The UK
ContactPoint
database designed to hold details on every child in England, along with their
parents or carers, will cost £224m to build and about £41m a year to maintain,
the government has admitted.
ContactPoint is touted as a quick way for the more than 330,000 education,
health, social care and youth justice professionals to find out who else is
working with the same child, making it easier to deliver more coordinated
support.
The database will contain basic personal information about every person under
the age of 18 in England, as well as contact details for their parents or carers
and for services involved with the child.
"ContactPoint is crucial to the successful delivery of the government's
Every
Child Matters: Change for Children programme and we are delighted to be
entrusted with a project of such importance," said John Cummings, vice president
for the education sector at Capgemini.
However, children's minister Kevin Brennan has revealed that the ongoing cost
of the database is expected to rocket past the original contract price.
"Running costs are estimated to be £41m per year. Most of this will go
directly to local authorities to fund staff to ensure the ongoing security,
accuracy and audit of ContactPoint," he said.
Brennan added that progress towards readiness to receive access to
ContactPoint is "on track" for an initial deployment to 17 early adopter
authorities in April 2008.
ContactPoint is scheduled for a full rollout to all English local
authorities, child protection agencies and a group of children's charities by
the end of 2008.
An estimated £28.4m had been spent on the project in 2006 and a further
£11.2m in the first quarter of 2007.
Commentators have already highlighted the database's potential for misuse,
and have branded the scheme "hugely expensive and intrusive".
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