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Vetting & Barring Scheme and CRB Regime - Latest UpdateLast year there was talk about there being a ONCE ONLY CRB / ISA check, with the Police and Courts then updating the appropriate authorities should something crop up with an individual of a notifiable profession. This is an update on the current state of affairs which looks like it will come into force on November 22nd 2012:
24
January 2012
Vetting
& Barring Scheme and Criminal Records Regime Review
recommendations - Latest
Update Welcome
to a new series of e-newsletters to help you keep informed on the
progress of the Protection of Freedoms Bill, and in particular news
on how the recommendations from the Vetting & Barring Scheme
Review and Criminal Records Regime Review are to be implemented.
We hope you will find these regular updates helpful to you in your
current and future work. We'd also welcome hearing back from you on
how useful you find the e-newsletters. Background The
Safeguarding Vulnerable Groups Act 2006 sets out a framework for the
scope and operation of the Vetting and Barring Scheme (VBS).
Following the reviews into both the Vetting & Barring Scheme and
the Criminal Records Regime (CRR), the subsequent report
recommendations which require legislation are included in the
Protection of Freedoms Bill (PoF). These
Bill provisions scale back the scheme, in particular, through the
abolition of the registration and monitoring requirements, and the
reduction in the range of posts to which barring arrangements
apply. 1/
Protection of Freedoms Bill Provisions that relate to re-modelling
the VBS. The
PoF Bill timetable so far:
The Bill
provisions that relate to the Vetting and Barring Scheme (VBS) and
the Criminal Records Regime include
(CRR):
2/ The
Disclosure and Barring Service
(DBS) The
provisions in the Protection of Freedoms Bill also mean that the
services of the Criminal Records Bureau (CRB) and Independent
Safeguarding Authority (ISA) will be merged and a single, new
Non-Departmental Public Body (NDPB) created in place of the previous
two organisations. The new organisation will provide a barring and
criminal records disclosure service and will be called the
Disclosure and Barring Service (DBS).The date that the new
organisation will come into being as a non-Department Public Body
(NDPB) is planned to be November 2012, and is subject to
Parliamentary timetabling. 3/ What
happens now? What does it
mean? We will
keep you informed of developments and updated as the Protection of
Freedoms Bill continues its passage through Parliament. For now it
continues to be business as usual. Please see the separate sections
below for further information on the:
Business
as usual It is
business as usual at the CRB, AccessNI and the ISA. Their websites
will be updated with any new information. These website addresses
are as follows: For information relating to the current Disclosure
process visit: www.crb.homeoffice.gov.uk or www.accessni.gov.uk You can
also contact the CRB Customer Services team on 0870 90 90
811 Independent
Safeguarding Authority (ISA) http://www.isa.homeoffice.gov.uk/
Also
note that both the contact centre number 0300 123 1111 and the email
address info@vbs-info.org.uk is no in longer operation. All queries
should be sent to the new email address which
is: HOSPPUEnquiries@homeoffice.gsi.gov.uk
Continued
Safeguarding
Duties: Safeguarding
duties remain in place as introduced in October 2009 and continue to
apply:
Stay
informed Over
66,000 employers, charities and voluntary groups have registered an
interest in being updated on the remodelling of the Vetting &
Barring Scheme and changes to the Criminal Records Regime. This
newsletter is being circulated as an update to those individuals and
organisations. This approach will be used to communicate further
information. Therefore
if you know anyone else who would like to be kept updated, please
forward this newsletter to them and ask that they complete their
details using the following link: http://www.isa.homeoffice.gov.uk/default.aspx?page=299
to receive information directly in the future.
4/
Questions and answers relating to the re-modelling of the
VBS. 1.
Why are you looking to scale the VBS
back? Under
the previous arrangements proposed, some nine million individuals
would have been required to register under the Vetting & Barring
Scheme, as their work fell within the definitions of the prescribed
work (i.e. regulated or controlled activities involving children or
vulnerable adults). The
Government has conducted a review of these proposals and come to the
view that they were not proportionate. The Bill therefore amends the
Safeguarding Vulnerable Groups Act, which provides the framework for
the vetting and barring scheme, to redefine the scope of the scheme
(i.e. reduce the range of posts that fall within 'regulated
activity' and scrap 'controlled activity' altogether) so that only
essential posts (from a public protection perspective) will fall
within its requirements. This significantly reduces the number of
individuals affected by the scheme. 2.
