Breadcrumbs


Conservatives commit to scrapping ContactPoint database

By Neil Puffett Thursday, 17 September 2009

The Conservatives have cemented their commitment to scrapping the controversial ContactPoint database after featuring the pledge in a policy paper designed to protect personal liberty.

The paper, Reversing the Rise of the Surveillance State, outlines plans for fewer central databases and stronger duties on government to keep the private information it gathers safe in an 11-point plan.

The ContactPoint database will eventually hold the details of 11 million children and young people to allow professionals working with them to see who else they are in contact with.

Launching the policy paper, Dominic Grieve, shadow justice secretary, said: "This government's approach to our personal privacy is the worst of all worlds - intrusive, ineffective and enormously expensive.

"As we have seen time and time again, over-reliance on the database state is a poor substitute for the human judgment and care essential to the delivery of frontline public services."

X

You must log in to use Clip & Save

Items with an asterisk * are required

Related Articles

Would you like to post a comment?

Please Sign in or register.


Additional Information

Latest jobs Jobs web feed


Latest tenders

Tender ListingCentral Bedfordshire Council