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Records bureau set for overhaul but home care staff remain unchecked

Posted: 06 March 2003 | Subscribe Online


The government has pledged to make "radical" changes to the running of the beleaguered Criminal Records Bureau, but is still to set a date to start checking home care workers.

The changes - including a new system for electronic applications and possibly fingerprinting some applicants - follow recommendations by the independent review team appointed in September to examine the CRB's failings.

The team concluded that there was "no evidence that the CRB, as it stands, would be able to cope with the significantly higher levels of demand which were foreseen in the business plans" and that "radical solutions" were needed to improve performance.
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The changes were proposed as a result of the CRB's inability, almost a year into operation, to cope with all the demands from the care sector. In November, the government delayed the date by which existing care home staff needed to be checked by 18 months to 31 October 2004 and postponed indefinitely checks on domiciliary care and nursing agency staff.

Home Office minister Lord Falconer said there was still no definite date in mind for the checking of domiciliary care staff but that they would be brought into the process "as soon as is reasonably practical".

"The CRB didn't work as it should have done," he said. "We will bring in groups of workers when it is able to cope with them."

Patrick Carter, who led the review team, said taking on more applicants now would cause more delays as the CRB could not cope with expansion.
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In response to the recommendations, the government has agreed to establish the CRB as an independent executive agency of the Home Office, revise the role of the registered bodies that forward applications to the CRB and set criteria for the level of checking.

It has also postponed the introduction of basic disclosure checks - mainly available for general recruitment purposes - until demand for standard and enhanced checks has been met.

The government said the service had improved since last summer, with 80 per cent of standard disclosures and 50 per cent of enhanced disclosures issued within three weeks. More than 988,000 disclosures have been issued in the past six months compared with 186,065 in the first five months of operation.


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