Charities (Protection and Social Investment) Bill [HL] Debate

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Department: Cabinet Office

Charities (Protection and Social Investment) Bill [HL]

Lord Bridges of Headley Excerpts
Monday 29th June 2015

(9 years, 5 months ago)

Grand Committee
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Lord Watson of Invergowrie Portrait Lord Watson of Invergowrie (Lab)
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My Lords, as one who was a member of the Joint Committee under the excellent chairmanship of the noble and learned Lord, Lord Hope, I share his puzzlement as to why this change has been made to the draft Bill. I have no wish to repeat the words of the noble and learned Lord, but those of us in opposition do not fully understand why such a change should have been made and we invite the Minister to explain that if he can, and to say why, after the Joint Committee recommended acceptance of the draft proposal, and given that, as we have heard, the Charity Commission wants this change, the original wording of the draft Bill should not be reinstated. There is little more to say than that. I look forward to the Minister’s response.

Lord Bridges of Headley Portrait The Parliamentary Secretary, Cabinet Office (Lord Bridges of Headley) (Con)
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My Lords, I, too, will keep my remarks relatively brief, by reason of the conclusion that I have come to as a result of what the noble and learned Lord and the noble Lord have said.

The provision corresponding to Clause 8 in the Bill made reference to “unable” in the manner proposed by this amendment. The Charity Commission asked for the change following several cases where financial institutions holding charity property were contractually unable to transfer it to secure its proper charitable application but would have been willing to do so. As the noble and learned Lord said, the Joint Committee which considered the draft Bill supported the provision.

However, as is noted in the report, the Charity Law Association, while it did not oppose the change, questioned whether the meaning of the word “unable” was sufficiently clear and whether banks in such situations were really unable to transfer charity property, or simply unable to breach a contract to do so. Therefore the Joint Committee recommended that the Government consider the inclusion of some form of statutory protection for a financial institution in cases where compliance with a Charity Commission direction in these circumstances might constitute a breach of its contract with a charity. The Government therefore followed this recommendation and amended Clause 8 to provide for such statutory protection. Since the clause was aimed at dealing with financial institutions which are contractually unable to transfer property, this statutory protection was considered sufficient and the reference to “unable” was omitted.

The amendment tabled by the noble and learned Lord, Lord Hope, proposes to reinstate the reference to “unable”, as we have heard, and further examples have been provided as to when this would be needed beyond the contractual liabilities of banks. I also note what the noble and learned Lord said about his conversations with the Charity Commission. In light of this, I am happy to give further consideration to the amendment and to return to this on Report.

Lord Hope of Craighead Portrait Lord Hope of Craighead
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My Lords, I am grateful to the noble Lord for his remarks. It is worth adding that the wording of Clause 85(1) is quite general—it refers to,

“a person or persons in possession or control of any property”.

It does not confine the provision to banks alone. Although they may be the main aim of the provision, it is more widely cast, so whatever the banks may think is not the end of the story.

I hope that the noble Lord will bring forward something on Report without my finding it necessary to table another amendment to keep the matter alive. For the time being, however, in light of what the Minister has said, which I very much welcome, I beg leave to withdraw the amendment.

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Baroness Hayter of Kentish Town Portrait Baroness Hayter of Kentish Town (Lab)
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My Lords, it is a sobering day even to discuss something with the word “terrorism” in it. I note that the House of Commons had a moment of silence at 3.30 pm, which maybe is a lesson for all of us.

On the amendment before us, the Committee will know that we have always been a bit jumpy about Henry VIII powers. However, it is very important to have this provision in the Bill because I did not move Amendment 7, which we dealt with on the first day of Committee last week, when we dealt with our attempt to include people on the sex offenders register on the list of those who are precluded—which, frankly, I take more seriously than someone who has got into a bit of debt and has an IVA. The Minister did not think that that was appropriate, and I hope very much that he is right and that we will not have a trustee who is on the sexual offenders register and then abuses someone, which would show that I was right and he was wrong. I do not want to be in that position, for fairly obvious reasons. However, if we find that the evidence is that we should have added those on the sex offenders register to those who are precluded from being a trustee, unless there is a waiver, this provision would allow the Minister, at that stage, to put right—unless we win the vote on Report—what would be an omission from the Bill.

