one team will begin home games at 4:00 p.m.Game times and dates may be adjusted by mutual consent of both Athletic Directors.Scheduling GuidelinesThe ACCAC basic schedule is formulated on a Wednesday-Saturday basis.Double Round Robin play within a single league structureRules and ProceduresNCAA rules shall be used.SEC 15 CROSS COUNTRYStarting Times1.8:00 AM/ 8:45 AMThe order will follow the order of the National Championship meet.Scheduling GuidelinesThere shall be one (1) ACCAC Cross Country Championship meet held in late September or early October.The date and site of the meet are to be recommended by the host college in November and approved by the Athletic Council in March for the following year.Designated host rotation for the ACCAC Cross Country Championship:2019 Mesa2020 Paradise Valley2021 Pima 2022 Central Arizona2023 Estrella Mountain2024 GlendaleAlphabetical rotation continuesAll ACCAC teams must attend the scheduled ACCAC meet.Unattached competitors may not compete in the ACCAC cross country meet.Conference ChampionTeam champions, individual champions and final team standings are determined by finishes in the ACCAC Championship meet.The team with the lowest total is the conference champion.The team with the second lowest total is the runner-up, etc.Rules and ProceduresNJCAA and NCAA rules will be used.All courses shall be approximately 5,000 meters or 3 miles long for women and approximately 8,000 meters or 5 miles long for men.Maps of the course must be sent to participating colleges one week prior to the scheduled meet.Courses must be well marked and monitored.Team Scoring SystemOnly the first seven runners on any one team may be used in team scoring.The total of the lowest five (5) runners of each team will comprise the score for each team (a team’s 6th and 7th runners serve to increase the score of their opponents).Forfeit: a team that starts with less than five (5) runners will be indicated in the results as "forfeit."Any team which forfeits will be ineligible for the conference championship.Non-Scoring Team: A team that starts five (5) runners, but finishes with less than five (5) runners will be listed as "NS" (non-scoring) in the results.Coach(es)/Athlete(s) of the yearCoaches will meet during the week after the NJCAA Cross Country Championshipsto select the Male and Female Athletes of the Year, the Men’s Coach of the Year, and the Women’s Coach of the Year.Coaches may nominate a male and/or female athlete from their school for consideration. A brief description of why they feel their athlete is deserving may also be submitted. By open ballot, each coach may vote for their 1st (3 points), 2nd (2 points), and 3rd choice (1 point) male and female athletes, but may not vote for an athlete from their own school. The male and female athletes with the most points shall be selected as Athlete of the Year. In the event of a tie, votes will be recast, for only those tied, to determine the award winner.Meet Expenses:The Host School shall pay all expenses to administer the Conference Meet. This includes Certified Officials, with minimums set for Referee, Umpires, Clerks, Starter, Timers, Judges of Finish). Certified Athletic Trainer must be on site.Each host school for the Conference Meet shall budget and provide electronic chip devices for all Cross-Country runners competing in the meets, along with a video camera device of choice at the finish line to assure accurate order of finish. (May 2019)SEC 16 FOOTBALLFollows Guidelines/By-laws of the Western States Football League.SEC 17 GOLFStarting TimesMatches may be scheduled on any day of the week based on course availability.Start times are subject to course availability but shall be after 12 noon whenever possible.Scheduling GuidelinesIn the event that the number of teams in the ACCAC exceeds 8, the golf committee may restructure ACCAC scheduling guidelines and conference scoring/standings procedures. Conference play shall consist of 36-hole tournaments played over consecutive days.Hosts of 36-hole tournaments will rotate such that no college is unfairly burdened by financial or personnel demands.Men’s host rotational schedule (May 2017):2019EMCCSCCSMCCGCCCGCCPCC2020SCCSMCCGCCCGCCMCCEAC2021SMCCGCCCGCCMCCPVCCPCC2022GCCCGCCMCCPVCCEMCCEACWomen’s host rotational schedule (May 2017):2019EMCCCGCCSMCCPCCPVCCMCCSCC2020CGCCSMCCPCCPVCCMCCSCCEMCC2021SMCCPCCPVCCMCCSCCEMCCCGCC2022PCCPVCCMCCSCCEMCCCGCCSMCCFor each 36-hole tournament, each college, including the designated host, is responsible for entry fees up to $45 green fees and $5 range fees per player per day. Entry fees must be paid prior to participation in any tournament.Each team will pay their own range fees.Each host is required to send out tournament information two (2) weeks prior to the tournament.Only one (1) team per school may enter ACCAC tournaments.Four-year schools may not enter ACCAC tournaments unless the golf committee has granted prior approval.In the event of rain or darkness:On the first day of a 36-hole tournament, groups that do not finish will be brought back to the course the next day to finish from where they left the course the previous day.On the second day, if any group(s) did not finish the tournament, it will then become a 27-hole tournament if all participants’ finish 9 holes the second day.If all players cannot complete 9 holes on the second day, USGA rules will be enforced and the tournament will revert back to the 18 holes completed the day before.Rules and ProceduresA college may play six (6) players and count four (4) scores each day.A college may play with less than 6 players, but if less than 4 play, no team points are awarded. (For women only, more than one such tournament makes that team ineligible for the ACCAC championship.) Teams will be paired together for initial pairings. On the final day of a tournament, teams will be paired together according to tournament scores.ACCAC play shall conform to the NJCAA Handbook (Golf – Section 5, R) regarding advice from coaches or players.ACCAC play shall conform to NJCAA statement regarding range finders.The use of all tobacco products by any coach, player, official or other individual involved in the administration of any ACCAC tournament is prohibited within the confines of the playing area. Any individual not in compliance shall be ejected from further participation in that contest. Note: ACCAC and NJCAA rules regarding ejection penalties shall apply.No player will be permitted back on the tournament course after completing a round except during play-offs. The penalty for breaking this rule is two strokes added to the score posted that day by the player. There is no penalty for congregating in the immediate vicinity of the 18th green.Only one member from each school in a (3/4) some.Rules Committee consists of the head professional of the golf course being played and his/her designee.In the absence of an ACCAC rule/policy, NJCAA policy governs play in ACCAC Tournaments.Conference ChampionFinal conference standings will be determined by an accumulation of points by each team in conference tournaments.Men’s 36-hole tournamentsno throw outsIn each tournament, the lowest team score receives 1 point; the next lowest team scores 2 points, etc.After all conference tournaments, the team that accumulates the fewest points is the conference champion.Women’s 36-hole tournamentswith throw outIn each tournament, the lowest team score receives 1 point; the next lowest team scores 2 points, etc. Each team may throw out one tournament finish.After all conference tournaments and after the throw out, the team that accumulates the fewest points is the conference champion.In the event of a tie for 1st place in the final conference standings, there will be co/tri- champions.Tie Breaking ProcedureTeam tie-breaking procedure for conference tournament (in numerical order);5th lowest score on the 2nd daytotal of 5th lowest score on both days6th lowest score on the 2nd daytotal of 6th lowest score on both daysin the event there is not a 5th or 6th score available, that team loses the tie-breakerIndividual tie breaking procedures for conference tournaments:Use USGA tie breaking procedures using second day scorecards.Final team standings tie-breaking procedure to determine national qualificationIn numerical ordertotal team strokes (including "throw out" tournament for women)add the 5th lowest score in each round, in All tournaments, to the team total (including "throw out" for women)add the 6th lowest score in each round, in All tournaments, to the team total (including "throw out" for women)if there is not a 5th or 6th lowest score to be used, that team is eliminateda playoff determined by the executive committee to be played at the earliest possible dateIn the event that tied teams are comprised of only 4 players, the tiebreaker shall be, in order:The 4th score on the 2nd dayThe 3rd score on the 2nd dayThe 2nd score on the 2nd dayThe 4th score on the 1st dayThe 3rd score on the 1st dayThe 2nd score on the 1st daySEC 18 SOFTBALLStarting TimesWeekday games for all ACCAC Softball doubleheaders will start at 1PM. There will be a 25- minute break in-between games.Saturday games – doubleheaders: 12:00 noon with a 25-minute break between games.Night games - may be played if lights are available and both coaches agree with playing a night doubleheader, these games will begin at 6:00 p.m.Scheduling GuidelinesACCAC schools will play a double round robin schedule within a single league structure. Format will be doubleheaders consisting of two 7-inning games.Halted, rained out, and suspended gamesFrom the first inning