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Wrong priorities

Posted: 12 September 2002 | Subscribe Online


It takes a string of errors before an organisation can arrive at the level of catastrophe now facing the Criminal Records Bureau.

As so often when public services are outsourced to private companies, both sides are blaming each other. But, as so often when outsourced services go wrong, both sides must share the blame. From the Home Office's initial failure to predict the scale of the task, via the CRB's failure to start the work on time, or to clear the backlog, we have arrived at a situation where an agency set up to protect children is now leaving them at risk.
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Panic is never a good frame of mind for decision-making. Criminal records checks are just one building block of a child-safe society; they would not have saved Holly Wells or Jessica Chapman. However, the government's decision to prioritise checks on teachers is worse than just unnecessary: it has done more harm than good.

Everyone else who dispenses a limited resource is expected to do so on the basis of greatest need. Obviously the CRB must be resourced so that it can process all the necessary checks within a reasonable timescale. In the meantime, however, situations where children are most vulnerable should be prioritised. That includes young people in care. It does not include those in the classrooms of mainstream day schools.
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The CRB must do more than just stop prioritising checks on classroom teachers. It must prioritise those on individuals who spend time working or living on a one-to-one basis with already vulnerable children.

Moreover, the idea that once the CRB is operating properly our children will be safe is a treacherous one. It follows from the myth that children are most at risk from non-relatives who could previously have been identified as dangerous if only some professionals somewhere had done their job properly.

When it comes to building a child-friendly society, getting the CRB sorted out is the easy part.


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