Youth Armoured Combat Draft:Sanctions and Appeals

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Chain of appeals at events

  1. Youth armoured combat marshals may only accept appeals with regards to youth armoured combat. If a Group Youth Armoured Combat Marshal is not an authorised youth armoured combat marshal, they may not hear an appeal.
  2. Any individual wishing to appeal a marshal's ruling at an event for any reason must do so through the appropriate chain of appeals, beginning with the marshal immediately superior to the marshal who made the initial ruling. The chain of appeals is as follows:
    1. The responsible marshal for the field
    2. The Marshal-in-Charge of the event
    3. The Group Youth Armoured Combat Marshal of the group in which the event is held (if appropriate)
    4. The Kingdom Youth Armoured Combat Marshal
    5. The Earl Marshal
    6. The Crown
    7. The Board of SCA Australia Ltd and Committee of SCA NZ Inc
  3. If any of those marshals are not at the event, the appeal may be made to the next marshal in the chain.
  4. For rulings which apply only at the event, such as the compliance of weapons or armour, the chain of appeal ends with the highest-ranking marshal from the list above who is at the event.
  5. Appeals on rulings which apply beyond the event at which they were made, such as suspension of authorisation, must be made directly to the Kingdom Youth Armoured Combat Marshal.

Suspension of authorisation

  1. A rostered marshal from Lochac may suspend the authorisation card of a fighter or marshal within Lochac (even those visiting from overseas) for a just and stated cause.
  2. If your authorisation has been suspended, you may appeal the suspension, but you must surrender your card and abide by the suspension until the appeals process is complete.
  3. The chain of appeals for suspension of authorisation is as follows:
    1. the Kingdom Youth Armoured Combat Marshal
    2. the Earl Marshal
    3. the Crown
    4. the Board of SCA Australia Ltd or Committee of SCANZ Inc
  4. Any marshal who suspends an authorisation must report this, in writing, to their superior officer and the Earl Marshal as soon as possible.
  5. Any marshal who suspends an authorisation without due cause may be subject to sanctions themselves.
  6. The Earl Marshal must notify the Society Marshal of any suspension of authorisations.
  7. Breaches of real-world law must be referred immediately to the appropriate authorities, in addition to any steps taken by the marshallate.

Managing incidents

  1. The dispute procedures in Kingdom Law must be followed at all times.
  2. The preferred solution is to resolve any incidents as quickly and with as little fuss as possible, by asking those involved to voluntarily correct any issues with their conduct or equipment.
  3. In the event that formal action must be taken by a marshal in response to an incident, the following procedure should be followed:
    1. Point out the violation (missing armour, grappling during combat, etc.) and ask the person to correct it.
    2. In the case of missing or inadequate armour, do not allow the person onto the field until it has been fixed.
    3. In the case of violation of the rules during combat, ask the combatant to leave the field, and do not allow combat to resume until they have cooled off. This particularly includes removing from the field anyone who has lost their temper.
  4. In the event that an issue cannot be resolved and must be escalated, or the marshal attempting to resolve the issue requires support, they should call on, in order of preference:
    1. Any other marshals who are present
    2. The responsible marshal for the field.
    3. The Marshal-in-Charge of the event
    4. The local Seneschal
    5. The Kingdom Youth Armoured Combat Marshal
    6. The Earl Marshal
    7. The Kingdom Seneschal
    8. The Crown
    9. The Board of SCA Australia Ltd or Committee of SCANZ Inc.
  5. If the violation cannot be stopped, and the participant continues to engage in youth armoured combat, the Marshal-in-Charge should end the activity.
  6. In any case where voluntary correction is not made after the problem has been pointed out, a written report must be made to the Kingdom Youth Armoured Combat Marshal as soon as possible after the event.

Sanctions

  1. In addition to removing a combatant from the field at the time, long-term sanctions are available.
  2. Sanctions with effects lasting more than a single event may be applied by the Kingdom Youth Armoured Combat Marshal or higher as part of the dispute resolution process.
  3. Possible sanctions include:
    1. Suspending or revoking the authorisation of the individual to fight with a particular weapon. This sanction may be applied as a suspension or revocation of a weapon-specific authorisation, or a prohibition from using a weapon normally covered by the usual youth armoured combat authorisation, e.g. barring fighter from using any two-handed weapon.
    2. Suspending or revoking the authorisation of the individual to fight at all.
  4. Further sanctions which may be applied as a result of serious violations include banishment by the Crown, and ultimately revocation and denial of membership by the Board of SCA Australia Ltd and Committee of SCANZ Inc.
  5. If any of these long-term sanctions are in progress, the Society Marshal must be informed.
  6. If an authorisation has been suspended, the Earl Marshal of any kingdom the suspended individual might travel to may be informed.
  7. Once long-term sanctions have been applied, a report must be made to the Society Marshal.
  8. An authorisation from any Kingdom may be suspended/revoked in another Kingdom, should it prove necessary and appropriate. Such suspension/revocation means that the fighter may not fight anywhere in the Society until and unless the issue is resolved. Accordingly, the Earl Marshal must inform the Earls Marshal of the neighbouring kingdoms.
  9. If the fighter is subsequently reauthorised, the neighbouring Earls Marshal should be notified.