There is always a problem with retrospective legislation, which would be the same now for people convicted for other things. Therefore, it will be important that the implementation date of any regulation is in good time to notify people so that they do not suddenly find themselves acting as a trustee and putting a charity at risk because of some new provision that then comes in. However, if it was something such as someone being on the sex offenders register, that is a known register and they would be able to be notified pretty easily that they could no longer act as a trustee. As a failsafe, albeit that any new measure should be by the affirmative procedure, we are content to see this power in the Bill.

Lord Bridges of Headley Portrait Lord Bridges of Headley
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My Lords, I am grateful to the noble Baroness, Lady Barker, for her explanation of this amendment, which was typically reasonable and eloquent. Subsection (4) of new Section 178A, inserted by Clause 9, would enable the Minister by affirmative procedure to make regulations to amend the list of criteria for automatic disqualification by adding or removing an offence.

The Joint Committee that undertook pre-legislative scrutiny of the draft Bill recommended that there be a requirement for any such regulations to be consulted on. The Government agreed and made provision, in subsection (21) of Clause 9, for there to be a requirement to consult on draft regulations where they add an offence.

The Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee’s first report of this Session stated that the committee was satisfied with the delegation and level of scrutiny in relation to this power when it had advised the Joint Committee on the Draft Protection of Charities Bill. It recognised that the Cabinet Office may in future need to take urgent steps to specify offences that should result in automatic disqualification, and considered that the affirmative resolution procedure would provide an appropriate safeguard.

The DPRRC, however, has raised a question about the commencement of new Section 178A and any regulations made under it. The last Government’s response to the Joint Committee’s report on the draft protection of charities Bill stated that we,

“commit to ensuring that sufficient time would be allowed before the commencement of such provisions”.

I will, therefore, happily provide a commitment to your Lordships that a disqualification would not take place under new Section 178A in relation to a person previously convicted of a specified offence until at least two months after enactment of the section and, in all but exceptional circumstances, until at least two months after the date that any regulations are made under subsection (4). We would want to ensure there was sufficient time to notify charities of the new offences.

When the Bill becomes law, we will publish an implementation plan that will set out when the different provisions of the Bill will be commenced. This will include the timetable for commencement of the automatic disqualification provisions under new Section 178A. The Charity Commission has said that it is planning a wide-ranging communications strategy in order to give those affected by automatic disqualification a fair opportunity to learn of the relevant changes before they come into force. Where we undertake any consultation, we will ensure that it is compliant with the compact.

I know that the Lords Constitution Committee has also considered the power to add offences. Its second report of this current Session states that this power to add new offences is not explicitly constrained in its scope, so perhaps I can provide some assurances to your Lordships on how the power would be used, and address a number of the points made.

First, while it may be considered unnecessary, I should nevertheless point out that there are no plans to exercise the power. Its purpose is to enable Ministers in future to amend the list of offences as new criminal offences are created which may be identified as appropriate for automatic disqualification, or criminal offences currently listed may no longer be appropriate, meaning the list needs to be updated. The prospect of a power to amend the list of offences was raised in consultation last year and was generally well supported by respondents, provided the power is subject to the affirmative procedure.

It should go without saying that, in considering any new offence to add to the list, there would need to be a clear rationale for adding that particular offence. The offence would have to be relevant to a person’s fitness to act as a trustee. We would set that out in consulting on the addition of any new offence. That consultation is a statutory requirement. Of course, the safeguards of the public consultation and the affirmative resolution procedure in Parliament—a point my noble friend Lord Hodgson of Astley Abbotts raised—should also provide a significant measure of assurance.

I hope that I have been able to give sufficient assurances to your Lordships on how this power would be used, and invite the noble Baroness to withdraw her amendment.

Baroness Barker Portrait Baroness Barker
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My Lords, I thank the Minister for that characteristically considered answer. It was helpful to have this fleshed out and to have statements on the record from the Dispatch Box.

