§ Baroness Hiltonof Eggardon asked Her Majesty's Government: What plans they have to make regulations under Part 5 of the Police Act 1997. [HL127]
§ The Minister of State, Home Office (Baroness Scotland of Asthal)I have today placed in the Library of the House a copy of a consultation paper on draft regulations to be made under Part 5 of the Police Act 1997 aimed at strengthening the role of registered bodies in the disclosure process. Responses to the consultation are invited by 23 February 2004.
The draft regulations will be made under new powers conferred by the Criminal Justice Act 2003. These implement key recommendations of the independent review team appointed, in September 2002, by the Home Secretary to take a fundamental look at the operations of the Criminal Records Bureau. In particular, the review team recommended that the critical role of registered bodies in the disclosure process should be upgraded by making them unambiguously responsible for validating the identity of disclosure applicants and for ensuring that application forms are fully and accurately completed. The draft regulations achieve these objectives by attaching conditions to registration; where such conditions are breached the provisions in the Criminal Justice Act will enable a registered body's registration to be suspended or revoked.
The Criminal Records Bureau will put in place a registered body assurance team to improve the level of training and support to registered bodies to help them to meet the standards expected of them. To meet the cost of managing and supporting the registered body network, the draft regulations provide for registered bodies to pay an annual fee of £300. The consultation paper invites views on alternative means of funding the registered body assurance team.
By raising the professionalism of registered bodies in this way we can further improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the disclosure process. The performance of the CRB has improved considerably over the past year. It now has the capacity to process over 50,000 disclosure applications per week, double the number of summer 2002, and is consistently meeting its service standards of issuing 90 per cent of standard and enhanced disclosures within two and four weeks respectively. Moreover, the CRB has now taken on the processing of some one quarter of a million applications from staff working in the care sector.
We have previously made clear that the CRB must be self-financing from 2005-06. As the CRB moves towards full-cost recovery, it is necessary to reduce 22WA (from £18.8 million in 2003–04 to £8.1 million in 2004–05) the substantial subsidy the bureau currently receives from the general taxpayer and make a compensating increase in the disclosure fee. From 1 April 2004 the fee for an enhanced disclosure will be £33 and for a standard disclosure £28. The fee payable by a registered body for registering an additional counter-signatory will be increased to £33. Disclosures will continue to be issued free to volunteers, saving the voluntary sector some £12 million in 2004–05.