How will employers and other registered bodies understand who falls
into regulated activity and who does
not? Appropriate
and timely guidance about the remodelled scheme will be provided
before any changes commence. We will continue to use Government
websites to ensure that appropriate information is available to
relevant audiences. 3.
Will you issue guidance about safe recruitment practices, such as
still being able to request criminal records checks even where
barring information will not be
available? Yes. The
Department for Education will update its sectoral guidance for
education settings, "Safeguarding Children and Safer Recruitment in
Education". The aim will be to provide advice that is as clear and
brief as possible. This can also be used as best practice guidance
for other settings in the children's
sector. 4.
Why are you changing the definition of regulated
activity? The
Government considers that the scope of regulated activities under
the SVGA was too wide and covered too many people. We wish to guard
against discouraging genuine people who wish to volunteer for work
with children. It is
for employers and organisations using volunteers to ensure safe
recruitment, training and supervision, rather than relying wholly on
state-regulation. Allowing people to work under supervision
emphasises the shared nature of protection
arrangements. Barring
arrangements 5.
What are the changes being
made? We have
redefined "regulated activity" (paid or voluntary work that involves
contact with children or vulnerable adults) to ensure that only
those who have close, regular or unsupervised contact will be
covered by the new arrangements. Controlled
activity did not include the same level of close contact as
regulated activity, this was an unnecessary burden on many
individuals, so government has scrapped the notion of controlled
activity altogether. Those
working in regulated activity will still be subject to the barring
regime but we propose to abolish the requirement to register with
the Scheme for continuous monitoring. Where a position involves
access to children or vulnerable adults employers and voluntary
bodies will still be able to request CRB checks, which will include
relevant criminal record information 6.
So what is happening to 'regulated
activity'? The
definition of 'regulated activity' will be narrowed under these
amendments, meaning the range of posts subject to barring decisions
will be reduced. As we will also be scrapping the previous
requirements for registration and continuous monitoring, the overall
burden on those posts still within the scope of the new arrangements
will be greatly reduced and, we believe, more proportionate. A
smaller (and more proportionate) group of roles will now be defined
as regulated activities. 7.
What is happening to 'controlled
activity'? The
concept of 'controlled activity', where an individual had some
contact with children and vulnerable adults, but not as intense,
frequent or regular as that deemed a regulated activity, will be
scrapped under these amendments. Previously, controlled activity
would have covered posts like catering staff in further education
colleges and hospital records clerks, for example. Employers would
have had to check people applying for these posts but could have
employed them if appropriate safeguards were put in place.
8.
Will the new scheme apply to
volunteers? Yes. The
refocused scheme will focus on the activity being carried out,
rather then the employment status of the individual carrying it
out. Volunteers
who are undertaking the newly defined regulated activity will still
be able to obtain an enhanced criminal records disclosure and the
organisation employing them will be required to check their barred
status before the individual commences working in regulated
activity. Some posts working with vulnerable groups, but which fall
outside regulated activity, will remain eligible for enhanced CRB
checks. This will help employers to make an informed decision about
employing someone, either paid or
unpaid. 9.
Will volunteers now have to
pay? As now,
volunteers will not be required to pay for criminal records checks.
The opportunity to opt into the online checking service and pay a
subscription fee is voluntary. The level of that subscription fee
has yet to be determined but it will certainly be cheaper than a new
CRB check. The decision on whether volunteers will have to pay for
this service is still under
consideration. Abolition
of registration and monitoring
requirements 10.