As I tried to indicate in my opening remarks, and as the noble and learned Lord, Lord Hope of Craighead, indicated on behalf of the committee, there is a widespread understanding in the sector that this is necessary. There is not such a widespread understanding, but perhaps some relief, that some charities may be able to use the provisions of this clause to deter unsuitable people from becoming trustees. That may well be a good thing. It is simply that, within the current climate and context of the debate about the nature of terrorism legislation and its ever-widening grip on our lives, those of us in opposition are beholden to pressure the Government on these matters to make sure that we are not being unduly punitive towards individuals for all the wrong reasons.

I therefore take the Minister’s explanations and I listened to what he said about the extent to which there will be public consultation. With that in mind, I beg leave to withdraw the amendment.

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Lord Bridges of Headley Portrait Lord Bridges of Headley
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My Lords, this debate is clearly overshadowed by the horrific and terrible events in Tunisia, France and Kuwait last week. I, too, express my condolences to those who lost loved ones. I would certainly not wish to imply that anyone who raises the issues that we have been discussing is in any way soft on terrorists.

Rather than rehearse all the arguments about this clause, let me address directly the point about the so-called chilling effect that some have spoken of. I recognise fully that this is a concern for some charities operating in some of the most difficult parts of the world. I will come on to explain why I disagree with the need for carve-outs. My belief is that we need to develop a clear understanding of NGOs’ concerns and see examples of where difficulties occur. We also need to avoid seeing the Bill as a means to tamper with or revise counterterrorist legislation itself—not that any of your Lordships have suggested that, but it is worth bearing in mind.

The noble Lord, Lord Watson, asked what I have been doing about this since Second Reading. I assure him that I have not been totally idle. I have been turning over the stones and seeing what is going on, and it is clear that there is a considerable amount of activity within government. I will not bore the noble Lord with a long laundry list but several government departments and other bodies, including the Home Office, the Treasury, DfID, the Charity Commission and the Cabinet Office, have been engaging with NGOs to understand their concerns and to ensure wherever possible that their concerns are properly covered by and in guidance. In 2014-15, for example, the commission engaged with more than 100 charities that operate internationally, and it regularly meets the Disasters Emergency Committee.

In many cases, there is already detailed guidance dealing with the points that have been raised, although I fully accept it may well be the case that better signposting, better explanation and more discussion are needed. The Charity Commission has produced and published a range of specific guidance for charities on managing the risks of operating overseas and on the abuse of charities for terrorist purposes. This includes the risks of links to or association with terrorist activity or abuse. This guidance is published on the commission’s website and includes the requirements for charities under UK counterterrorism legislation and charity law.

What I am taking from this debate is that we need to have more communication with these charities in a more targeted way. The Government’s assessment is that neither existing terrorism legislation nor other legislation prevents organisations, including charities and NGOs, operating in the UK or overseas. The legislative framework is deliberately drawn widely to capture the ever-diversifying nature of the terrorist threat faced. The chances of prosecution of an individual for a terrorism-related offence as a result of their involvement in legitimate humanitarian efforts are considered to be low, as was referred to a moment ago, although this can be determined only on a case-by-case basis and on the particular circumstances of each case.

It is not possible to provide assurances to the charitable sector or to those engaged in humanitarian efforts about possible prosecutions, as doing so might obviously fetter the discretion of the Crown Prosecution Service. Equally, doing so could create a loophole that could be exploited by the unscrupulous. In the interests of fairness, every case must be treated on an individual basis by the independent prosecution authorities, subject to the evidence available and their judgment on whether it is in the public interest to proceed with a case.

There has been one recent case involving a charity and connected individuals being investigated on suspicion of breaching UK counterterrorism legislation. The alleged offence related to the charity’s humanitarian efforts in Somalia. The normal police and prosecution decision-making processes were followed, and the Attorney-General accepted the CPS’s recommendation that prosecution in this instance was not in the public interest. Therefore it did not proceed. Furthermore, the Government do not consider it necessary for there to be a carve-out or exemption for charities because there is no evidence of a significant number of prosecutions against them, which suggests that the protections already in place are adequate. For example, the public interest test, as set out in the Code for Crown Prosecutors, sets out the factors considered when prosecution is appropriate.

