
Originally Posted by
gkelly
It varies.
Around here, rinks hire coaches directly to teach group lessons.
Coaches who teach private lessons on rink-run freestyle sessions are independent contractors who pay a fee to each rink where they teach for the privilege of teaching on those sessions.
To teach on club sessions (of which there are few), they need to be approved to do so by the club's board of directors.
I'm not sure how the insurance works for each of those situations, but pretty much all the coaches would be members of the PSA and have insurance through that membership. Most rinks run some sort of independent background check.
To teach on club sessions, our club requires coaches to be US Figure Skating members and to have gone through the "greenlighting" process (background check). This greenlighting is also required for coaches to be credentialed at USFS events.
There are some lower-level coaches who teach only group classes and lower-level private lessons on public sessions and rink freestyles. They might be members of ISI and prepare their private students for ISI testing and competition but have nothing to do with the USFS. They don't teach on club sessions or bring their skaters to club test sessions and competitions. When and if those skaters want to move up to participate in USFS programs, they would probably need to switch coaches.
Different clubs may handle things differently, especially in areas where the rinks don't offer freestyle or dance sessions directly to the public and all figure skating ice time is contracted through the local club.
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