New Jersey Department of Health Guidance For Sports Activities
New Jersey Department of Health Guidance For Sports Activities
New Jersey Department of Health Guidance For Sports Activities
Activities
July 9, 2020
Executive Order No. 149, issued on May 29, 2020, permitted sporting activities, including organized
sports, to resume on June 22, 2020. Permissible sporting activities were required to take place in
outdoor settings only in a manner that does not involve person-to-person contact or routinely entail
individuals interacting within six feet of one another.
Executive Order No. 163, issued on July 8, 2020, states that practices and competitions for Low Risk sports
and no-contact practices for Medium Risk and High Risk sports are permitted in outdoor and indoor settings.
Contact practices and competitions for Medium Risk sports are permitted in outdoor settings only. Contact
practices and competitions for High Risk sports remain prohibited in both indoor and outdoor settings.
This “Guidance for Sports Activities” published by the New Jersey Department of Health (NJDOH) is
intended to guide organizations that oversee sports activities as they resume operations to ensure the
health and safety of staff, participants, and their families. The Guidance address skill-building drills and
team-based practices as described in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Guidance
on Youth Sports.
This guidance document does not apply to professional sports activities or US national team activities.
High school sporting activities under the jurisdiction of the New Jersey Interscholastic Athletic
Association (NJSIAA) must abide by NJSIAA protocols, which shall consider NJDOH guidance. Per
Executive Order No. 149 (2020), NJSIAA activities may not resume before June 30, 2020.
As a reminder, youth sports summer camps that were permitted to open on or after July 6, 2020, must
follow all applicable summer camp guidance, in addition to these Standards for Sports Activities.
• Inter-team games, scrimmages, and tournaments are permitted for low-risk sports, such as golf
and individual running events (a more complete list is available below).
• Contact sports, which are defined as any sports categorized as medium or high risk (a more
complete list is available below), must limit activities exclusively to no-contact drills, practices,
and simulations of game situations as of June 22.
As of July 8, 2020:
• Traditional practices and competitions are able to resume for medium-risk sports, such as
baseball, softball, basketball, and soccer, in outdoor settings. No-contact practices for medium-
risk sports are permitted in both outdoor and indoor settings.
• Practices and competitions for low-risk sports are permitted both in indoor and outdoor
settings.
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By July 20, it is still anticipated that contact practices and competitions will be able to resume for high-
risk sports, such as football.
The public health data on which this document is based can and do change frequently. Organizers
should check back frequently for updates. NJDOH also encourages organizers to keep informed of
guidance from the CDC, which may change regularly.
C No-contact practices
in indoor settings:
July 8
Medium Risk - Sports that involve Lacrosse, hockey, multi-person rowing, multi- No-contact practices
some close, sustained contact, but person kayaking, multi-person canoeing, water in outdoor settings:
with protective equipment in place polo, swimming relays, fencing, cycling in a June 22
between participants OR group, running in a close group, group sailing,
intermittent close contact OR group volleyball, soccer, basketball, baseball/softball, Contact practices and
sports OR sports that use short track. competitions in
equipment that cannot be cleaned indoor and outdoor
between participants. settings: July 8
Low Risk - Sports that can be done A Archery, shooting/clay target, individual Practices and
individually, do not involve person- running events, individual cycling events, competitions in
to-person contact and do not individual swimming, individual rowing, outdoor settings:
routinely entail individuals individual diving, equestrian jumping or June 22
interacting within six feet of one dressage, golf, individual sailing, weightlifting,
another skiing, snowboarding, tennis, individual dance,P Practices and
pole vault, high jump, long jump, marathon, competitions in
triathlon, cross country, track and field, disc indoor settings: July
golf, badminton. 8
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Guidance for Operations
Outdoor Sports and Athletic Facilities Organizations, businesses, schools, and government entities
that operate outdoor sports facilities, such as athletic fields, courts and other playing surfaces,
outdoor pools, and sailing and boating facilities that are permitted to reopen their premises and
facilities to adult sports and supervised youth sport leagues, summer sports camps, and other
athletic activities should follow the safety measures outlined below. As a reminder, municipalities
retain the discretion to open or close municipal fields or facilities.
a. Each sports program shall create a plan (“program preparation plan”) to ensure
the following:
i. Identify adult staff members or volunteers to help remind coaches, players
and staff of social distancing. Use of signs, tapes or physical barriers can be
used to assist with guiding social distancing requirements.
ii. Within the program, consider creating consistent groups of the same
staff, volunteers, and athletes, and avoid mixing between groups.
iii. Individuals shall remain 6 feet apart from one another whenever possible. This
applies to athletes, coaching staff, parents/guardians, and other spectators.
iv. Coaching staff and parents/guardians should wear cloth face coverings. Athletes
should wear cloth or disposable face coverings when not engaging in vigorous
activity, such as when sitting on the bench, when interacting with an athletic
trainer, etc. Face coverings are not required when persons are engaged in high
intensity aerobic or anaerobic activities. Face coverings should not be worn when
engaged in activities that may cause the cloth face covering to become wet, like
when swimming, or when doing so may endanger the individual’s health. When
face coverings are not worn, efforts should be made to maintain at least 6 feet
from others.
v. Create staggered schedules to limit contact between groups and/or players.
vi. All staff should be educated on COVID-19 health and safety protocols prior to
the resumption of athletic activities, including:
1. Revised practice rules and regulations in place during COVID-19;
2. The importance of staying home when experiencing symptoms of COVID-
19 or residing with someone experiencing symptoms of COVID- 19;
3. Social distancing and face coverings;
4. Proper hand hygiene;
5. How to address a situation in which an athlete presents with symptoms of
COVID-19; and
6. How to address situations in which social distancing or other necessary
requirements are challenged by athletes or parents/guardians/visitors.
