Plans for a national police intelligence scheme are being plagued by further
problems, with the scrapping of one key project and yet more delays to another.
The
Cross
Regional Information Sharing Project (Crisp) – an interim stage of the
Impact programme created following the Bichard Inquiry into the Soham murders –
is being cancelled, Home Office
minister Tony McNulty told Parliament on Tuesday.
And 10 years after it became a legal requirement, the national firearm
certificate register has missed another key deadline and will now not be fully
operational until the end of August.
The creation of a national database of certificate holders linked to the
Police National Computer (PNC) was passed into law in 1997, following the 1996
Dunblane massacre, but its development has been beset with difficulties.
Now the National Policing Improvement
Agency (NPIA), which runs the project, says problems with data cleansing
within individual forces mean the National Firearms Licensing Management System
(NFLMS) will not meet its most recently revised deadline of linking with the PNC
by June.
‘Forces that have only recently installed the system will not have time to
cleanse their data,’ said an NPIA spokeswoman.
But some forces are still struggling to get the system operational. The NPIA
says 90 per cent of forces are successfully running NFLMS, but others have local
technology problems.
South Wales Police has sent a
letter to firearm certificate holders informing them that ‘administrative
difficulties’ are causing delays in issuing certificates.
The letter says: ‘Applications received and accepted before the expiry date
will deem that you remain the holder of a certificate even though administrative
difficulties may delay sending a new certificate to you.’
Labour peer Lord Corbett of Castle Vale is calling for the
National Audit Office to hold an inquiry
into the project.
‘This is a sad saga of technical incompetence alongside what seems to be an
orchestrated attempt to ensure that the NFLMS is never properly operational,’ he
said.
The NFLMS is part of the Impact national information sharing programme, along
with seven other systems including crime, child abuse and domestic violence.
Crisp is an interim step to the capability described by
Sir Michael Bichard as ‘a
national priority’ in June 2004.
Its demise will delay forces’ access to intelligence held by colleagues in
other areas until Impact’s Police National Database starts in 2010.
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