The Equality Act Obligation Most Grassroots Clubs Don’t Know They Have
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The Equality Act 2010 has been law for fifteen years. Most grassroots clubs still don’t understand their obligations. Here’s what you need to know.
What the Law Actually Says
Under the Equality Act, clubs have a legal duty to make reasonable adjustments for disabled players. Neurodivergence can be considered a disability. ADHD, autism, dyslexia, dyspraxia, anxiety disorders – all can qualify.
You don’t need a formal diagnosis to make adjustments. You just need evidence of need. And here’s the bit that catches clubs out: you have an anticipatory duty.
That means you should be thinking about accessibility before someone asks. Not after.
Mentioned in this episode:
The FMHA Neurodiversity, Mental Health & Safeguarding Academy.
The FMHA Neurodiversity, Mental Health & Safeguarding Academy gives your entire club unlimited access to: Unlimited seats in face-to-face training in neurodiversity, mental health first aid and emotional regulation Monthly expert-led CPD from recognised specialists Football-specific resources updated monthly (matchday checklists, parent conversation templates, adjustment guides) A fiercely moderated peer community – no ‘Daves’ allowed The Player Log App (in development) for documenting reasonable adjustments Free Parent/Carer/Guardian Academy so families become partners, not problems Not a one-off workshop. Not a Facebook group. An ongoing support system built specifically for grassroots football.
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