until the completion of 5 full innings (or 4 ? innings if the home team is ahead), any game that is halted for any reason will be rescheduled and resume at the exact point it was stopped.Any game halted after the 5th inning shall be considered complete as long as the score is not tied at the end of the last complete inning played.If each team has not had an equal number of innings in this situation, the score reverts to the previous complete inning.A suspended tie game will be rescheduled and resume at the exact point it was suspended.All conference rained out games must be completed on or before the Monday following the conclusion of the regular season.Exception: games rained out after the last scheduled makeup date that do not affect conference standings need not be made up.26Conference make-up games that are to be played on regularly scheduled make-up dates will take precedence over any non-conference that may have been scheduled for those dates.Home athletic director is responsible for notifying the Supervisor of Officials and conference treasure of any changes.Rules and ProceduresEach home team shall provide game balls.NCAA Rules shall be used.NJCAA approved softball shall be used as the game ball.International tie breaker will be used after the completion of seven (7) innings of play.Between games of a doubleheader, the infield playing surface must be dragged and raked. The field should also be watered, if needed.Cages and bullpens will be made available to the visiting team one hour prior to the start of the game. The visiting team will be allowed to take pre-game warmup on the game field. Each team will have only up to 10 minutes to take pregame warm-ups-regardless of whether the other team takes it or not-before the game. Each team (home or visitor) may decline pre-game warmup. This procedure pertains only to ACCAC games (see Region I Handbook for region play guideline).SEC 19 SOCCERStarting TimesWhen a single game will be played at a site, weekday games will begin at 3:00 p.m., weekend games will begin at 2:00 p.m. and night games will begin at 6:00 p.m.If there is a doubleheader to be played at the same site, weekday games will begin at 1:00pm and 3:30pm, and weekend games will begin at 12:00 noon and 2:30pm.Night doubleheaders will begin at 4:30pm and 7:00pm. In even-numbered years, men's teams will play the first game, and in odd-numbered years, the women will play first.Game times may be adjusted by mutual consent of the Athletic Directors with the host school responsible for contacting the Official’s Supervisor.In the event of the existence of an extreme heat advisory, the ACCAC advocates that any of the following options be implemented:Start times be changed:Earlier in the morning on SaturdaysLater in the afternoon/evening at facilities with lightsAlternate game sites be reserved/utilized:MCCCD sites with lights be utilizedHome-and-home matches be flippedHalftime shall be 10 minutes in length.Scheduling GuidelinesGames are set on the master (2-year) schedule for Tuesdays and Saturdays with some Thursday dates. In the final week of the master schedule, games shall be played on Tuesday and Thursday.Any change in this format must occur with the consent of both Athletic Directors with the host school notifying the Supervisor of Officials.The last Thursday in the first half of the ACCAC master schedule and the Saturday following the last Thursday of the ACCAC master schedule shall be designated as make-up days. Both dates are to be left open in the schedules of all ACCAC member colleges. Any contests postponed in each respective half of the schedule shall be made up on or before the designated day.Conference ChampionThe Conference Champion shall be determined by double round robin play within a single league structure.League standing determined by total points: Wins = 3 points, tie = 1 point, loss = 0 points.Rules and ProceduresFollow NCAA Rules as the official ACCAC Rules with the following exceptions:unlimited substitutiona two-minute water break timeout will be taken after the 23rd minute of each half before a throw-in near the halfway line of the field or before a goal kick. Substitutions are allowed for players and are not required to “be ready” prior to the water break timeout. Coaches may communicate with players during the water break timeout.The ACCAC will be governed by the NCAA rules and regulations applicable to overtime periods.Captains and officials meet 5 minutes prior to kickoff while teams clear the field, followed by introductions and national anthem.Spectators must be seated on the side of the field opposite the teams or in an area behind the teams separated by a barrier.Only those designated on the official’s scorecard may be in the bench area.A score table, home scorekeeper and sounding device must be set up at mid-field for all games.It is recommended four ball runners be supplied by the home team and that they be of high school age or older.Conference line-up cards (with conference logo) will be supplied along with the conference score sheets.The game ball shall be the Select Brilliant Super soccer ball. Member colleges shall have and use no less than five (5) specified balls in all ACCAC contests.Game officials will settle disruptions promptly, issuing misconduct cards as necessary.After warning both teams, the officials will initiate a 5 minute “cooling off” period. The game will be re-started and completed.After the re-start, if a team continues to engage in violent conduct against their opponent or game officials, the match may be terminated. The terminated match shall be declared a forfeiture to the offended team.If, after the re-start, both teams engage in violent conduct against each other or game officials, the match may be terminated and each team shall be charged with one (1) loss. If this occurs during tournament play, both teams shall be suspended from further tournament competition.The act of leaving the team bench area by a coach, non-playing contestants, or non- participating school personnel to engage in violent conduct will be grounds for immediate match termination. Termination will result in forfeiture to the offended team. If both teams are guilty of this infraction, a double loss will result.SEC 20 TENNISGame TimesMatch times and sites will be determined by the home Athletic Director and sent to each tennis- playing college.Scheduling GuidelinesAll Conference teams shall play no less than a double round robin on a rotating home and away basis. Based on the number of teams, the ACCAC Tennis Committee may restructure ACCAC scheduling guidelines.Postponed matches shall be rescheduled by Athletic Directors.In the event of expected inclement weather, the host coach shall notify the opponent and discuss a date for rescheduling.The rain out shall be played at the original site. If the rain out occurs during the first round of play, then it shall be rescheduled before the last week of the round. If it occurs during the second round, then it shall be rescheduled by Thursday of the week following conference play.In the event that a match is not able to start at the scheduled time, but may be played later in the day, teams will be committed to wait up to two (2) hours to start the match unless mutually agreed upon by the coaches to reschedule.A match will have officially started when team line-ups are exchanged. If the match is then suspended, the line-ups will be set as exchanged when the match is replayed.Conference ChampionThe ACCAC Team Champion shall be determined by conference play only, based on the season conference win/loss record.If a tie occurs, co/tri-championships will be named and plaques will be awarded.Rules and ProceduresTeam, matches shall consist of six (6) singles and three (3) doubles matches.In accordance with ITA regulations Part 6, Section II, K.5, the minimum number of players for a dual-meet match is four physically able players.A team consisting of less than the minimum may play at the opposing team’s discretion. Results from the singles and doubles matches will be recorded as wins or losses for the single and doubles matches played.Coaches of teams with less than four eligible players must notify opposing team’s coach a minimum of 24 hours prior to team travel time.The singles match shall consist of best-of-three sets with doubles consisting of one eight game pro set. A third-set super tiebreaker may be placed in lieu of a third set in singles competition if the outcome of the match has already been determined and the coaches agree prior to the match and announce the decision during introductions.ITA and United States Tennis Association (USTA) shall govern play except when such rules may be modified for dual match play as described herein.The 12-point tie-breaker system shall be used when the set score is 6-all in singles. The tie break shall be used when the score is 8-all in doubles.Coaches shall exchange both singles and doubles line-ups before matches begin, with the order of play being doubles followed by singles.Conference line-ups:Players shall be ranked in order of ability, with the best player on the team playing at the number one position, the second best at number two and so on through all the positions. This rule shall also apply to doubles play with the strongest combination listed at number one doubles, and so on.During conference play, a team that has less than six players shall default matches at the bottom of their line-up. All other players shall move up according to ability.Beginning with the final round of conference play, players designated in flights 1 through 6 singles and