Vulnerable Groups - Independent Barring Board - Regulated Activity and Provider
- Monitoring - Fingerprints and DNA Retention
Independent Barring Board
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Clause 1 of the Safeguarding Vulnerable Groups Bill establishes a new
statutory body, that of the Independent Barring Board (IBB); with Schedule
1 making provision for membership and staffing arrangements, and the IBB’s
responsibilities in regard to reporting to Parliament and the Secretary
of State. In brief, when set up the IBB must establish and maintain two
new lists:
a) a children’s barred list which will integrate the current
List 99 (for teachers) and Protection of Children Act (POCA) List; and
b) an adult’s barred list which will replace the existing Protection
of Vulnerable Adults (POVA) List (clause 2).
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All future decisions as to whether someone ought to be barred from working
with children or vulnerable adults will be the responsibility of the IBB,
thus removing it from the Secretary of State (Jones 2006). However, the
Secretary of State will still retain a certain amount of authority over
the IBB; e.g. pay scales, appointment to and removal from the IBB
and the form in which it keeps its accounts (Schedule 1: 2(a and b); 3,
2(a); 11). More importantly, referral of names to it will be within the
remit of a Secretary of State (Schedule 2, Part 1).
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In order to allow its workload to be managed effectively the IBB will
be able to delegate its core functions internally. Core functions are
defined as:
a) determining whether it is appropriate for a person to be included
in a barred list;
b) determining whether to remove a person from a barred list;
c) considering representations made for the purposes of Schedule 2
(Schedule 1 8).
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Any function other than core functions can be delegated externally, (e.g.
purely administrative work to the Criminal Records Bureau. Schedule
1 7). The IBB must issue a report annually of the exercise of its functions
during the previous year. However, it will be up to the IBB to arrange
for the report to be published in such a manner as it considers appropriate
(Schedule 1 9).
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Regulated activity provider and regulated activity
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The legislation also creates ‘Regulated activity providers’
(RAP), to wit a person who:
a) has responsibility for the management or control of regulated activity;
and
b) makes arrangements (whether in connection with a contract of service
or for services or otherwise) for another person to engage in that activity
(Clause 6(2)(a) and (b)).
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The most obvious person in sport who would have both management and control
of an activity and arrange for someone else to engage in that activity
would be a sports coach/instructor. Here, the coach could arrange for
children to engage in the sport and could also arrange for parents to
help out. However, unincorporated associations will also fall within the
definition of a RAP. For these any requirement of or liability (including
criminal liability) under the Act will fall on:
a) the person responsible for the management and control of the association;
or
b) if there is more than one person, all of them jointly and severally
(Clause 6(7)(a) and (b)).
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The majority of local sports clubs are unincorporated associations, managed
and controlled by a committee; and the majority of these clubs provide
an ‘activity’ (sport). If the sport provided falls within
the scope of a regulated activity, by definition all the committee members,
be they paid or unpaid, will be RAPs for the purposes of the Act.
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Where children are concerned there are a number of definitions of regulated
activity; however, the one that has the greatest potential to apply in
a sports setting is:
... any form of teaching, training or instruction of children, unless
the teaching, training or instruction is merely part of or incidental
to teaching, training or instruction of persons who are not children
(Schedule 3, Part 1, clause 2(a).).
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This definition has been designed to include sports clubs run solely
for children, for it excludes clubs where both children and adults train
together. The result is that, when this provision becomes law in 2007,
anyone involved in the control and management of ‘all-children’
clubs are going to have extra legal responsibilities relating to the care
and supervision of those children.
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Criminal offences
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The extra legal responsibilities are going to arise as a result of the
creation of a number of new criminal offences.
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i) An individual will commit an offence if s/he:
a) seeks to engage in a regulated activity from which s/he is barred;
b) offers to engage in a regulated activity from which s/he is barred;
c) engages in regulated activity in a regulated activity from which
s/he is barred (Clause 7).