Some have argued that the disqualification provision should not apply to people designated under terrorist asset-freezing legislation, as this is not a criminal offence and is not subject to the same standard of proof. I disagree. The Terrorist Asset-Freezing etc. Act provides the Treasury with powers to freeze the funds and economic resources of those suspected of, or believed to be involved in, terrorist activities and restricts the making available of funds, financial services and economic resources to or for the benefit of such persons. These are highly targeted measures. The latest consolidated list of those designated under the UK’s terrorist asset-freezing legislation contains 23 individuals. Furthermore, if the case is serious enough to designate an individual under this legislation, it is impossible to see how such a person could be considered fit to serve as a charity trustee or manager. It would be an absurd position for an individual to have their own funds frozen but to be in a position to fundraise for a charity or to control a charity’s funds or activities. Nevertheless, as a safeguard, a person who was disqualified by virtue of designation would be entitled to apply to the Charity Commission for a waiver from disqualification, and the commission’s decision would be appealable to the Charity Tribunal.

Clause 9 agreed.
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Baroness Warwick of Undercliffe Portrait Baroness Warwick of Undercliffe
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My Lords, I support my noble friend Lady Hayter in her amendment to reaffirm the independence of charities and of charity trustees. I declare an interest, in addition to others I have previously declared, as the chair-designate of the National Housing Federation.

The purpose of the Bill is to strengthen public trust and confidence in charities. The public will have that confidence only if charities are well run, live their values, fulfil their stated aims, deliver what they were set up to do and achieve value for the money entrusted to them to deliver services. Charity trustees have an obligation to act in accordance with their trust deed or governing document and to deliver their charitable outcomes for the benefit of the public. They are independent bodies, set up under a range of legal arrangements: they might be trusts, as we have learnt, companies limited by guarantee, incorporated by royal charter, or charitable incorporated organisations, all of which have different legal personalities.

Like my noble friend, I am concerned about one group of charities, housing associations, whose governance requirements might fall into any of the categories I just mentioned. However, they have one characteristic in common: all of them are independent of government at either local or national level, but they will be affected by a government policy, the right to buy, which could make them unable to deliver their stated aims, because they will be constrained in their freedom to make independent decisions about the use of their assets. As I have said, trustees have a fiduciary duty to use their charitable funds and assets reasonably and only in furtherance of the charity’s objects. They must avoid activities that might place the charity’s endowment, funds, assets or reputation at undue risk. However, the right to buy will ride roughshod over trustees’ responsibilities to take strategic responsibility for the disposal of their property assets.

I will not repeat the points I made in the debate about affordable housing on Thursday or the statistics highlighted so strongly by my noble friend, but I do want to emphasise the wide range of tenants and communities with which these housing associations work: those paying social and affordable rents, private renters, those with disabilities, those who need care and those in properties for shared ownership or outright sale. Housing associations are extremely flexible in response to tenants’ needs and, as has been said, are hugely ambitious to build more homes. It is clear that they will be critical to delivering the national response to the current housing crisis, yet they may be hobbled in trying to do so.

Trustees have to balance their charitable goals of building homes for those in greatest need with delivering homes right across the market. They have become extraordinarily adept at leveraging in private finance because finance companies have confidence in the trustees’ effective management of assets. If trustees’ control over their assets were to be undermined, that would make investors nervous and therefore less inclined to invest. Housing associations’ ability to build enough houses to meet national need will then be undermined.

To add to that downturn, there are nearly 2 million people on housing waiting lists and there is a real shortage of homes at affordable and social rent. While replacing homes sold, housing associations will have less capacity to build the new affordable homes needed. Meanwhile, local councils will be selling their high-value homes to fund the process and ostensibly replacing them one for one. But this has proved a challenging target in the past and there is every expectation it will be so in the future.

The charities Bill is not the place to sort out these policy problems, nor is it the place to decide whether historic charity law in all its variety might need to be tested. But it is the place to reaffirm the centuries-old principle of the independence of charities and the overarching duty of trustees to act only to fulfil the charity’s purpose. I urge the Minister to let that ring out loud and clear by agreeing to include the proposed new clause in the Bill.

