Identity cards should be rolled out to citizens as quickly as possible, an
influential Treasury-backed report
will recommend to ministers this month.
Sir James Crosby's review of private sector uses of the proposed biometric ID
scheme was due to be published with the Budget in March. According to insiders,
the former HBOS chief executive's report will be circulated internally in the
coming weeks and is to be published when Parliament reconvenes in early October.
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'Probably the strongest theme will be a recommendation to establish a
critical mass of cardholders very fast, to enable both public and private
sectors to get the benefits of the scheme and start building ID checks into
business models,' said a senior source.
The IT requirements have already been significantly scaled down. The plan no
longer requires an entirely new National Identity Register but instead will
reuse the governmentís existing Citizen Information System.
The Crosby report is expected to curb the scheme's high-tech ambitions even
further.
'It will recognise that there are many ways for checking services to be used
and a lot will be offline, without the need for a huge IT network
infrastructure,' said the source.
Though the long-delayed technology procurement is expected imminently, the
scheme is subject to continued accusations of confusion.
Officials on Crosby's Treasury team requested a meeting with industry body
the Enterprise Privacy Group (EPG) at
the end of last month to discuss the potential for private sector ID brokers.
Such a scheme would reduce the governmentís role to mandating and managing
the biometric enrolment of citizens only. All subsequent use of the identity
established would be run by one or more trusted third parties - such as a bank -
as chosen by the individual.
'A broker system could achieve the same outcome but is potentially more
civil-liberties friendly and has a much lower cost than the traditional
monolithic, centralised approach,' said EPG director Toby Stevens.
The brokerage model is fundamentally different from that being pursued by the
Home Office's Identity and Passport
Service. But insiders say it is too early to draw any conclusions.
'The concept has not even been fully defined yet - we are only at the very
start of debating if that is a direction we might want to go,' said a source.
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