flights 1 through 3 doubles shall hold those positions through the region tournament. At the regional tournament, in singles play, if a player becomes sick, injured, or ineligible, the coach of a player incapable of participating in the regional tournament has the option of substituting for that player at the highest position; with everyone else remaining in their respective position, or substituting at the bottom of the ladder with everyone else moving up the ladder to fill all open positions.Additions to the team roster will follow the NJCAA rule.The home coach shall serve as referee. He or she shall:Assign courts.Provide the balls.Provide dressing and showering facilities.Begin all matches promptly at the designated time.Default players not ready for play by 15 minutes after starting time.Requires players to be ready to start their doubles within 15 minutes of the completion of a single.Either coach may request a foot fault judge or a court monitor.A coach may coach a player any time during the match as long as he/she does not interfere with play. A coach must sit (or stand if the facilities dictate) near the net post. A coach may change courts when his/her movement does not interrupt play. Coaching is permitted outside the fenceperimeter. On an empty adjacent court, the coach may stand at the doubles sideline on the same side as his/her own player. On the opponent’s die, he/she must remain at midcourt. Coaches may coach within the lines of the court only during a changeover or set break.At the beginning of each match, the home coach shall announce the NJCAA Code of Conduct, and at this time the USTA warning will be issued to all players.Disputes arising during a match that cannot be resolved by the coaches shall be forwarded in writing (within 24 hrs.) to the respective Athletic Directors for resolution.Coaches will meet twice a year. The fall (October) meeting will be used solely for the discussion of changes and making recommendations to the Tennis Committee for their consideration at the November ACCAC meeting. The spring (pre-Region I Tournament) coaches meeting will be used solely for matters related to the Region I tournament (presentation of All-Conference team, seeding, or any other area connected to the tournament.The Pre-Tournament Region I Coaches Meeting shall be mandatory with each school having a men’s team representative and a women’s team representative. All business will then be forwarded to the ACCAC Tennis Committee for a review and presented to the ACCAC Joint Council in the May meeting.SEC 21 TRACK & FIELDMeet Starting TimeThe conference meet shall be either Friday or Saturday will have start times no earlier than 10:00 am, and that meet would be held the first weekend in April annually. Day and time will be determined when the conference schedule is approved during the November ACCAC Meetings.The steeple-chase will be the first event, to be followed by the 4 x 100 relay. The 4 x 100 relay will start 30 minutes after the start time of the steeple-chaseScheduling GuidelinesThere shall be 1 ACCAC meet each year. That meet will be held the first weekend of April, with consideration of some flexibility in schedule to a week before the first weekend of April, or the week following the first weekend of April. Host rotation will be supplied at the September ACCAC Meetings.All ACCAC teams will compete in each meetACCAC meets shall be held on one dayHost college shall choose Friday or Saturday. Saturday is recommended for ACCAC meets.Meet information must be sent to each college participating ten (10) days prior to the meet.All scoring meets will run the M/W 5K. The option to run this event separate or combined for men and women is at the discretion of the host school.The 10K will not be run at conference meets.No entries shall be made once an ACCAC meet has begun.Unattached competitors will not be allowed to participate in conference track meets.Conference meets shall be seeded by times & marks from results of the current year.All field events with at least one fair mark in the first 3 attempts will get another 3 attempts. All horizontal jumpers and throwers shall receive 4 attempts in conference meets. shall be the official reporting website for all ACCAC meets.Each college will pay meet entry fees, not to exceed $250 per meet, which includes fees for both men’s and women’s teamsHost rotation (May 2019): 2019: Mesa2020: Pima2021: Central Arizona2022: Glendale2023: Paradise ValleyConference ChampionAll conference meets shall be scored as dual meets between participating teams.The team with the best overall dual record is the ACCAC ChampionRules and ProceduresAll ACCAC designated scoring meets will follow the official NCAA track and field rules and regulations.Individual scoring in each event:First Place = 5 PointsSecond Place = 3 PointsThird Place = 2 pointsFourth place = 1 pointEach host school for either the Conference meet or the Region One meet shall budget and provide electronic chip devices for all Cross-Country runners competing in the meets, along with a video camera devise of choice at the finish line to assure accurate order of finish. (May 2019)Tie Breaker – In the event of a tie at the top of the conference standings, there shall be co-tri champions.SEC 22 VOLLEYBALLMatch Starting TimesWeekday matches shall be played at 7:00 p.m.Matches will be scheduled on Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday whenever possible.Saturday matches will begin at 7:00 p.m.Changes to start times must be by mutual consent of both Athletic Directors.Scheduling and GuidelinesLeague play will consist of 16 matches. Division I schools will play each other three times and will play each Division II college one time. Division II schools will play each other two times and will play each Division I college one time.Schedules shall be drawn up at the end-of-season meeting for the following year.A rotation sequence shall be determined by the volleyball chairperson.The rotation sequence will be used for two years.The master schedule for the following year will be presented to the joint council at the November meeting.Rules and ProceduresThe official ball shall be the same as the ball approved by the NJCAA for National Tournament play.The gym must be made available to the visiting team one hour and thirty minutes prior to the game time. The net must also be available one hour and thirty minutes prior to the game time. (May 2019)The period-from one hour and thirty minutes until one hour prior to the match start time-will be reserved for the visiting team (for example: 5:30-6:00PM for a 7:00PM match). At one hour prior to match start, NCAA warm-up procedures will be followed.When teams decide to use an “intermission” during a match, visiting teams will receive prior notification. The intermission will follow all guidelines stated in the NCAA rules and will not exceed the maximum allowable time.Each ACCAC school will use certified line judges who can be certified in one of three ways:By attending the pre-season volleyball jamboreeLocal training through the use of a training film provided by the supervisor of officialsAIA certificationA red cloth will be used by line judges.ARTICLE XIV: OFFICIATINGSEC 1 Supervisor of Officials Job DescriptionThe Supervisor of Officials for the ACCAC shall report directly and be responsible to the ACCAC Officiating Committee.Duties of the Supervisor:Recruitment of OfficialsOrganize and administer clinics for officials in each sport for which assignments are made.Each member college Athletic Director shall assist the supervisor in determining the need for clinics.Eligibility of OfficialsThe Supervisor of Officials is given full and complete charge to assemble rosters for All officials for sports under his/her discretion. All ACCAC officials who are assigned to ACCAC contests must sign the ACCAC Independent Contractors form (ICON) for employment within the ACCAC, and return the form to the supervisor of officials for distribution to the ACCAC President and ACCAC Athletic Directors.Member schools may recommend names for addition and deletion.All officials within the state of Arizona with three or more years of high school experience or the equivalent shall have the opportunity to attend a clinic for roster vacancies. Applicants who have attended the clinic for three consecutive years and have not placed on the roster, at the supervisor's discretion, may be denied application to the clinic. Supervisors are to include tryout rosters and actions taken in their post season reports.Officials shall exhibit competency through testing of equivalencies as determined by the Supervisors.Training OfficialsAll Conference Officials must attend in-service officials’ meetings. These meetings will be called by the Supervisor not to exceed three in any given sports season.Evaluation of officials shall be assigned by the Supervisor for scheduled ACCAC contests and Region I playoff contests.All officials shall be assigned by the Supervisor for scheduled ACCAC contests and Region I playoff contests.At least three weeks prior to the close of the regular season, the Supervisor will request each conference coach to submit up to five names from a list of available officials that merit playoff consideration.All sports supervisors shall notify officials for assignments for Region I tournaments two weeks prior to that tournament.Supervisor retains the sole discretion in assigning officials for Region I playoffs. Playoff assignments are to be approved by the Region Director. The input of the coaches will also be given consideration.Persons working for or