Lord Bridges of Headley Portrait Lord Bridges of Headley
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My Lords, I thank all noble Lords for their contributions, which were clearly eloquent and heartfelt. I note your Lordships’ concerns and will ensure that they are brought to the attention of my honourable friend the Minister for Housing. I say that because the extension of the right to buy is being taken forward, as the noble Baroness just said, in another Bill, which is yet to be presented to the House. That Bill is the right place to have the debate on these issues. My noble friend Lady Williams of Trafford, the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government, explained to the House that our honourable friend in the other place—the Minister, Brandon Lewis—is already leading the engagement with the sector on our housing commitments as set out in our manifesto and is happy to meet Members of this House and others.

I turn specifically to the noble Baroness’s amendment. Under charity law, charities are already required to obtain the best price available when an asset is sold in most cases and the proceeds of the sale must be used to further the charity’s purposes. Amendment 12 seeks to prevent charities from using or disposing of assets in a way that is inconsistent with their charitable purposes. That would cause problems. Many charities hold property investments that are not directly used to further the charity’s purposes, some of which may not be consistent with the charity’s purpose. Instead, the investments are used to generate an income which is then used to further the charity’s purposes. What is relevant in this context is the income the charity can obtain, not whether its property is being used in a manner consistent with the charity’s purposes. Of course, many charities can and do use property assets directly or indirectly to further their purposes—but the point is that there are many that do not and which instead view property solely as a financial investment.

There is another problem with the noble Baroness’s amendment: it seeks to prevent charities being compelled to dispose of assets. There are already circumstances where charities can be compelled to sell an asset. They can be subject to compulsory purchase orders like any property owner. The Charity Commission and courts have powers to require charities to dispose of assets in certain circumstances and for the proceeds to be applied for the same or similar charitable purposes, although not necessarily in the same charity.

As the noble Baroness mentioned, there is also the preserved right to buy in relation to housing associations, which 630,000 tenants enjoy, and the right to acquire, which 800,000 tenants already have and which, when exercised, would compel the charity to sell assets. These existing rights would be undermined by the noble Baroness’s amendment.

I am sure that it was not the noble Baroness’s intention to frustrate with this amendment the existing right to buy, planning laws, or the powers of the court or the Charity Commission. I hope that she will accept that the proper time and place to debate the right-to-buy policy will be when the legislation on that subject is brought before the House.

Lord Campbell-Savours Portrait Lord Campbell-Savours
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On that matter, the Minister invited Members of this House and others to meet the Ministers involved in this whole debate regarding housing associations. Could he give us an assurance that he will approach the noble Baroness, Lady Williams of Trafford, to ask her to invite representatives of the community land trust network nationally to discuss this matter? All we need is an assurance that they will be invited to the department to meet Ministers before that Bill reaches the Commons.

Lord Bridges of Headley Portrait Lord Bridges of Headley
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My Lords, I am happy to give the noble Lord an assurance that I will raise this matter with the noble Baroness, Lady Williams of Trafford, and will draw her attention to his clearly heartfelt views. I repeat that I will pass on to my honourable friend the Housing Minister all the points that have been made to ensure that he considers them when developing the policy further.

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Baroness Barker Portrait Baroness Barker
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My Lords, I agree to a certain extent with what the noble Lord, Lord Hodgson, said. He has wrestled with this particular issue for the best part of six years now and he bears some of the scars accordingly. There is no doubt that the voluntary and charitable sector is acutely aware that this particular case has raised this matter to a point where it can no longer be ignored or shunted around between different bodies. Some noble Lords were present at a national event held by the NCVO two weeks ago, at which Sir Stuart Etherington stated in terms to the great and the good of the voluntary sector there assembled that they cannot dodge this issue anymore and that the voluntary sector has to come up with some strong self-regulation. If it does not, it will find itself on the receiving end of regulation from government.

It really is quite tough for the voluntary sector to do that, not least because the noble Lord, Lord Hodgson, is right: there are completely different types of organisations doing different things in different ways, which are all subsumed under the catch-all of “fundraising”. It is sometimes the bigger organisations—the multimillion pound organisations—that have the resources with which to emulate practice in the private sector, which is sometimes pressurised but which actually works. That is the problem: emotional appeals and pressure work.

