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Rogue Community College Board of Education

AP 3518 Child Abuse Reporting

References:

ORS 419B.005 to 419B.050


Rogue Community College (RCC)recognizes the responsibility of its employees and board of education members to immediately report to the appropriate agency when there is reasonable suspicion that abuse or neglect of a child may have occurred. All employees and board of education members are required to comply with applicable state child abuse and neglect requirements and are considered mandatory child abuse reporters under Oregon law. 

The duty of a mandatory reporter is a 24-hour-a-day, 7 day-a-week responsibility. As a community college employee or board of education member this legal duty is the personal responsibility of each individual and applies whether or not the individual is on work time. As such, all RCC employees and board of education members are required to report suspected child abuse anytime, anywhere. Whether an employee or board of education member learns of suspected abuse or a suspected abuser while at work, coaching their child’s soccer team, or when shopping for groceries on the weekend, the reporting obligation is the same.

An employee or board of education member making a report of child abuse shall make an oral report by telephone or otherwise to the local office of the Department of Human Services (DHS), to the designee of the department or to a law enforcement agency within the county where the person making the report is located at the time of the contact. The report shall contain, if known:

  • Names and addresses of the child
  • Names and addresses of the parents of the child or other persons responsible for care of the child
  • Child’s age
  • Nature and extent of the abuse, including any evidence of previous abuse
  • Explanation given for the abuse
  • Other information that the person making the report believes might be helpful in establishing the cause of the abuse and the identity of the perpetrator.

Any questions regarding this procedure should be sent to the Director of Risk Management and the Assistant Director of Risk Management. In addition, if an employee or board of education member makes a report to law enforcement or DHS, the employee or board of education member should notify Risk Management that a report has been filed.

Anyone participating in good faith in making a child abuse report has immunity from any criminal or civil liability. This immunity is also in place with respect to participation in any subsequent judicial proceeding. To the extent possible, the individual’s identity as the reporter will be kept confidential (ORS 419B.025).

Below is a summary of what is generally considered abuse as outlined in ORS 491B.005:

“Abuse” does not include reasonable discipline unless discipline results in one of the above-described conditions.

Reporting Options

Jackson County DHS
Monday-Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
541-858-3197 (local) 866-840-2741 (toll free) (dedicated hotline)

911 or Jackson County law enforcement agency:
Jackson County Sheriff: 541-774-6800
Ashland Police: 541-488-2211
Butte Falls Police 541-865-3200
Central Point Police 541-664-5578
Eagle Point Police 541-826-9171
Jacksonville Police 541-899-7100
Medford Police 541-774-2250
Phoenix Police 541-535-1113
Rogue River Police 541-582-4931
Talent Police 541-535-1253

Josephine County DHS
Monday-Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
541-474-3101 (local) 855-503-7233 (toll free) (dedicated hotline)

911 or Josephine County law enforcement agency:
Josephine County Sheriff: 541-474-5123
Grants Pass Police: 541-450-6260
Oregon State Police: 541-955-6370

Definitions:

“Child” is defined as an unmarried person who is under 18 years of age. 

Rescinds Policy Number: AP-012

Approved:  September 23, 2021

Revised: April 14, 2026

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For more information contact:
Rachelle Brown
Executive Assistant to the President
Governance & Operations
[email protected]
541-956-7001