Protection of Freedoms Act 2012 (Disclosure and Barring Service Transfer of Functions) Order 2012 Debate
Full Debate: Read Full DebateBaroness Smith of Basildon
Main Page: Baroness Smith of Basildon (Labour - Life peer)Department Debates - View all Baroness Smith of Basildon's debates with the Home Office
(12 years ago)
Grand CommitteeMy Lords, I thank my noble friend the Minister for explaining this statutory instrument. I have no reason to object to the streamlining of these organisations. It makes sense to bring together the collection and dissemination of criminal records information and barring decisions and to maintain those lists. However, I turned to the Explanatory Memorandum to have a look at what it says about consultation and I noted that it says that the changes are consequential on the Government’s remodelling review, on which there was consultation. Many of us who were part of that consultation were most grateful to my noble friend the Minister’s predecessor, the noble Lord, Lord Henley, at the Home Office, who was kind enough to spend quite a lot of his time consulting us. The problems identified by those who were concerned about the original legislation have been recently compounded. Employers in the further education colleges sector and the amateur sports organisations sector were particularly concerned about the reduction in the number of people who were going to be subjected to revelations about their background.
Perhaps I could summarise my remarks by asking my noble friend the Minister to tell the Committee how he feels that these new arrangements will help to prevent recent situations such as the Jimmy Savile situation and the terrible stories that came out of the Bryn Estyn school in North Wales some years ago. Those situations related to people who had never committed a crime and therefore they did not have a criminal record. So I would like to know how this streamlined arrangement will help to protect children in those circumstances.
My Lords, I thank the Minister for his explanation and the information he gave in speaking to this order. I appreciate that orders of this kind often necessitate a long list of amendments. There is always the hope that the Explanatory Notes will make them clearer ... but they rarely do. I liked the comment in the Explanatory Note on page 20:
“Chapter 2 makes amendments to the principal enactments which are consequential on this transfer of functions and Chapter 3 makes amendments to other enactments which are consequential on this transfer of functions. Chapter 4 makes supplemental provision”.
It then goes on. It is quite a minefield for anyone to negotiate exactly what the order does. I know that the Government say in the Explanatory Notes that a consolidation order is not necessary but I wonder whether there should be a rethink on that. Just on page 2 of the order, there are six different pieces of legislation; there are also a number of orders and other secondary legislation—rules, procedures and regulation—referred to, which all concern amendments.
Those who need to consult this legislation should be able to do so as easily as possible and with the utmost clarity. Many people have a professional responsibility to enact this legislation and, presumably, need to be aware of it all and any other changes made to it since 1997. I wonder how much legislation somebody will have to have to hand to work their way through the minefield of amendments in this order and in other provisions. I do not know whether the legislation referred to on page 2 has previously been amended. If so, it seems quite a complex task for anyone and I am interested in the guidance that is being issued to professionals alongside this order. When and how will that be made available and can it be made available to those attending today’s Committee? It is crucial, particularly given the change of name and the merger of the two organisations, that there is some professional and public understanding and awareness of all the different changes being made. It would be helpful if the Minister could say something about publicity or any other measures being taken to alert the public and professionals to the changes being made.
The Minister explained the broad outline of the order, which is basically that the Disclosure and Barring Service—not a particularly catchy name; I hope people understand what that is going to mean—will take over the powers that were previously the responsibility of the Secretary of State under Part 5 of the Police Act 1997, the Safeguarding Vulnerable Groups Act 2006 and the safeguarding vulnerable groups order of 2007. It was helpful that the Minister gave some description of the functions that will transfer, and those that will not, because there is concern that functions are being transferred from the Secretary of State to the newly merged organisation—the DBS. As originally intended in the legislation, such responsibilities are those of the Secretary of State, with the holder of that office being accountable to Parliament. Given the number of issues that have been raised about failures in the system to fully protect vulnerable children and vulnerable adults, it is clearly advisable that parliamentarians should not lose an opportunity to ask questions or seek Statements from the Secretary of State or a government Minister on these issues, if they so wished.
I have a question about accountability issues. Will that accountability and scrutiny role still be available to parliamentarians? In particular, if Members of either House are asking parliamentary questions of Ministers, will they in future merely be referred to the head of the DBS and not be answered by Ministers? Clearly, the original intention of Parliament was that there should be a direct responsibility to Parliament for those functions. The issue is whether it is appropriate for those powers to be handed to a new, separate body, unaccountable in parliamentary terms, through secondary legislation. That is my point about questions and Statements. Can the Minister also say anything about the scrutiny arrangements that will be put in place to oversee the performance of those functions?