affiliated with an ACCAC member college are permitted to officiate ACCAC contests except those in which their college is involved.Dismissal of officialsThe dismissal of officials from the approved list shall be made at the discretion of the Supervisor.End of year report shall be submitted, in the format below, to the Officiating Committee at the end of each season to discuss league play, officiating and/or Supervisor’s concerns.Title pageStatus of programPresent roster of officials plus future officialsProblems and recommended solutionsGame report analysisSummary of seasonRecommendations (do not include pay increases)Expense record with explanation if over Allotted amountRecommendations for salary increaseThe Supervisor or designee shall meet with coaches at the preseason and/or end of season meeting for the purpose of reviewing league play, officiating problems, rule changes and the evaluation of officials.Each supervisor will meet with the chair of the Officiating Committee and the Executive Committee during the preseason (July-August) to discuss ACCAC expectations for the current season.Each supervisor must be able to navigate the Arbiter and Refpay systems, and will be expected to input all schedules into the system for each institution to check for accuracy.Supervisor’s salary per sport shall be amended per ACCAC rules (see ACCAC Officials Fee Schedule)$500 in expenses for all officials’ supervisors shall be allowed. Expenses in excess of this amount must be reported to the Officials Committee and then approved by the Executive CommitteeThe Supervisor of Officials is allowed to officiate ACCAC contests in the sport that he/she supervises.Supervisor will be required to attend the Supervisors’ Pre-Season Meeting in July/August.Supervisor will be required to use Arbiter for their scheduling of officials.Supervisor will be required to provide the process for determining officials’ assignments for postseason play. This process will be communicated to the sport’s athletic directors in writing, and presented either at or before (electronically) the postseason coaches’ meeting.SEC 2 Official’s FeesAll issues pertaining to pay and number of officials shall be reviewed on a yearly basis.Officials’ pay rates shall be discussed in March, one year ahead of the actual increase, to be presented to the conference and voted on at the May meeting.Colleges must use the approved pay rate for officials and may not deviate from the set amount.Mileage and Per diemFees paid to each official will be a flat fee per the Officials’ Fee Schedule, will include all charges, will be calculated per institution, and will be inclusive of all costs.Show Up Fee:Officials assigned to the contest must contact host athletic director or coach two (2) hours prior to game time for information on scheduled games when play is doubtful.If the officials are present at game site and that aforementioned procedure is followed, a single game fee will be paid to the officials.Assigned officials are responsible for contacting the host Athletic Director or Coach prior to the game regarding cancellation.Host Athletic Director or coach may also initiate a call to assigned officials regarding cancellation.ACCAC Preseason Volleyball Tournament: Reduction of $10 per contest.Suspended pay for Baseball and SoftballUmpire fees for the suspended game will be $40.00 for the first inning and $7.00 for every inning thereafter with a maximum of a game fee.Fees will be paid to each official by the home team.If mileage is involved, the driver will be the one paid.Officials will be paid through the RefPay system utilized in conjunction with Arbiter.Colleges will pay the conference a lump sum at the beginning of each sport season to cover the per game cost paid through RefPay.SEC 3 Official’s Fee ScheduleA.The comprehensive 2019-20 ACCAC Official’s Fee Schedule (May 2019):BaseballSupervisor Fee$2,256Scrimmage feeGame FeeDHSingle^Maricopa/Pima/Central AZ$210$118$210^Arizona Western$347$252$347^Central Arizona$300$219$300Cochise$361$263$361Eastern Arizona$331$241$331^Pima (non-local)$320$236$320^Yavapai$320$239$320^Maricopa rates used when local umpires are assignedSuspended Game Fees:$40 1st Inning; $7 each inning after up to fame feeSoftballSupervisor Fee$2,256Scrimmage feeGame FeeDHSingle^Maricopa/Pima$207$108$207^Arizona Western$335$217$335^Central Arizona$255$219$255Eastern Arizona$300$211$300^Yavapai$255$219$255^Maricopa rates used when local umpires are assignedSuspended Game Fees:$40 1st Inning; $7 each inning after up to fame feeVolleyballSupervisor’s FeeMatch Fees (each official)Maricopa/PimaArizona WesternEastern ArizonaYavapaiLine Judges$1,889Scrimmage fee$122(x2)$122$210(x2)$210$186(x2)$186$164(x2)$164$35 (x2)Soccer (Men & Women)Supervisor’s FeeMatch FeesMaricopa/PimaArizona WesternCochiseYavapai$1,889Scrimmage feeCenter RefLine Refs$115$102 (x2)$115$176$157 (x2)$176$140$123 (x2)$140$134$114 (x2)$134Basketball (Men & Women)Supervisor’s FeeGame FeesMaricopa/PimaArizona WesternCentral ArizonaCochiseEastern ArizonaTohono O’odhamAll rates include metro mileage or per diem$2,118Scrimmage fee$121 (x3)$121$196 (x3)$196$141 (x3)$141$167 (x3)$167$170 (x3)$170$145 (x3)$145UPDATED 5/5/2019ARTICLE XV: SPORTS PUBLICISTSSEC 1 Sports Publicists DutiesGather information from ACCAC coaches, once a week during the regular season of that publicist’s sport, regarding their teams' records and individual and team statistics.Send that information in document form to appropriate ACCAC coaches and Athletic Directors, ACCAC Webmaster, NJCAA officials, and media outlets.Present all final statistical information, as well as All-Region and All-Conference teams to the ACCAC and ACCAC Webmaster for its archives.SEC 2 ACCAC Webmaster DutiesACCAC Webmaster will maintain the ACCAC website on a daily/weekly basis to ensure that the following departments are kept up-to-date:standings/stats for each sportTwitter/Facebook entries from the ACCAC Twitter & Facebook pagesscoreboard and schedule portion on the front page of the site (and on each individual sport page)ACCAC Webmaster will request updated information from the ACCAC President prior to the start of the fall season annually for the Schools and Contact tabs on the ACCAC Website and update them accordingly. He/she will also periodically check to make sure that those links and information are accurate throughout the academic year.ACCAC Webmaster will request electronic copies (preferably in PDF form) of the NJCAA Region I Event Financial Summary, NJCAA Region I Handbook, ACCAC Handbook, and WSFL Constitution & Bylaws from the ACCAC, NJCAA Region I & WSFL Secretaries after they are published on August 1st of each year, and update the corresponding links on the Resources page of the ACCAC Website prior to the start of the fall athletic seasons.ACCAC Webmaster shall receive information from ACCAC Coaches’ Association and coaches for Player of the Week nominees and/or recipients each week during the regular season, and publish them in a weekly entry (per sport) on the ACCAC Website.ACCAC Webmaster shall receive end-of-season information-including final standings, All-ACCAC & All- Region I postseason honors, playoff schedules and results, All-American recipients, NJCAA Academic Achievement Award recipients, and national tournament information, and will publish that information in a timely manner as stories/entries on the ACCAC Website.Present all final statistical information, as well as All-Region and All-Conference teams to the ACCAC for its archives.SEC 3 ACCAC Social Media Coordinator Duties (May 2019)A.Assist in maintaining and growing the conference social media presence by creating, posting, sharing and tracking original, relevant and regular athletics-related contentB.Develop story ideas related to conference initiatives and strategic goals, and work with various conference and college departments and personnel to complete those assignmentsC.Work with conference personnel to help plan and execute unique promotional campaigns and programs - both paid and organic - designed to target cross-generational populations for awareness, event attendance, athlete and program promotion, and other conference-related purposesD.Work with conference webmaster to ensure content is posted and removed in a timely mannerE.Keep abreast of the latest changes and developments in social media, and recommend level of involvement in each platformF.Assist members of the media, including fielding inquires, researching and providing information, and building relationshipsSEC 4 The comprehensive 2018-19 Sports Publicists/Web Official’s Fee Schedule is listed below:Sports Publicist/Web MaintenanceACCAC Webmaster$6,000Cross Country/Track & Field ACCAC Web Maintenance$600Cross Country (M/W) Publicist Stipend$1,100Track & Field (M/W) Publicist Stipend$1,100Golf (M/W) Publicist Stipend$600Tennis (M/W) Publicist Stipend$600ACCAC Social Media Coordinator$6,000UPDATED 7/9/2019ARTICLE XVI: AWARDSSEC 1 Championship TeamsA conference award shall be given to the first-place team in each sport.Should two teams tie, they shall be declared co-champions and two awards shall be given.First place winners in each sport are determined at a conference meet or tournament or by their season record according to the guidelines outlined in Article XII.SEC 2 Coach of the YearCoach of the Year may be selected in all ACCAC sports.The representative coaches' association will make the selection by open ballot and selection will require 50% or greater vote on the first ballot.If a 50% vote does not exist on the first ballot, the top two nominees will be voted upon