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vii. Educate athletes and coaching staff about when they should stay home and
when they can return to activity.
1. Actively encourage sick staff, families, and players to stay home. Develop
policies that encourage sick employees to stay at home without fear of
reprisal, and ensure employees are aware of these policies.
2. Individuals, including coaches, players, and families, should stay home if
they have tested positive for or are showing COVID-19 symptoms.
3. Individuals, including coaches, players, and families, who have recently had
a close contact with a person with COVID-19 should also stay home and
monitor their health.
4. Immediately separate coaches, staff, officials, and athletes with COVID- 19
symptoms at any sports activity. Individuals who have had close contact
with a person who has symptoms should be separated and sent home as
well, and follow CDC guidance for community-related exposure.
5. Establish procedures for safely transporting anyone who is sick to their
home or to a healthcare facility.
viii. All athletes, coaches, and staff should bring their own water and drinks to
practice activities. Team water coolers for sharing through disposable cups
and other types of shared water sources should not be permitted
ix. Encourage athletes to use their own equipment to the extent possible.
x. Discourage sharing of equipment as much as possible. If equipment is shared,
coaching staff should be aware of the sanitation procedures for team equipment
(balls, bats, etc.) and sufficient disinfecting wipes or similar products should be
made available. Consult CDC guidance for cleaning and disinfection.
xi. Discourage use of locker rooms or facility showers. If facility showers need to be
used, only allow shower and locker room use if there are partitions or signage in
place to ensure that athletes maintain proper physical distancing of 6 feet.
b. Communicate applicable details of the plan to parents/guardians and/or participants
before commencing practices.
c. Organizers should further consult and implement, as appropriate, recommendations
listed in the CDC guidance regarding assessing risk, promoting healthy behaviors, and
maintaining a healthy environment during youth sports.
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2. Preparing a Facility for Sports Practices
a. Coaches, staff, visitors and athletes will be required to abide by the gatherings limitations
outlined in Executive Order Nos. 156 (2020) and 161 (2020), or the Order in effect at the
time of competition.
b. Screen athletes, coaches, staff and others participating in practice sessions, via
temperature check and health questionnaire, at the beginning of each session. Players,
coaches, staff, and volunteers showing symptoms of COVID-19 shall not be permitted to
participate. If any individual develops symptoms of COVID-19 during the activity, they
should promptly inform organizers and must be removed from the activity and
instructed to return home.
c. Encourage practice activities that do not involve sustained person-to-person contact
between athletes and/or coaching staff, and limit such activities in indoor settings. For
example, focus on individual skill-building activities.
d. Adhere to precautions outlined in the program preparation plan.
e. Ensure that athletes and coaches adhere to social distancing while not actively involved in
practice activities (on the bench, in the dugout, etc.). Consider assigning coaching staff to
monitor sideline social distancing.
f. If any equipment is provided by the operator, operators must minimize equipment sharing
and clean and disinfect shared equipment at the end of a practice session using a product
from the list of disinfectants meeting EPA criteria for use against the novel coronavirus. Do
not permit athletes to share food, beverages, water bottles, towels, pinnies, gloves,
helmets or any other equipment or materials that is involved in direct bodily contact.
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g. Consider dividing larger teams into smaller groups and staggering practices at different
times or across different days.
h. Limit any nonessential visitors, spectators, staff, volunteers, vendors, members of the
media, and activities involving external groups or organizations as much as possible.
Visitors and spectators should wear face coverings at all times, unless doing so would
inhibit the individual’s health or the individual is under the age of two.
i. Operators are encouraged to mark off spectator/chaperone viewing sites to allow for
social distancing. Visitors showing symptoms of COVID-19 shall not be permitted to
attend.
j. Restrict spitting, handshakes, high-fives, team huddles, and any other close-contacting
activities.
Competitions, tournaments, and other activities or events that involve interaction between athletes
from the same team or between teams carry significant risks that operators, towns, coaches,
parents and others should carefully consider before proceeding. If participating in or organizing a
competition:
d. Consider social distancing requirements when scheduling contests and events. Social
distancing will need to be maintained on buses/vans. Thus, multiple buses/vans and/or
individual parent/guardian transportation will likely be required. Games should be
scheduled at intervals that allow for proper sanitation of facilities and equipment
following each game.
Additional notes:
Programs that are governed by formal league rules or other binding agreements or affiliations should
comply with any COVID-19 and other health and safety rules applicable under those authorities but
must abide by the timeline regarding permitted practice activities and competition dates.