ID cards: scheme to be compulsory

Initiate
User avatar
Posts: 673
Joined: Sun Aug 03, 2008 6:20 pm

You might like:

PostFri Mar 20, 2009 3:10 pm » by 7hidden7agenda7


http://uk.news.yahoo.com/16/20090320/tt ... 15470.html
>>>ID cards reviews show state desire for scheme to be compulsory
1 hour 3 mins ago
VNU Net Tom Young
Widespread concern over how effective the £4.7bn National Identity Scheme would be without ID cards being compulsory have been revealed in newly-published project reviews.
The Identity Cards Act passed by the government in 2006 made it clear that ID cards would not be compulsory for British citizens.
But the first Gateway review found that "the police felt that the absence of any obligation to carry or produce identity cards would substantially remove the administrative savings and some of the other advantages that Identity Cards would offer".
The review also noted with some concern, that other users of the scheme in the public sector such as the DVLA, the Passport Agency, the Department of Work and Pensions and the Inland Revenue "were not quite as enthusiastic about the programme as might have been hoped".
The news will reignite privacy campaigners' fears that the government intends to make cards compulsory eventually.
The second gateway review, from 2004, shows that the government considered compulsory adoption at an early stage.
"If the conditions are right the first stage of the scheme could then be followed by a move to a compulsory card scheme," says the review. "This step will require full debate and a vote in both Houses of Parliament and will only be taken after a rigorous evaluation of the first stage and when there is high confidence that everything is in place to enable the scheme to work."
In 2006, then Home Secretary Charles Clarke said the cards would become compulsory if Labour won the next election.
But last year, amid widespread opposition to the scheme, the government delayed mass rollout of the scheme and instead targeted foreign national, airside workers and students as the first recipients.
Home Secretary Jacqui Smith insisted that cards would not be compulsory for other British citizens until public acceptance had been gained.
"While there are big advantages to making ID cards as widespread as possible, we need to be clear there is public acceptance," Smith told the BBC.
The gateway reviews were published yesterday after four years of legal opposition to the original freedom of information request from government buying agency the OGC at an estimated cost of £120,000.<<<
Expedite Your Imminent Demise. Or Die Trying!

Writer
Posts: 24
Joined: Thu Nov 06, 2008 6:04 pm
Location: London,England

PostFri Mar 20, 2009 3:41 pm » by steviewonder


first the ID card, then the chip....gotta love this reality

Conspirator
User avatar
Posts: 2466
Joined: Fri Nov 07, 2008 7:19 pm

PostFri Mar 20, 2009 4:31 pm » by Towelie


Well my uncles went to jail for not paying there poll tax, i guess this is what ill be going there for, cos im not having a damn id card.
Kill em all and let god sort them out!

Atheism is a non-prohet organisation.

  • Related topics
    Replies
    Views
    Last post

We are listed at the www.topparanormalsites.com website. Click here to vote for us.. Thank you :-)