with a second ballot.If a tie exists on the second ballot, a tie shall be declared and two Coach of the Year awards will be given.The plaque(s) for Coach of the Year will be provided by the representative coaches' association.SEC 3 Athlete of the YearAthlete of the Year will be selected in all ACCAC sports.The recipient will be the number one vote getter on the All-Conference team.The Athlete of the Year will receive a plaque from the ACCAC.For specific Athlete/Pitcher of the Year selections for baseball and softball, see the individual sport sections in Section 5.SEC 4 All-Conference TeamAll-Conference Teams shall be chosen in the coaches' regularly scheduled meeting after each sport season. To be eligible to vote for All-Conference players or Coach of the Year at the end of season meeting, both of the following conditions must be met:The head coach or designee from that institution must attend the preseason coaches’ meeting. That meeting may be conducted in person, via interactive television, or telephonically (the sports chair along with the coaches’ rep will set up the meeting).The head coach or designee from that institution must be present at the post-season meeting to nominate or vote on players recommended for the All-Conference team.36The council shall approve the All-Conference selection as determined by the coaches at the next scheduled ACCAC Meetings.The public can be notified immediately following the coaches’ meeting of the selection.SEC 5 All-Conference Team Selection ProceduresFor all ACCAC sports, All-Conference teams shall be determined according to the following procedures:BaseballA first and second team of 16 players each with the following designations: 4 outfielders, 5 infielders, 5 pitchers, 2 catchers, 1 designated hitter and 1 utility player shall be named.Each coach shall nominate and provide stats on players from their own team. Minimum at bats would be two per game scheduled.Voting for first team only shall be on the first ballot.The vote shall be written, open ballot with each coach casting a vote for each position.No coach may vote for a student-athlete from his college.When the tabulation of votes is completed, the player with the most votes in that position is first team.Voting for second team shall be a repeat of the process above.In case of ties, both players will be named to that respective team. However, this will result in fewer players on the second team.Athlete/Pitcher of the Year:Athlete (Player) of the Year will be the number one vote getter among the utility, infield, catcher and outfielder categories.The Player of the Year cannot be a pitcher.Pitcher of the Year recipient will be the number one vote getter among the pitchers.BasketballSix first team, six second team and eight third team players shall be named to All-Conference teams.Coaches may nominate the players from their respective teams that they believe to be worthy of consideration (number not specified). These names are written so all present may see them.The coach may present statistics and any other information which is pertinent to the player being nominated.By open ballot, each coach (one per college) must vote for twenty players. The #1 player on a coach’s ballot will receive fifteen points, 2nd will receive fourteen, etc. Refusal to cast 20 votes on a ballot will result in the withdrawal of the college’s nomination and ballot.No college/coach may vote for its own athletes.Once balloting is completed, each vote is read aloud; then the numerical value is recorded on the board beside the proper nominee’s name.When all votes are recorded, each nominee’s total points are tabulated.When the tabulation of votes is completed, the top six players are named ACCAC 1st Team - the top person being named player of the year.Players seven through twelve are ACCAC 2nd team. Players 13 through 20 are ACCAC 3rd team.In case of ties for the last position on a team (i.e., fifth on the 1st Team) both players will be included on that team. However, this will result in one fewer person being on the 3rd team - only 20 players may be selected.To be selected, a player must appear on at least two ballots.Cross Country:Seven first team, seven second team, and seven honorable mention runners shall be named to the All-Conference Teams.First team - top seven individuals (1-7) in ACCAC Championship meetSecond team – next seven individuals (8-14) in ACCAC Championship meet.Honorable Mention- next seven individuals (15-21) in ACCAC Championship meet.GolfThe All-Conference Team shall be six (6) first team and six (6) second team plus ties.Scores in ACCAC regular season tournaments will determine the All-Conference teams.For each individual, the two highest scores will be dropped before calculating the final All- Conference ranking.First team All-ACCAC: 1-6 low gross (plus ties)Second team All-ACCAC: 7-12 low gross (plus ties)In the event of a tie for 6th place, the 2nd team will be reduced so as not to exceed a total of 12. In the event of a tie for 12th place, all those tied are to be included on the 2nd team.SoccerThe All-Conference team in soccer shall consist of a first team and a second team comprised of 11 players with at least one goalie for each team. Seven additional players will be named Honorable Mention; these will be the next seven highest vote getters after the first two teams have been selected.Coaches may nominate the players from their respective teams that they believe to be worthy of consideration (number not specified). These names are written so All present may see them.The coach may present statistics and any other information which is pertinent to the player being nominated.By open ballot, each coach (one per college) must vote for eleven players. The #1 player on a coach’s ballot will receive eleven points; number two will receive ten, etc. Refusal to cast eleven votes on a ballot will result in the withdrawal of the college’s nomination(s) and ballot.No college/coach may vote for its own athletes.Once balloting is completed, each vote is read aloud, then the numerical value is recorded on the board beside the proper nominee’s name. When all votes are recorded, each nominee’s total points are tabulated.When the tabulation of votes is completed, the top eleven players, including at least one goalie are named ACCAC 1st Team; the top point getter being named “Player of the Year.” Players 12 through 22 are ACCAC 2nd Team (includes at least one goalie), with the 7 additional top vote getters named Honorable Mention.In case of ties for the last position of one team (i.e., eleventh on the 1st team), both players will be included on that team.To be selected, a player must appear on at least two ballots.If twenty-four players each are not named on two ballots, another vote shall be taken. Those players who were nominated but did not receive two votes shall be eligible to be selected. The top vote getters shall fill out the second team.SoftballTwelve (12) first team, twelve (12) second team and seven (7) third team shall be named to All- Conference. Teams are defined as: 4 battery (pitchers and/or catchers), 4 infielders, 3 outfielders and 1 utility player.The utility player category would be flexible yearly based upon the number of nominees (minimum of two). If not a designated hitter, this nomination would then be placed as an infielder.Coaches may nominate the players from his/her team believed to be worthy of consideration (number not specified). These names are written so that all may see.The coach may present statistics and any other information which is pertinent to the player being nominated.By open ballot, by labeling ranking sheet with school name, each coach (one per college) must rank.No college/coach may vote for his/her own players.Once balloting is completed, the numerical value is recorded on the board beside the proper nominee's name. When all votes are recorded, each nominee's total points are tabulated.To be selected, a player must be ranked on at least two ballots.Once the tabulation is completed, the top (players with the highest point total) in each category: 4 battery, 4 infielder, 3 outfielders, 1 designated player are named to the first team All- Conference. The second team All-Conference would be comprised of the next 4 battery, 4 infielders, 3 outfielders and 1 designated player. Third team All-Conference would include the highest point receivers, 2 per category, with the exception of designated player, if 2 are not available.In case of ties for the last position on a team, both players will be included on that team. However, this will result in one fewer player being on the third team - 31 total players.Athlete/Pitcher of the Year:Athlete (Player) of the Year will be the number one vote getter among the utility, infield, catcher and outfielder categories.The Player of the Year cannot be a pitcher.Pitcher of the Year recipient will be the number one vote getter among the pitchers.TennisThe All-Conference first team shall be the number one seeds at the Region Tournament in flight 1-6 singles and flight 1-3 doubles.The All-Conference second team shall be the number two seeds at the Region Tournament in flight 1-6 singles and flight 1-3 doubles.TrackThe All-Conference team in track shall consist of a first team and a second team in each event in designated ACCAC scoring meets.The First Team All-Conference shall be determined by the best mark/time in each event, including relay teams in the ACCAC meets.The Second Team All-Conference shall be determined by the second best mark/time, in each event, including relay teams, in the ACCAC meets.Athlete of the Year – Men and Women. Nomination and selection will take place at the Region I Championships scratch meeting. Coaches may nominate athletes they feel worthy of consideration. By open ballot, each college shall vote for 1 athlete. Colleges may not vote for their own nominee. Selection will require a 50% or greater vote on the first ballot. If a 50% vote does not exist on the first ballot, the top two vote getters (including ties for 2nd) will be voted upon with a 2nd ballot. The top vote getter on the 2nd ballot is the Athlete of the Year. If there is a tie among the top vote getters after the 2nd ballot, Athlete of the Year Awards will be given to those tied.Coach of the Year – Men and Women. Selection will take place at the Region I Championships scratch meeting. By open ballot, each college shall vote for 1 coach. Selection will require a 50% or greater vote on the 1st ballot. The top two vote getters (including ties for 2nd) will be voted upon with a 2nd ballot. The top vote getter on the 2nd ballot is the Coach of the Year. If there is a tie for the most votes on the 2nd ballot, Coach of the Year Awards will be given to those tied.VolleyballSix first team, six second team and eight third team players shall be named to All-Conference teams.Coaches may nominate the players from their respective teams that they believe to be worthy of consideration (number not specified). These names are written so all present may see them.The coach may present statistics and any other information which is pertinent to the player being nominated.By (open) ballot, each coach (one per college) must vote for twelve players. The #1 player on a coach’s ballot will receive 12 points, 2nd will receive eleven, etc. Refusal to cast 12 votes on a ballot will result in the withdrawal of the college’s nomination and ballot.No coach may vote for his/her own athletes.Once balloting is completed, each vote is read aloud, and then the numerical value is recorded on the board beside the proper nominee’s name. When all votes are recorded, each nominee’s total points are tabulated.When the tabulation of votes is completed, the top six players are named ACCAC 1st Team. Players 7 through 12 are ACCAC 2nd Team. The top vote getter is named the Player of the Year.In case of ties for the last position on a team (i.e., 6th on the 1st team) both players will be included on that team. However, this will result in one fewer player named to the 3rd team - only 20 players may be selected.To be selected, a player must appear on at least two ballots.The top Setter and Libero vote getters will be named “Setter of the Year” and “Libero of the Year”. If a Setter and Libero is not voted onto the All-Conference team, the top setter and top libero will be a separate vote by the coaches. Unless voted to the All-Conference Teams, the “Setter of the Year and “Libero of the Year” will not be added to the All-Conference Teams.All-American ballots and rankings shall have the name of the school on them.ARTICLE XVII: FORMSSEC 1 ACCAC/Region I Student Athlete/Player of the Year Award FormACCAC/REGION I STUDENT ATHLETE/PLAYER OF THE YEARNAME COLLEGE SPORT CHECK ALL THAT APPLYGPA4.030 pts.3.5 - 3.9920 pts.3.0 - 3.410 pts.Below 3.00 pts.ACADEMIC HONORSNJCAA All-Academic First Team30 pts. NJCAA All-Academic Second Team20 pts. NJCAA All-Academic Third Team10 pts. NJCAA Scholar-Athlete of the Year25 pts.ACCAC ATHLETIC HONORS (includes WSFL)All-Conference First Team All-Conference Second Team All-Conference Third TeamAll-Conference Honorable Mention40 pts.30 pts.20 pts.10 pts.ACCAC Player of the Year100 pts.ACCAC Pitcher of the Year50 pts.ACCAC Setter of the Year50 pts.ACCAC Libero of the Year50 pts.REGION I ATHLETIC HONORS (includes WSFL)All-Region First Team40 pts.All-Region Second Team30 pts.All-Region Third Team20 pts.All-Region Honorable Mention10 pts.NJCAA TOURNAMENT HONORSNJCAA All-Tournament Team50 pts.NJCAA Tournament MVP100 pts.NJCAA Tournament Offensive MVP100 pts.NJCAA Tournament Defensive MVP100 pts.Spalding Player of the Year150 pts.Spalding Defensive Player of the Year150 pts.Spalding Offensive Player of the Year150 pts.Spalding Special Teams Player of the Year150 pts.Spalding Pitcher of the Year150 pts.NJCAA ATHLETIC HONORSNJCAA All-American First TeamNJCAA All-American Second Team40 pts.30 pts.NJCAA All-American Third Team20 pts.NJCAA All-American Honorable Mention10 pts.NJCAA David Rowland Male Student-Athlete of the Year250 pts.NJCAA Betty Jo Graber Female Student-Athlete of the Year250 pts.NJCAA Lea Plarski Award250 pts.NJCAA Player of the Year250 pts.OTHER HONORSABCA Player of the Year150 pts.ABCA/Rawlings Gold Glove50 pts. USTFCCCA Most Valuable Field Athlete150 pts. USTFCCCA Most Valuable Track Athlete150 pts. Coaches Association All-American50 pts.Coaches Association All-Region25 pts. Coaches Association Player of the Year75 pts. Coaches Association Scholar All-American25 pts.LEADERSHIP/COMMUNITY SERVICETeam Captain25 munity Service25 ments/OtherSEC 2 ACCAC/Region I Athletic Trainer of the Year Award Nomination FormACCAC/REGION I ATHLETIC TRAINER OF THE YEARName: Credentials: Phone: E-Mail: Address: AZ Athletic Training License #: BOC #: Years in ACCAC: Years of Experience: Employer: Phone: Address: Supporting Activity Involvement or Accomplishments: SEC 3 The ACCAC Hall of Fame Nomination FormARIZONA COMMUNITY COLLEGE ATHLETES ASSOCIATIONCoach/Administrator Hall of Fame Nomination Application(Attach any additional information needed for either category coach or administrator)Head Coach/Administrator’s name (circle one or both)Nominated by: (person and college affiliation)Sport (coaches)/Position (administration)College employment (college/# of years/position)Important Coaching Information:Overall record ACCAC/Region/National Coach of the Year Award ACCAC playoff appearances (Team/Years) ACCAC championships (Team/Years) Region runner-up/championship (Team/Years) National Tournament appearance/ finishes (Team/Years) (Football national champions/end of year rankings) Other relevant accolades (ex. Olympic coach, NJCAA team coach, etc.) Important Administrator Information:ACCAC positions held Region positions held National positions held Campus positions held Campus Awards Other areas of impact ARTICLE XVIII: ADDENDUMSSEC 1 ACCAC Athletic Health & Safety Manual1905000252045Health&Safety ManualPurposeThe ACCAC is committed to the health and safety of its athletes, coaches, and staff. This commitment is demonstrated through the employment and utilization of licensed athletic trainers by its member institutions, which rely on their expertise, skill and judgment.NJCAA, ACCAC and/or Region I RulesSEC 5Athletic Health and Safety CommitteeFunctionThe Athletic Health and Safety Committee shall serve as a vehicle to promote the communication of athletic health care issues and the improvement of athletic training services within the ACCAC.MembershipThe committee shall consist of one athletic director, at least one athletic trainer, one at large member from the ACCAC ATC representatives and the remainder of the committee from at-large members of the Athletic Council.DutiesDevelop, recommend and implement ACCAC sports athletic training coverage standards.Advise the ACCAC on All health care issues.Identify athletic healthcare concerns within the ACCAC.Work cooperatively with other ACCAC athletic trainers.Maintain and publish a directory of ACCAC athletic trainers.Promote cooperative working relations with the medical community serving ACCAC athletics.ARTICLE XIII: SPORTS PROCEDURESSEC 2Management of Contests/PracticesAll intercollegiate games shall be played under the management of the host college.Officials for all ACCAC sponsored intercollegiate competition shall be assigned by the appropriate ACCAC Supervisor.The ACCAC is committed to the health and safety of its athletes, coaches, and staff. This commitment is demonstrated through the employment and utilization of licensed athletic trainers by its member institutions, which rely on their expertise, skill and judgment.In the interest of providing a safe playing environment, the following items will be made available for visiting teams prior to, or at the start of, warm-up activities:Access to a taping/treatment areaDrinking water (water cooler and cups/bottles/fountain)Ice and plastic bags for injuriesBiohazard container / exposure control planBench towels (indoor sports)Waste container (bench area)Ice towels (outdoor sports - hot weather)Certified athletic trainer on site. If the host licensed athletic trainer will not be on-site for event day coverage, the host school will notify the visiting school's athletic trainer prior to the event.Visiting teams must provide their own athletic training suppliesMedical emergency plan – a copy of this plan should be provided to the visiting team or at least be accessible prior to any competition. The plan should include the following:Individual(s) identified as responsible for contacting EMS when needed, typically, the host ATC or designeeAvailability or direct access to an AEDPlayers and coaches to assemble to respective bench areasPrearranged access of EMS to venueSpectator/Fan management by event staff or designeeDirections/map to treating medical facilityThe ACCAC will follow the NCAA Sports Medicine Handbook lightning safety guidelines for suspending or terminating athletic events in adverse weather conditions, as determined by the host licensed AthleticTrainer in coordination with host athletic director and/or game manager. (See Lightning Safety below)Host school game management personnel, the athletic trainer, and event officials will