What are the specific changes being
made? Those
engaged in roles which fall with the scope of the new arrangements
will not be required to register and there will be no continuous
monitoring arrangements. 11. What
types of post will not now fall under Regulated Activity that would
have been covered by the previous
scheme? Examples
of people who will no longer fall within regulated activity include
supervised volunteers and external contract workers such as
plumbers, electricians or window cleaners, and receptionists working
in care homes. 12. Will
similar changes be made in Scotland and Northern
Ireland? Justice
and criminal records matters are devolved functions and Scotland and
Northern Ireland have separate arrangements. Nonetheless, it is
important that arrangements across the UK are all in step and there
are no gaps in public protection terms. With the agreement of the
Northern Ireland Assembly, the Bill makes parallel amendments to the
vetting and barring scheme in Northern Ireland so that it continues
to be aligned with that in England and Wales. Scotland is
maintaining its own Protection of Vulnerable Groups (PVG)
scheme. 5/ The
Review of the Criminal Records Regime - Phase
two Introduction In
parallel with the review of the VBS, a separate but aligned review
of the broader criminal records regime was undertaken. This was led
by Mrs Sunita Mason, the Government's Independent Advisor on
Criminality Information Management. The
first phase of the review focused on issues concerned with the
extent and demands of pre-employment vetting systems and the role of
the Criminal Records Bureau (CRB), in particular, what information
it should be disclosing and to whom. Phase two focused on the
broader criminal records regime. Phase
two of this review has also been published and a summary of Mrs
Mason's recommendations are set out
below: Summary
of Sunita Mason's criminal records regime review
recommendations: I
recommend that an individual's 'criminal record' should be defined
as all their convictions, cautions, reprimands or warnings which are
recorded in central police records (recommendation
1). I
recommend that the Government conduct an immediate review of which
offences are recorded in national police records.(recommendation
2). I
recommend that the Police National Computer should continue to be
the central repository for criminal records for the foreseeable
future (recommendation 3). Linked to recommendation
3. I
recommend that the Government should begin work immediately on
developing and analysing alternative options for sharing and
managing criminal records in the longer term (recommendation
4). I
recommend that Ministers and their Northern Ireland counterparts
should reach agreement urgently on how to fund delivery of the PSNI
-PNC criminal records and fingerprint connection (recommendation
5). I
recommend that the Government and the police service should move
towards a more integrated approach to the administration of criminal
records. I further recommend that the scope to expand the role of
the DBS over time to provide the customer-facing aspects of a range
of disclosure services should be explored. (recommendation
6). I
recommend that: (iii)
All existing supply arrangements should be reviewed within the next
12 months to check they conform to the standards set by PIAP
(recommendation 7). I
recommend that the systems for individuals to access, challenge and
correct their own criminal records should be maintained and better
publicised (recommendation 8). I
recommend that the comprehensive and easily understood guidance
which I advocated in my phase 1 report should extend to broader
aspects of the criminal records system, such as definition,
retention and access (recommendation
9). I
recommend that Ministers commission further work to review and
update the cross- Government strategy for improving the
international exchange of criminal records. This should include
consideration of the following
elements: ( i)
ensuring the transfer of fingerprint records with criminal records
as often as possible (particularly with EU
Countries); (ii)
ensuring greater levels of notification of criminal offences
committed by British citizens outside the
EU; (iii)
looking at whether more can be done to prevent the entry of foreign
nationals who have committed serious offences abroad and who present
a serious risk to public protection; (iv)
seeking agreements to allow the CRB to obtain criminal records from
a person's country of nationality where the applicant and employer
request this as part of the CRB disclosure process and where
adequate safeguards can be put in
place; (v)
developing a coherent and consistent cross-government policy setting
out the circumstances in which foreign governments should be told
about the convictions of their nationals and ensuring that all UK
agencies adhere to it. (vi)
allowing British residents to obtain a standard CRB certificate when
applying for a post abroad that would be excepted from the ROA if it
was in the UK, and to a check of the barred list where it would have
amounted to regulated activity; and (vii)
ensuring that existing and developing initiatives in this area are
adequately resourced (recommendation
10). The
Terms of Reference for both reviews, the formal Government response
to both phases, along with the full Criminal Records Regime reports
can be downloaded using the following
link: http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/publications/crime/criminal-records-review-phase1/ http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/publications/crime/criminal-records-review-phase2/ ![]() |
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