Equally, very small charities that work locally and in a face-to-face way, raising small amounts, quite often have a higher level of ethical practice because they have to: they work in communities where, if they work even remotely unethically, they do not raise money. There are then those charities that operate in the middle, which sometimes are some of the most innovative organisations of all but which would be the ones that would fall foul of regulatory requirements, just because they do not have vast teams of people overseeing their compliance.

A fundamental problem for charities is that when they are open and transparent about their fundraising costs, they put themselves in the firing line for all sorts of comment. It makes them incredibly reluctant to do that—not because they want to deceive anybody but because the very same people who have taken it upon themselves, quite rightly, to criticise in cases such as this take the charities to task for doing that. You cannot run a compliant, ethical and effective fundraising operation on thin air. You cannot do it.

The noble Baroness is right to do her bit to up the temperature on the voluntary sector at this moment, but I am not sure she is absolutely right with the amendment that she has put forward. I believe that the voluntary sector should be allowed one last chance in the last chance saloon to put itself right. The noble Lord, Lord Hodgson, is also right that there are too many different bodies all hovering around the same thing, clogging up the decision-making, and there needs to be a rationalisation of that. I would suggest that there should be a time limit, say of a year. If the voluntary sector does not come forward with a new code of conduct within that year, the Government would be absolutely right to step in at that point and exercise their powers.

Lord Bridges of Headley Portrait Lord Bridges of Headley
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My Lords, we are all understandably concerned about the reports of the fundraising activities used by a small number of charities. There is certainly no complacency on behalf of the Government on this issue; the debate and the possible disagreement are over what should be done. I hope, as the noble Baroness, Lady Barker, just said, that the self-regulatory bodies note the fact that everyone wants action to be taken and to be taken soon.

Last week my honourable friend from the other place, the Minister for Civil Society, Rob Wilson, addressed fundraisers and made it clear that the clock is ticking for them to get a grip on self-regulation. He said:

“I am giving self­regulation an opportunity to demonstrate it can work effectively and make the short term and long term reforms necessary. I urge you to take that window of opportunity seriously as the window may not remain open for much longer … Change is essential. You should embrace it and lead it, rather than wait and allow others to do it for you”.

The noble Baroness, Lady Hayter, cited a report in the Daily Telegraph. The Daily Telegraph is obviously a fantastic newspaper but I would not believe everything that I read in it. I am not sure where that particular date has come from, but I should stress that, as I have said, self-regulatory bodies have a relatively short opportunity to demonstrate that they are getting to grips with self-regulation.

It has been less than two months since poor fundraising practices were thrust into the media spotlight following the sad and tragic death of Olive Cooke. The extent to which she was influenced by poor fundraising practices is not entirely clear, but the issue, as the noble Baroness so rightly said, has clearly struck a chord with the public. Since then there has been a steady stream of media reports about unacceptable fundraising practices—whether direct mail, telephone fundraising or door-to-door fundraising.

As I said, I think almost everyone agrees that there needs to be change. The question is what change and who should lead it. It strikes me that there are three questions that need answering: first, whether the standards fundraisers have set themselves are high enough; secondly, whether the structures for self-regulation are the right ones; and thirdly, whether fundraisers and the charity trustees who oversee them accept the need for change to ensure that donors are treated with honesty, respect and decency.

On the first question, whether the standards for fundraisers are high enough, the answer is a clear no in relation to some fundraising practices. That is why the Minister for Civil Society met the regulators at the beginning of June and set them a challenge to improve standards in a number of areas. This work is continuing but it must bear fruit.

I welcome the announcement by the Institute of Fundraising, on 24 June, that it is strengthening its code of fundraising practice by requiring door-to-door fundraisers not to knock on doors that have a “no cold calling” sticker. However, that is something it should have done proactively some time ago. I know that several review groups have been established and are looking at various issues, including options for opt-in and opt-out, frequency of contact, and whether there can be a one-stop shop for people who want to come off all fundraising contact lists.