The SI lays out the legislative steps required to merge the two bodies. The Minister spoke to that but can he update us on the practical steps being taken? He said something about it, but the DBS will inherit powers from the ISA and it would be helpful to know what practical, step-by-step arrangements are taking place. It was helpful that the Minister referred to both sites. Will the two sites operate as they do now or will there be a movement and integration of staff and functions across them? Is the new management structure now in place? He referred to the chief executive and chair, but does that go further down the organisation? How much progress has been made on the new IT system? We all know that there are always issues with new IT systems. Is it possible to update the Committee at this stage on the costs related to it and when it is expected to be fully operational?
The noble Baroness has been true to form in providing the Minister with lots of questions—quite rightly—to challenge his knowledge of the subject. I have taken quite an interest in this particular area, because, as Minister for Criminal Information, my Home Office responsibilities include the current CRB and ISA and will include the DBS. So I hope that I can reassure the noble Baroness.
Perhaps I could correct something that the Minister said—that I am asking questions to challenge his knowledge of the subject. That is really not why I am asking them; I never doubt his knowledge of the subject. It is just because there are issues, when I am reading through an order like this, which occur to me and to which I would like answers. There is nothing more sinister to it than that.
I do not attribute any base motive to the noble Baroness. However, it sets me on key, because these are legitimate questions, as she rightly points out, to which everyone has the right to know the answer. It has been helpful to be able to explain the main purpose of the transfer of functions order, to put it in the context of the change of management that will flow from it. As we are making a substantial change, in the sense that the two bodies are being merged into one, it is important that I have the opportunity to explain it to the Committee. We are trying to bring about reform. We have tried to avoid unnecessary bureaucracy to encourage volunteering and employers and other organisations rightly to share responsibility for the adequate safeguarding of children and other vulnerable groups.
We need to move away from a tick-box mentality. Employers think that a criminal records inquiry is all that they need to check on the desirability of employing someone. That leads in quite well to the comments made by my noble friend Lady Walmsley, who has been assiduous in dealing with these matters. I am pleased that she paid tribute to the engagement of my predecessor, the noble Lord, Lord Henley, in this issue. This change is not designed, of course, to weaken checks. The noble Baroness mentioned this in the context of various current investigations and, in truth, these matters should have been promptly reported to the police. She also mentioned the absence of criminal records of particular individuals. This shows that effective management and supervision of volunteers and professionals within the group is key: the checks go only so far. Effective management and supervision of all volunteers is one of the reasons why we can have an updating service and a capacity for people to volunteer more easily. However, the people who are responsible for managing volunteers have an enhanced responsibility to make sure that they perform their tasks in a proper way and do not exploit them for more sinister purposes.
The noble Baroness, Lady Smith of Basildon, asked about guidance. She made a little fun of the complexity of the order. It is complex—it is the kind of document that drives me mad—and, as I am a simple country chap, I find this stuff largely beyond me. However, the law needs to be regularised and this statutory instrument is there to regularise the legal framework. The key is how the public see these matters. They do not see them through a statutory instrument but through what we tell them about the service. Promoting the CRB update service will be important as a part of this.
We have highlighted these changes through road shows and both organisations have been communicating regularly with stakeholders about the changes. So people who regularly use the facilities have been kept in the picture. I have been impressed by the way in which both organisations see themselves as supporting the employers and managers of the people who are part of the information service they provide.
It is important to mention—I alluded to this earlier—the role of the Home Secretary in connection with a non-departmental government organisation. The Home Office will continue to answer questions about the new body and its accountability from Members of Parliament in another place and Members of this House. We will monitor the progress of this merger and I hope, in a year’s time or so when the system has settled down, we might be able to persuade the usual channels to hold a debate on how the service is functioning. I hope I have been able to reassure noble Lords on that.
As for staff moving from Liverpool and Darlington, obviously this would be a cause for concern but it is not part of the current plan. The chief executive-designate and the chair-designate have confirmed that they do not anticipate doing anything about changing the two site locations in the first two years. This position has been shared with staff and the TUC. They will continue to seek some flexibility from staff over travelling between the two work locations to attend meetings so that they can establish an effective organisation, but that is going on already and people have been working well together. I have gathered that there is a sense of ambition about the new service from both the CRB and the ISA.
Will there be efficiency savings? There will be some efficiency savings but, more to the point, it provides a single focus for a complementary service that will be found within the CRB and the ISA. We are not looking to make any particular changes to the structures other than those that have already been consulted on. As the noble Baroness would expect, TUPE provisions will apply in these circumstances but there are no redundancies, so it has been a matter just of consultation and having regular briefings on how the future organisation might work to provide an integrated service.
The noble Baroness asked about numbers and whether there had been an increase in referrals to the ISA. I was not aware of that. Although I was shown some figures, I did not bring them with me today. I know that there was a slight rise in CRB figures over the summer but it was a modest percentage, which may have been because of the increased activity around the Olympics. I know we have figures from CRB up to September. If I may, I will write to the noble Baroness and give her the full set of figures on that.
Meanwhile, I hope noble Lords are content to commend the order to the House by approving this draft order.