Barring will come as a result of a referral to the IBB, and can be automatic
or subject to representations. Here, a coach who has been barred will
commit the offence if s/he continues to coach children after being barred;
or tries to take up coaching children after being barred.
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ii) It will be an offence for a RAP to use a barred person for a regulated
activity if the RAP knows or has reason to believe that person has been
barred (Clause 9).
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iii) RAPS will not be the only ones with responsibilities under the legislation.
Clause 8 (1) makes it an offence for an individual to engage in regulated
activity ‘with the permission of’ a RAP if s/he is not subject
to monitoring (see below) by the Secretary of State. What this will mean
in practice is not made clear in the Explanatory Notes (Notes 2006) accompanying
the Bill. However, it would seem to be applicable to anyone; be it an
employee, independent contractor, or volunteer; a RAP allows to help with
the activity, for example assistant or trainee coach, club physiotherapist,
or parent helper.
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iv) Linking these last two offences is a further offence, that of RAPs
permitting someone to take part in a regulated activity without first
making an ‘appropriate check’ with the Secretary of State
to obtain ‘relevant information’ (Clause 11). Relevant information
will include, but will not be restricted to, whether or not the individual
is barred from the relevant regulated activity; or is subject to monitoring.
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v) Finally, there is to be a duty on a RAP to provide the IBB with prescribed
information about an individual (Clause 27); and a duty to provide information
if requested to do so (Clause 28). In fact, it is to be a criminal offence
not to do so (Clause 28). The type of information here includes
a) the withdrawing of permission for an individual to engage in a regulated
activity; and
b) the fact that the RAP would have withdrawn permission if the individual
had not stopped engaging in the activity (Clause 27).
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Monitoring
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Monitoring will come about if an individual is:
a) not barred;
b) makes a monitoring application;
c) satisfies the prescribed identification requirements; and
d) pays the prescribed fee (Clause 21(1)).
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When a monitoring application has been made to the Secretary of State
s/he will make all enquiries thought relevant to the application. These
inquiries can include, but not be restricted to, looking at records held
by the Passport Office, DVLA, National Insurance numbers office, and anywhere
else if it is decided that these places might hold relevant information.
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Comments
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The legislation is not intended to be retrospective and will not apply
to anyone already engaging in regulated activities - thus avoiding the
chaos experienced at the start of Criminal Records Bureau (CRB) checks
when both existing and new teachers and others deemed to be working with
children had to have a CRB check before starting work (Cowie 2002). However,
if s/he changes ‘jobs’ within a regulated activity, or someone
new is taken on, then the law begins to apply. The result is that generally,
it looks as though a lot more responsibility, and work, is going to be
placed on the shoulders of volunteers in sport at a local level. It could
also put an added financial burden on ‘cash strapped’ local
sport.
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Unless changes are made during the Bill’s passage through Parliament
a surprising loophole in the legislation will be that although those who
engage in the activity with the permission of the RAP will have to be
monitored, the RAP him/herself will not have to be. One result will be
that a self-employed RAP with an income from the activity will not have
to pay any monitoring fees. On the other hand, the volunteer helper may
have to, as it has not yet been decided how much the prescribed fee will
be; or whether, unlike now and CRB checks, volunteers will have to meet
some or all of the costs themselves.
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However, one of the more controversial aspects of the monitoring, especially
as far as volunteers are concerned, may prove to be that, in meeting the
prescribed identification requirements, the legislation provides for the
taking of fingerprints (Clause 21(9)). Whether this will be at a police
station and under controlled conditions has not yet been decided. The
same Clause also gives the Secretary of State the option for making provision
requiring the destruction of those finger prints in specified circumstances
and by specified people.