work suspending or terminating athletic events in adverse weather conditions, as determined by the host licensed Athletic Trainer in coordination with host athletic director and/or game manager cooperatively to maintain a safe playing environment. Events that have large numbers of participating athletes or that are held at venues that cover a large area where direct observation of the athletes would be difficult, require additional measures by the host institution to ensure adequate safety of the participants. Such measures may include, but not be limited to:Additional event management and/or sport medicine staff adequately positioned around the venueAdditional avenues of communication among staff – radios, cell phones, etc.Appropriate transportation of staff for event coveragePre/post event planning/debriefing of event coverageRefer to guidelines for hosting multiple team events as distributed by the Athletic Health and Safety Committee.Refer to current appropriate medical coverage guidelines as distributed by the Athletic Health and Safety Committee.Scheduling accommodations should be employed as part of the development of the conference’s master schedule when seasons and sports are impacted by extreme heat conditions. This would be the preferred method as to avoid likely last-minute schedule changes due to dealing with extreme heat conditions:When extreme heat conditions have been advised by local and/or national weather outlets, and have been confirmed to be present by Heat Index or WGBT temperatures, then the following recommendations should be discussed by host team’s athletic director, certified athletic trainer and coaches as well as visiting team’s athletic director, certified athletic trainer and coaches to determine proper course of action for scheduled competitions, such as:Switch competition site to a site that has lights so night games can be played, or sites that are in cooler locations.Change start time of game/match to an earlier or later start time.Postpone to another day.(NOTE THAT OPTIONS i, ii, & iii ABOVE SHOULD BE CONSIDERED IN A TIMELY MANNER SO THOSE THAT ARE TRAVELING DO NOT INCUR ADDITIONAL COSTS)Continue with game/match as scheduled, recognizing that both teams are acclimatized to heat and make plans for extra water breaks, provide ice towels for both teams, and ensure adequate shade for benches, scorer’s table and athletic training areas.Outdoor team/individual(s) practices, training sessions, scrimmages, etc.-regardless of season-will still be institutional responsibility to monitor and adjust, although these guidelines can be used and adopted at each school for that specific purpose.Make shade structures mandatory for the bench areas at all outside venues that are used for ACCAC competitions.LIGHTNING SAFETY NCAA GUIDELINE 1EJuly 1997 ? Revised June 2013Lightning is the most consistent and significant weather hazard that may affect intercollegiate athletics. Within the United States, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration NOAA) estimates that 40 fatalities and about 10 times as many injuries occur from lightning strikes every year. NOAA attributes 48 percent of the fatalities to lightning strikes during organized sport activities at all levels across the country. While the probability of being struck by lightning is low, the odds are significantly greater when a storm is in the area and proper safety precautions are not followed.Education and prevention are the keys to lightning safety. The references associated with this guideline are an excellenteducational resource. Prevention should begin long before any intercollegiate athletics event or practice by being proactive and having a lightning safety plan in place. The following steps are recommended by the NCAA and NOAA to mitigate the lightning hazard:Develop a lightning safety plan for each outdoor venue.Designate a person to monitor threatening weather and to notify the chain of command who can make the decision to remove a team, game personnel, television crews and spectators from an athletics site or event. A lightning safety plan should include planned instructions/announcements for participants and spectators, designation of warning and all-clear signals, proper signage and designation of safer places from the lightning hazard.Monitor local weather reports each day before any practice or event. Be diligently aware of potential thunderstorms that may form during scheduled intercollegiate athletics events or practices. Weather information can be found through various means via local television news coverage, the Internet, cable and satellite weather programming, a lightning detection and notification service, or the National Weather Service (NWS) website at .Be informed of National Weather Service (NWS) issued thunderstorm “watches” or “warnings,” and the warning signs of developing thunderstorms in the area, such as high winds or darkening skies. A “watch” means conditions are favorable for severe weather to develop in an area; a “warning” means that severe weather has been reported in an area and for everyone to take the proper precautions. It should be noted that neither watches nor warnings are issued for lightning. A NOAA weather radio is particularly helpful in providing this information.Know where the closest “safer structure or location” is to the field or playing area, how long it takes to evacuate to that location for all personnel at the event, and have access to it. A safer structure or location is defined as:Any building normally occupied or frequently used by people, i.e., a building with plumbing and/or electrical wiring that acts to electrically ground the structure. Avoid the shower, plumbing facilities, contact with electrical appliances and open windows/doorways during a thunderstorm.In the absence of a sturdy, frequently inhabited building, any vehicle with a hard metal roof (neither a convertible, nor a golf cart) with the windows shut provides a measure of safety. The hard metal frame and roof, not the rubber tires, are what protects occupants by dissipating lightning current around the vehicle and not through the occupants. It is important not to touch the metal framework of the vehicle. Some athletics events rent school buses as safer locations to place around open courses or fields.Lightning awareness should be heightened at the first flash of lightning, clap of thunder, and/or other signs of an impending storm such as increasing winds or darkening skies, no matter how far away. These types of activities should be treated as a warning or “wake-up call” to intercollegiate athletics personnel. Lightning safety experts suggest that if you hear thunder, begin preparation for evacuation; if you see lightning, consider suspending activities and heading for your designated safer locations. For large-scale events, continuous monitoring of the weather should occur from the time pre-event activities occur throughout the event.DANGEROUS LOCATIONSOutside locations increase the risk of being struck by lightning when thunderstorms are in the area. Small covered shelters are not safe from lightning. Dugouts, refreshment stands, open press boxes, rain shelters, golf shelters and picnic shelters, even if they are properly grounded for structural safety, are usually not properly grounded from the effects of lightning and side flashes to people. They are usually very unsafe and may actually increase the risk of lightning injury.Other dangerous locations include bodies of water (pools, ponds, lakes) and areas connected to, or near, light poles, towers and fences that can carry a nearby strike to people. Also dangerous is any location that makes the person the highest point in the area. Administrative Issues 17 locations. For large-scale events, continuous monitoring of theweather should occur from the time pre-event activities occur throughout the event.The following specific lightning safety guidelines have been developed with the assistance of lightning safety experts. Design your lightning safety plan to consider local safety needs, weather patterns and thunderstorm types.As a minimum, lightning safety experts strongly recommend that by the time the monitor observes 30 seconds between seeing the lightning flash and hearing its associated thunder or by the time the leading edge of the storm is within six miles of the venue, all individuals should have left the athletics site and be wholly within a safer structure or location. Individuals just entering the outdoor venue should be directed to the safer location.Please note that thunder may be hard to hear if there is an athletics event going on, particularly in stadiums with large crowds. Implement your lightning safety plan accordingly.Ensure a safe and orderly evacuation from the venue with announcements, signage, safety information in programs, and entrances that can also serve as mass exits. Planning should account for the time it takes to move a team and crowd to their designated safer locations.Lightning can strike from blue sky and in the absence of rain. At least 10 percent of lightning occurs when there is no rainfall and when blue sky is often visible somewhere in the sky, especially with summer thunderstorms. Lightning can, and does, strike as far as 10 (or more) miles away from the rain shaft. Be aware of local weather patterns and review local weather forecasts before an outdoor practice/event.Avoid using landline telephones, except in emergency situations. People have been killed while using a landline telephone during a thunderstorm. Cellular or cordless phones are safe alternatives to a landline