Link between electoral database and ID system mooted
By Steve Ranger
Published: 9 January 2006 15:15 GMT
Council officials could become "local police" for the controversial new ID cards database under government proposals, according to claims from the Conservative Party.
Tories claim a new electoral database under discussion will be connected to the ID cards database and council officials will be required to 'investigate' any discrepancies.
The Tories said: "This could mean that councils end up acting as the local police for the ID card agency, and track down those who fail to inform the state of their new address or new family circumstances."
Under the government plans, local residents face fines of up to £2,500 for not registering or keeping their details up to date with the new national ID card agency, according to the Tories.
Shadow e-government minister Oliver Heald said there is growing concern amongst the public about Labour's use of invasive databases without transparency or clear backing from the public.
Heald said in a statement: "I believe local residents will be alarmed at the further prospect of town hall bureaucrats being told to investigate people's homes for ID cards, backed up with the threat of thousand pound fines."
A spokesman for the Department of Constitutional Affairs told silicon.com the National Identity Register could be used to help ensure that local electoral registers are more comprehensive and are compiled more efficiently.
He said: "Electoral Registration Officers could check whether their entries matched those on the National Identity Register and whether the National Identity Register contained some records which were absent from theirs."
But he said that in order to do this, the Identity Cards Bill, which is currently before parliament, requires the government to obtain specific approval from parliament.
With Central Government palming more resonsibility...
Anonymous
What's any law abiding/tax paying person to worryi...
Anonymous
New definition of 'voluntary'. Pay for a card or P...
Andrew Flack
Correct me if I'm wrong but can you not be fined f...
WCM
Please note: You MUST be eligible to work in the United Kingdom, and if successfully employed, you be subject to background checks which involve: ...
Essex Police Assistant Head of IT (Service, Design and Transition) 46,647 - 52,776 p.a. Essex Police is committed to providing the highest standard ...
Please note: You MUST be eligible to work in the United Kingdom, and if successfully employed, you be subject to background checks which involve: ...
CIO50 2008
The silicon.com CIO50 2008 profiles the most influential and innovative tech chiefs in the UK across all industries and organisation size, from the biggest FTSE100 companies to high growth dot-com start ups and the public sector. The list was voted on by the UK CIO community and a panel of experts. Find out more in our latest special report.
Stories from the web...
Copyright ©1995-2008 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved. Top of page
Julian Goldsmith
Leading a horse to water
Profile: Government CIO John Suffolk
Steve Ranger
Editor's Blog: Time to take the politicians out of technology?
We've given them their chance...
Paul Bentham
Outsourcing - life after the contract
Just when you thought it was all nailed down...
Andy McCue
ID cards are dead
This u-turn is the beginning of the end
silicon.com
Dear silicon.com... Laptop losses, mobile ads, gas-guzzler charge, Vista backtrack…
Reader Comments of the Week
Steve Ranger
Editor's Blog: ID cards - cock-up and conspiracy...
The real last enemy is…incompetence