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As the law stands at the time of writing, should the Secretary of State
choose not to avail him/herself of that option, the ruling regarding the
destruction of fingerprints in R (on the application of S) v Chief
Constable of South Yorkshire; R (on the application of Marper) v Chief
Constable of South Yorkshire ([2002] EWCA Civ 1275; [2003] Crim LR
39) will apply. This case concerned the destruction of DNA samples taken
from people who have been arrested and charged and later acquitted. Section
64(1A) Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 empowers the police to retain
the lawfully-taken fingerprints and samples of un-convicted persons provided
that they could only be used for purposes related to the prevention or
detection of crime, the investigation of an offence or the conduct of
a prosecution. Relying on that power, and in accordance with a policy
to retain such material for those purposes save in exceptional circumstances,
the defendant chief constable decided to retain the fingerprints and samples
taken from the claimants. The claimants had appealed.
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It was held in R that:
[a]lthough the retention of [fingerprints and DNA samples] interfered
with the art 8(1) [ECHR] rights of individuals from whom [they] had
been taken, that interference was justified by art 8(2).... Nor were
the adverse consequences to the individual disproportionate to the benefit
to the public... [O]nce fingerprints and samples had been lawfully obtained,
there was a perfectly clear objective distinction between individuals
from whom such material had been taken and individuals from whom they
had not. No harmful consequences would flow from the retention unless
the fingerprints or samples matched those of someone alleged to be responsible
for an offence ([2002] EWCA Civ 1275, headnote).
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The case of R reveals the policy of the Home Office to retain
as much DNA, and fingerprint, information as it can. As this legislation
is designed specifically to accommodate the Bichard recommendations following
the scandal about deleted police information, perhaps it is not surprising
that a fingerprint as well as DNA database is being designed.
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However, as far as sport and volunteers are concerned, in 2005 (Telegraph)
Roy Case, Chairman of the English Golf Union was reported as saying that
the then new guidelines on child protection in sport were already discouraging
volunteers from helping next generation golfers. The report continued
by saying that the guidelines ‘... seem to reflect an unhealthy
national obsession with paedophilia, which bears no resemblance to the
scale of the danger’. If volunteers are already being discouraged
from helping out in children’s sport, how many more will be discouraged
by the fact that, if they have to have their fingerprints taken, those
fingerprints could continue to be held on a government database for the
rest of their lives? How many law-abiding parents will be reassured that
they will have nothing to fear from the law in the future, as there will
never be a ‘hit’ on their fingerprints retained after they
have finished with monitoring?
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On the other hand, how many will share similar opinions to those reported
to have been expressed by Furedi at the Cotton Wool Kids conference
in Glasgow in 2005? In referring to sport Furedi argued that:
... while many people on the left were concerned about the loss of
civil rights, such as free speech in the wake of the war in Iraq, nobody
was prepared to raise a murmur when it came to “ritualistic”
police checks on individuals in contact with children .... the “child
protection industry” ... can’t resist the temptation of
going anywhere where there are children. ... Anyone who has anything
to do with children has to have a security vetting. There is only one
possible consequence - it breeds mistrust.... [police checks] diminish
our humanity by making us more suspicious of each other. Freedoms are
being taken away because they are to do with children. But they are
not good for children, for us or for society (Buie 2005).
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These opinions may be controversial ones now, but this new law has the
potential to take away still more freedoms and impose still more responsibilities.
More innocent people could find themselves on a national government database
and it will be interesting to see how many more people will be sharing,
and voicing, similar opinions to Case and Furedi in a year or two’s
time.
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Buie E (2005) ‘Children are “living in a security state”’
The Times Educational Supplement, September 23 p. 1.
Cowie E (2002) ‘Criminal vetting backlog spreads’. The Sunday Times
September 1, p. 4.
Jones G (2006) ‘Kelly reveals the extent of sex offence loophole’.
The Daily Telegraph January 20, p 4.
The Daily Telegraph (2005) June 27, p. 19.
Williams, Yvonne, "The potential of the Safeguarding Vulnerable Groups Bill
for children's sport",
, ISSN 1748-944X, April 2006, <http://go.warwick.ac.uk/eslj/issues/volume4/number1/williams/>