phone, particularly if the person and the antenna are located within a safer structure or location, and if all other precautions are followed.To resume athletics activities, lightning safety experts recommend waiting 30 minutes after both the last sound of thunder and last flash of lightning is at least six miles away and moving away from the venue. If lightning is seen without hearing thunder, lightning may be out of range and therefore less likely to be a significant threat. At night, be aware that lightning can be visible at a much greater distance than during the day as clouds are being lit from the inside by lightning. This greater distance may mean that the lightning is no longer a significant threat. At night, use both the sound of thunder and seeing the lightning channel itself to decide on re-setting the 30-minute “return-to-play” clock before resuming outdoor athletics activities.People who have been struck by lightning do not carry an electrical charge. Therefore, cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is safe for the responder. If possible, an injured person should be moved to a safer location before starting CPR. Lightning strike victims who show signs of cardiac or respiratory arrest need prompt emergency help. If you are in a 911 community, call for help. Prompt, aggressive CPR has been highly effective for the survival of victims of lightning strikes.Automatic external defibrillators (AEDs) are a safe and effective means of reviving people in cardiac arrest. Planned access to early defibrillation should be part of your emergency plan. However, CPR should never be delayed while searching for an AED. Note: Weather watchers, real-time weather forecasts and commercial weather-warning devices or services are all tools that can be used to aid in the monitoring and notification of threatening weather situations, decision-making regarding stoppage of play, evacuation and return to play.REFERENCESCooper MA, Andrews CJ, Holle RL, Lopez RE. Lightning Injuries. In: Auerbach, ed. Management of Wilderness and Environmental Emergencies. 5th ed. C.V. Mosby, 2007:67-108.Bennett BL. A Model Lightning Safety Policy for Athletics. Journal of Athletic Training. 32(3):251-253. 1997.Price TG, Cooper MA: Electrical and Lightning Injuries. In: Marx et al. Rosen’s Emergency Medicine, Concepts and Clinical Practice, Mosby, 6th ed. 2006; 22: 67-78.National Lightning Safety Institute website: .Uman MA. All About Lightning. New York: Dover Publications. 1986.NOAA lightning safety website: lightningsafety..Walsh KM, Hanley MJ, Graner SJ, Beam D, Bazluki J. A Survey of Lightning Safety Policy in Selected Division I Colleges. Journal of Athletic Training. 32(3):206-210. 1997.Holle RL. 2005: Lightning-caused recreation deaths and injuries. Preprints, 14th Symposium on Education, January 9-13, San Diego, California, American Meteorological Society, 6 pp.The Weather Channel on satellite or cable, and on the Internet at .Walsh KM, Cooper MA, Holle R, Rakov V, Roeder WP, Ryan M. National Athletic Trainers’ Association Position Statement. Lightning Safety for Athletics and Recreation. Journal of Athletic Training. 48(2);258-270. 2013Concussion ManagementConcussions are a complex pathophysiological process affecting the brain, induced by traumatic biomechanical forces (NCAA sports medicine handbook, 2013). The diagnosis of a concussion is clinical. In other words, there are no laboratory tests, biomarkers, or computerized cognitive tests that make a diagnosis. The clinical diagnosis of a concussion is ultimately made when a discerning clinician (AT or Dr.) notes an inciting event (e.g. blow to the head), which is followed by signs and symptoms that are consistent with a concussion and that are not indicative of other brain injury.Member schools shall have a concussion management plan on file such that a student-athlete who exhibits signs, symptoms or behaviors consistent with a concussion shall be removed from practice, competition, conditioning, or weight training session, and be evaluated by an athletics health care provider experienced in evaluating and managing sport-related concussion. Student-athletes diagnosed with a concussion shall not return to activity for the remainder of that day and shall be precluded from any future activity until they have been medically cleared by institution’s Athletic Trainer, Team Physician, or a Physician experienced in evaluating and managing sport-related concussion. Any athlete suspected of suffering a concussion must be evaluated immediately on the field, on the sideline, or in a quiet locker room. Many tools exist to aid in the diagnosis of a concussion, and it is best to include a combination of symptoms checklist, cognitive testing, and balance testing, all within a clinical context. The sideline evaluation should include a neurological and mental status examination and some form of neurocognitive testing to assess memory function and attention. This can be in the form of questions regarding the particular practice or game, previous game results, and remote and recent memory, and questions to test the athlete’s recall of words, months of the year backwards, and calculations (e.g., SAC, SCAT, SCAT II, SCAT II, BESS). Special note should be made regarding the presence and duration of retrograde or anterograde amnesia, and the presence and duration of confusion. It is suggested the concussion management plan have the following components which are specific to the collegiate environment:Institutions should ensure that coaches have acknowledged that they understand the concussion management plan and have been provided information about the danger of concussions as well as the signs and symptoms of concussions (e.g. recommend obtaining certification from CDC Heads Up Program).Student-athletes shall be provided an informational handout at the beginning of each year that provides the following information:Definition of a concussion.Dangers of a concussion.Signs and symptoms of a concussion.Risk factors of playing with a concussion/not reporting a concussion.Athletics health care providers should practice within the standards as established for their professional practice.Institutions should record a baseline assessment for each student-athlete before the first practice in the sports of baseball, basketball, football, pole vaulting, soccer, softball, and Rodeo (CAC and CC). The same baseline assessment should be used post-injury at the appropriate time intervals. The baseline assessment should consist of one or more of the following:Table 1At minimum, the baseline assessment should consist of the use of a symptom checklist and standardized cognitive and/or balance assessment.Additionally, neuropsychological testing (e.g., computerized, standard paper and pencil) has been shown to be effective in the evaluation and management of concussions.Post injury, the student-athlete should receive serial monitoring for deterioration. Athletes should be provided with written at home instructions, preferably sent with a roommate, parent/guardian or someone who can follow the instructions.Student-athletes should be returned to activity only after they are asymptomatic, and post-exertion assessments are within normal baseline limits. Return to play should follow a medically supervised stepwise process (Ex table 1)Objective of each stageFunctional exercise at each stage of rehabilitationRehabilitation stageGRADUATED RETURN-TO-PLAY PROTOCOL *No Activity.Symptom-limited physical and cognitiverest.Light aerobic exercise.Walking, swimming or stationary cycling keeping intensity less than 70 percent maximum permitted heart rate. No resistance training.Sport-specific exercise.Skating drills in ice hockey, running drills in soccer. No head-impact activities.Noncontact training drillsProgression to more complex trainingdrills, e.g. passing drills in football and ice hockey. May start progressive resistance training.Full-contact practice.Following medical clearance, participate in normal training activities.Return to play.Normal game play.Recovery.Increase heart rate.Add movement.Exercise, coordination and cognitive load.Restore confidence and assess functional skills by coaching staff.* 2013 International Conference on Concussion in Sport. Zurich, SwitzerlandInstitutions should document the incident, evaluation, management, and clearance of a student-athlete with a concussion.Cardiovascular screeningArticle V, Eligibility Rules, Section 9, page 55:Physical Examination: All student-athletes participating in any one of the NJCAA certified sports must have passed a physical examination administered by a qualified health care professional licensed to administer physical examinations, prior to the first practice for each calendar year in which they compete. A physical is valid for 13 months from the date it is administered. A student-athlete must always have a valid physical on file in order to practice and or participate within the NJCAA. A cardiovascular screening is recommended as a part of the physical exam required upon a student-athlete’s initial entrance into the intercollegiate athletics program.CPR and AED CertificationIt is required that ALL Head Coaches annually provide proof of CPR and AED certification to their respective institutions. It will be the responsibility of each Member School to monitor and record CPR/AED Certification for their Head Coaches. Additionally, it is recommended that ALL Paid Assistant Coaches be expected to maintain CPR and AED Training/Certification annually. ................
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