Policies · the United Kingdom

Child Safe Policy

Every young actor who works with Tingley's Acting Studio in the United Kingdom is entitled to a safe, respectful, and age-appropriate environment.

This policy sets out how Tingley's Acting Studio protects young actors in the United Kingdom, what every coach is required to hold before coaching a minor, and how concerns are raised and responded to.

1. Core commitments

  • Every coach working with a minor in the United Kingdom holds a current Enhanced Disclosure and Barring Service (DBS) check with barred-list check, issued by the Disclosure and Barring Service, before any session with that minor.
  • Scotland uses Disclosure Scotland (Protecting Vulnerable Groups scheme), and Northern Ireland uses AccessNI; the substance of the check is broadly equivalent.
  • A parent or guardian is in the building and available throughout every session with a minor.
  • Scene material is agreed with the parent or guardian in advance, and no material is ever sprung on a young actor.
  • Coaches are trained to recognise signs that a young actor is uncomfortable and to stop a session immediately if that is the case.

2. The legislation that applies in the United Kingdom

Our child safety obligations in the United Kingdom operate under the Safeguarding Vulnerable Groups Act 2006 and the Protection of Children Act 1999. We comply with mandatory reporting obligations under that framework and cooperate fully with the relevant authorities where a reportable concern arises.

3. Consent and communication

Before any coaching with a minor begins, the young actor is told what a session will involve, that they can stop at any time, that they can bring a parent or guardian into the room at any time, and how to raise a concern if something makes them uncomfortable. These rights are repeated periodically.

All communication about a minor's coaching goes through the parent or guardian's email. We do not contact a minor through private direct messaging on social platforms. Session notes are shared with the parent, not the minor alone.

4. Raising a concern

A concern can be raised in any of the following ways:

  • By email to our safety address ().
  • By phone, or in person at a session.
  • Directly to the relevant external authority in the United Kingdom: the local authority children’s social care team (or the equivalent in Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland), and the police where a criminal act is alleged.

In cases of immediate danger, call 999.

Internal complaints are acknowledged within one business day, actioned within seven, and handled with complete confidentiality except where we are required by law to report them. See also our Complaints Policy.

5. Training

Freya completes annual refresher training in child safeguarding and trauma-informed acting coaching practice. Certificates on request. Contractor coaches working with minors complete equivalent training before coaching any minor.

6. Review

This policy is reviewed annually. The named reviewer is Freya Tingley. If there is a serious incident, the policy is reviewed immediately after the incident is resolved.